55 Neb. 735 | Neb. | 1898
This suit was instituted by the Equitable Trust Company to foreclose real estate mortgages upon lot 3 in
It is argued that the burden of proof was upon Frances B. O’Brien to establish the invalidity of the special taxes in question, and as she offered no proof upon that point the court below erred in holding said special taxes illegal. To this contention two answers suggest themselves: First — The. illegality of these special taxes was pleaded in the answer to the cross-petition of Dvorsky, and he did not controvert the averments of the answer by a reply. Under the Code of Civil Procedure every material allegation of new matter in an answer, not put in issue by the reply, must be taken as true, and need not be proved. (Stewart v. American Exchange Nat. Bank of Lincoln, 54 Neb. 461, and cases there cited.) All testimony relating
The evidence contained in the bill of exceptions fails to establish that due and legal notice of the meeting of the city council of Omaha, as a board of equalization, was given prior to the levy of these special taxes. A city of the metropolitan class cannot'pass an ordinance levying special taxes until, as a board of equalization, it has ascertained the amount of special benefits to be assessed against the real estate; and such board has no authority to determine the benefits to be levied without proper notice to the landowner. Chapter 12a, Compiled Statutes 1887, was in force when these special taxes were imposed, and by sections 73 and 85 of said chapter notice of the sitting of the board of equalization of a city of the metropolitan class is required to be given during at least six days prior thereto in the official paper of the city. While the evidence adduced in this case shows that a notice of the meeting of the board of equalization was published for the requisite time in the Omaha Republican, a newspaper “in general circulation in the county of Douglas and state of Nebraska,” it was not established •by any proof that such publication Avas made in the official paper of the city of Omaha. These special taxes were
AFFIRMED.