13 Wash. 428 | Wash. | 1896
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was a hearing on certiorari. A motion to quash the writ and the merits of the cause came on for hearing before the lower court by consent upon a single argument. The case involves the va
Many preliminary questions are discussed on this appeal, relating to the mode o.f procedure, the right of the plaintiff to invoke the writ of certiorari, etc., but with the view we take of the merits of the case it will not be necessary to discuss these preliminary questions. It seemed to have been the view of the learned judge, who tried the case below that the cura
We think the learned judge was mistaken, both as to the intention of the act and the power of the legislature to pass such an act. It seems plain to us from the reading of the statute, that the legislature intended to provide for a reassessment in all cases where the assessment had been held to be void, whether for irregularities or for want of prerequisites which went to the jurisdiction of the council to levy the assessment and to order the work done.
The language of the statute is that:
“Whenever an assessment for laying out, establishing, . . . paving,, repaving, . . . graveling, regraveling, ... or for any local improvement which has heretofore been made or which may hereafter be made by any city or town, has been or may be hereafter declared void, and its enforcement under the charter or laws governing such city or town refused by the courts of this state, or for any cause*431 whatever has been heretofore or may be hereafter set aside, annulled or declared void by any court, either directly or by virtue of any decision of such court, the council of such city or town shall by ordinance, order and make a new assessment or reassessment upon the lots, blocks or parcels of land which have been or will be benefited by such local improvement.” etc.
This language seems to clearly contemplate a case where there was no jurisdiction in the city council to order the improvements or make the assessments, which is the kind of a case that the courts would declare void. But to put the question beyond peradventure, the legislature, in expressing the intent of the act (Laws 1893, p. 228, §6), says:
“It being the true intent and meaning of this act to make the cost and expense of all local improvements payable by the real estate benefited by such improvement by making a reassessment therefor, notwithstanding that the proceedings of the common council or board of public works or any of its officers may be found irregular or defective, whether jurisdictional- or otherwise.”
And it further provides that:
“The fact that the contract has been let or that such improvements shall have been made and completed in whole or in part, shall not prevent such assessment from being made.”
So that it seems the intention of the legislature to provide for cases where there was no jurisdiction in the common council to act is too plainly expressed to be misunderstood. Nor is there anything in the act to indicate that, before this reassessment can be made, the prerequisite to action under the old charter shall exist under the new; that is to say, there is no intimation that before an assessment can be made under the new act, the petition provided for by the old law
The rule deduced from all the authorities seems to be in substance that if the legislature had the power in the first instance to make valid the assessment without the requirement which was disregarded by the authorities, it can by legislative enactment dispense with that requirement in providing for a new assessment; and there can be no question but that under the almost unlimited exercise of authority on questions of tax or assessment, the legislature in the first instance could have provided that this work should be done and the assessment made without the requirement of any kind of a petition. It seems to be well established by the authorities that the fact that a judgment of a court has pronounced an assessment void will not preclude the legislature from making provision for a reassessment on such property, if it had the original power to provide for such assessment. The only restriction on the powers of the legislature in our state is that the taxes must be uniform, and the further restriction that the person whose property is assessed must have notice.', Of course, this is not parallel with a case where a judgment was held, void because there was no service, or cases of that kind which would clearly fall within the constitutional inhibition of taking property without due process of law and therefore the legislature would not have had the power to dispense with that requirement in the first instance.
The retrospective power of the legislature over subjects of assessments and taxation where past proceed
“The other principal question involved in this case is one which has become trite, and scarcely an open one, by repeated arguments and decisions in this court as well as in the courts of other States. It relates to the retrospective power of the legislature over the subjects of assessment and taxation, where past proceedings have proved defective or irregular, either for want of power in the local boards or officers or by reason of non-compliance with some existing provision of law. The cases in which this question has arisen and been decided are quite numerous and always with one result. The authority of the legislature in this respect has always been affirmed, where the subject acted or operated upon was purely and exclusively one of taxation and assessment, and concerned only the taxing power.” “ The principle,” says the court, “ upon which these and other similar decisions
In these cases it was decided that if the legislature has antecedent power to authorize a tax, it can cure, by a retroactive law, an irregularity or want of authority in levying it, though thereby a right of action which vested in an individual should be divested.
The same principle was announced by the supreme court of Minnesota in the case of St. Paul v. Certain Lots, 6 N. W. 424 (S. C. City of St. Paul v. Mullen, 27 Minn. 78). The curative statute in that case was no stronger than ours and it provided and authorized the common council to direct a -new assessment or reassessment when judgment is denied on the original assessment, or the assessment set aside or declared void for any cause whatever.
This question has been before the supreme court of the United States in Spencer v. Merchant, 125 U. S. 345 (8 Sup. Ct. 921). There an assessment had been made and a portion of the lots upon which the assessment was made successfully contested the validity of the
In Williams v. Supervisors of Albany, 122 U. S. 154 (7 Sup. Ct. 1244), the supreme court decided that the mode in which property should be appraised, by whom and when that shall be done, what certificate of. their action shall be furnished by the board which does it, and when parties may be heard for the correction of errors, are all matters within legislative discretion; and it is within the power of the state legislature to cure an omission or a defective performance of such of the acts required by the law to be performed by local boards in the assessment of taxes as could have been in the first place omitted from the requirements of the statute or which might have been required to have been done at another time than that named in it.
In In re Van Antwerp, 56 N.Y. 261, it was held that the taxing power of the legislature for public purposes is unlimited, except as specifically restrained by the constitution; that where an assessment for municipal improvements is irregular the legislature may itself make, instead of authorizing, a reassessment. If this be true it certainly destroys the objection that the legislature in this instance did not have power to provide that-the assessment could be made by the city council without the presentation of a petition of the property owners, which was provided for by the law under which the first assessment was made. To the same effect are: Howell v. Buffalo, 37 N. Y. 267; McMillen v. Anderson, 95 U. S. 37; State, ex rel. Doyle, v. Newark, 34 N. J. Law, 236.
It is announced by Mr. Cooley in his work on Constitutional Limitations (5th ed., p. 593), that:
“The power to impose taxes is one so unlimited in*437 force and so searching in extent, that the courts scarcely venture to declare that it is subject to any restrictions whatever, except such as rest in the discretion of the authority which exercises it.”
A general review of this chapter conclusively shows that the overwhelming weight of authority, in fact, all authority, goes to the extent of according this power to the legislature, and the courts will not inquire into the policy of the tax, or undertake to limit the authority of the legislature, so long as it is exercised within the constitutional limitations and so long as it appears that it is a proper exercise of a taxing power.
A defense of the law announced by the courts on this question is made by Cooley in his work on Taxation (2d ed., p. 309), where he insists that this power is not inconsistent with reason or fair dealing, because the reassessment is only for the purpose of enforcing against the delinquent tax-payer' a duty which he was likely to evade by reason of the non-feasance or misfeasance of the officers who ought to have enforced it and when the new proceedings will give him the same opportunity to be heard that was given him in other cases, and will be conducted on principles that operate generally, he has no reasonable ground of complaint; and he sums up the law and announces the particular cases where the legislature may provide a reassessment, in cases where the first assessment has been held to be void, and after giving some instances where the new assessment cannot be provided for, as where the tax itself was originally void by reason of having been levied for an illegal purpose, he concludes:
“And here it may be observed that a judicial decision against the first proceedings, if based upon errors and defects merely, and not upon the vicious nature of the tax itself, is not a bar to a reassessment. Such a decision merely points out the error, and the reassess*438 ment may be of all others the most proper and effectual way of correcting it.”
On this proposition, however, the authorities are so uniform that a further citation would be without benefit. It appears in this case that the subject of the assessment was a subject over which the legislature had proper control; that the new assessment law provides for notice to the' property owners; that no constitutional limitation has been invaded; and under the plain provisions of the statute we think the new assessment provided for contemplated just such a case as the one at bar; that, so far as the record shows, the law has been substantially complied with.
We think. there is nothing in the contention that the city is not a party in iuterest here, for whatever its ultimate responsibility may be in cases of this kind, it is primarily responsible for the collection of this assessment.
Believing that the court erred in overruling the motion to quash the writ, the judgment will be reversed and the case remanded with instructions to grant the motion to quash the writ.
Hoyt, C. J., and Anders and Gordon, JJ., concur. Scott, J., dissents.