delivered the opinion of the court.
This case .raises the question whether certain proceedings taken under the Compiled Laws of Michigan for the assessment of benefits upon neighboring lots derived from the'opening of Milwaukee avenue, in the city of Detroit, deprived the ■owners of such lots of their property without due process of law.
These proceedings began with a resolution of the common council declaring the necessity of opening the street. Thereupon the city petitioned the recorder’s court for a jury to determine the necessity of such improvements and of taking *436 private property, (a map or plan of which was annexed to the petition,) and “ to ascertain and determine the just compensation to be made for such private property proposed to be taken,” and for the issue of a summons to all persons mentioned in the petition as being interested in the property proposed to be taken. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the necessity of opening the avenue, of taking private property therefor, and fixed the compensation at the aggregate sum of $1.5,214.75.
Thereupon the common council passed another resolution fixing the district benefited by the opening, and declaring that there should be assessed upon the real estate included in such district the sum of $15,214.75, “in proportion) as near as may be, to the advantage which each lot or parcel is deemed to acquire by this improvement.” The resolution further required the board of assessors to make an assessment roll to that amount, assessing upon each lot “ a ratable proportion, as near as may be, of said amount in accordance to the amount of benefit derived by such improvements.” Thereupon the matter was referred to the board of assessors, who. reported the amount assessed against each lot. The bill averred that none of the plaintiffs’ land thus assessed abutted upon those parts of the street opened by these proceedings, but that they-had already dedicated to the city all that portion of .Milwaukee avenue lying in front of their lands, without'cost or expense to the city.
Plaintiffs made a large number of objections to the validity of such assessment, none of which require to be noticed, except so far as they are pertinent to the provision of the Fourteenth Amendment, concerning due process of law.
1. The first of these objections is that while the statute provides for a notice to the parties whose land is to be taken for the street, no provision is made for giving notice to the owners of the land liable to be assessed for the improvement. Section 3394 provides for the filing of a petition by the city attorney for the condemnation of land, and that the petition, among other things, shall contain “a description of the property to be taken, . . . also the names of the owners and others interested in the property, so far as can be ascertained, including those in *437 possession of the premises.” Section 3395 provides that, “ upon receiving such petition, it shall be the duty of the clerk of said court to issue a summons against those named in such petition,” that is, all interested in the property-to be taken, “commanding them, ... to show cause, if any they have, why the prayer of such petition should not be granted.”
It will be observed that this section makes no express provision for notice to the owners of property not to be taken, but assumed to be benefited by the improvements. These owners, however, are not then known, because the proceedings for the condemnation of the property taken precedes the determination of the benefits and the fixing of the assessment district. The sections of the statute taken together provide for two distinct and separate proceedings : (1) for the assessment of compensation for property taken, and (2) for the assessment of benefits to property not taken. In the former, only the owners of the land taken are interested. Their rights are amply protected by sections 3394 and 3395, requiring notice to be given to show cause why the petition should not be granted.
The argument of the plaintiffs is that the owners of the property liable to be assesséd for the
benefits
are just as much interested in the question as to the necessity of making the improvement and the amount of compensation as are the owners of land to be taken for such improvement, and the samé -reasons for notice apply in the one case as in the other. A number of cases are cited which, it is argued, give countenance to this position.
Paul
v. Detroit,
Rut whatever weight be given to these authorities, the law in this court is too well settled to be now disturbed, that the interest of neighboring property owners, who may possibly thereafter be assessed for the benefit to their property accruing from opening a street, is too remote and indeterminate to require notice to them of the taking of lands for such improvement, in which they have no direct interest. The position of the plaintiffs in this particular would require a readjustment .of *438 tbe entire proceedings, and a determination of tbe property incidentally benefited, before any proceedings are taken for the condemnation o,f land directly taken or damaged by such improvement. ’ It might be argued upon the same lines that, whenever the city contemplated a public improvement of any description, personal notice sho.uld'be given to the taxpayers, since all such are interested in such improvements and are liable to have their taxes increased thereby. It might easily happen that a whole district or ward of a particular city would be incidentally benefited by a proposed improvement, as, for instance, a public school, yet to require personal notice to be given to all the taxpayers of such ward would be an intolerable burden. . Hence it has been held *by this court that it is only those whose property is proposed to be taken for a public improvement that due process of law requires shall have prior noti.ce.
' Thus in
Spencer
v.
Merchant,
This question, however, is decided in the case of Voigt v. Detroit City, ante, p. 115, recently- disposed of, and will not be further considered here. Indeed, so far as this question is concerned, this case might be affirmed upon the authority of that.
2. The second objection is that the resolution of January 22, 1895, fixing the assessment district and levying a gross amount thereon for benefits,- does not expressly state that the property included therein is benefited to the amount ordered to be assessed. This resolution was passed in pursuance of section 3406, reprinted in the Voigt case, {ante, p. 115,) w;hich provides that “if- the common council . . . believe that a portion of the city . . . will be benefited by such improvement, they may . . . determine that the whole or any just proportion of the compensation awarded by the jury shall be assessed upon the owners or occupants of real estate deemed to be thus benefited and thereupon they shall by resolution fix and determine- the district, or portion of the city . . . benefited, and specify the amount to be assessed upon the owners or occupants of the taxable real estate therein. The amount of the benefit thus ascertained shall be assessed upon the owners or occupants of. such taxable real estate, in proportion, as nearly as may be, to the advantage which such lot, parcel or subdivision is deemed to acquire by the improvement.”
The resolution declares that the “ common council do hereby fix and determine that the following district ... is benefited by the opening of Milwaukee avenue,” . . . and “ that
*440
there be assessed and levied upon the several pieces and parcels of real estate, included in the above description, the amount of $15,214.75, in proportion, as near as may be, to the advantage which each lot or parcel is deemed to acquire by this improvement.” If this resolution be not a literal, we think it is a substantial, compliance with the statute, declaring that if the common council
believe
that the property will be benefited by such improvement, they may determine the proportion of the compensation to be assessed upon the owners; but whether this be so or not, there was no want of due process of law within the Fourteenth Amendment, inasmuch as section 3406 expressly provides, following the language"already quoted, “that the assessment shall be made and the amount collected in the same manner and by the same officers and proceeding, as near as may be, as is provided in the charter of the municipality for assessing, levying and collecting the expense of a public improvement when a street is graded.” Interpreting this, the Supreme Court of Michigan held in the case of
Voigt
v.
The City of Detroit,
3. The last objection, that there were several of the parcels of land constituting the extension of Milwaukee avenue so defectively described that the judgment of condemnation was absolutely void, is untenable. Not only is it not shown that the plaintiffs were interested in the lands alleged to be misdescribed, but it is obviously impossible, in a proceeding to assess benefits upon other property, to show a misdescription in the lands taken for such improvement.
Voorhees
v.
Bank of United States,
There was no error in the decree of the Supreme Court affirming the dismissal of the bill, and it is therefore
Affirmed.
