157 Ind. 205 | Ind. | 1901
Mandamus. Relator’s application and the alternative writ disclose that relator owned real estate fronting on Washington avenue in Evansville; that Gorman,
“Writs of mandate may be issued to any inferior tribunal, corporation, board, or person, to compel the performance of an act which the law specially enjoins, or a duty resulting from an office, trust, or station.” §1182 Burns 1894, §1168 R. S. 1881 and Horner 1897.
The duties of the board of public works of Evansville with respect to making assessments for street improvements are prescribed by the act of 1893 as amended in 1895. §§73-82 Acts 1893, p. 65, et seq.; §§3977-3986 Burns 1894; §§18-21 Acts 1895, p. 258 et seq.; §§3977, 3978, 3981, 3985 Burns Supp. 1897. In all respects that are material to this case, these statutory provisions are the same as those of the “Barrett law”, considered in Adams v. City of Shelbyville, 154 Ind. 467, 49 L. R. A. 797. The board adopts and publishes a “resolution of necessity”. If the board finally orders the improvement to be made, they advertise for bids and let the contract. When the work is completed, the city engineer is required to certify that fact, to the board, together with his final estimate of the cost. It thereupon becomes the duty of the board to prepare an assessment list, assessing each parcel of abutting real estate for its proportion of the cost according to frontage. “Whenever such assessment list is completed,” the statute proceeds, “said board shall fix a time and place when and where objections to such assessment will be heard, and shall cause notice thereof to be given by publication in a newspaper of general circulation published and printed in such city once each week for two successive
Under the holding of the majority of the court in Adams v. City of Shelbyville, supra, the assessment list as made out and filed by the board, assessing each parcel of abutting real estate for its proportion of the cost according to frontage, was merely a prima facie charge of the amount the owner should pay; the board was a proper tribunal for hearing and determining the question as to the proper amount; the notice and hearing were sufficient to constitute “due process of law”; and the owner, after having had his “day in court”, can not inquire into the correctness of the assessment collaterally.
In this case the board were advised by tire city attorney that under the street railroad company’s contract with the city no part of the cost could be charged against the company. Counsel for relator construe the contract otherwise. But it is unnecessary to examine the contract, because the failure to deduct for the space occupied by the tracks simply resulted in making relator’s assessment larger than he claims it ought to have been, just as would be the case if the total cost, by mistaking the width or length or price per square yard of the improvement, was figured to be more than it actually was. It was the duty of the board, on the day set for the hearing, to proceed and complete the assessment with the best light they had. And though it may be proper and commendable for the board to correct their own errors (if the proceedings have not passed beyond their control), there is no statute, nor duty resulting from their office, which
Because the application and alternative writ do not deny, they have been taken as admitting that the board in making the assessment complied with all the statutory requirements as to notice and hearing. The cases cited by relator, Hamilton v. State, ex rel., 3 Ind. 452; City of Indianapolis v. Patterson, 33 Ind. 157; Indianapolis, etc., R. Co. v. State, ex rel., 37 Ind. 489; Pudney v. Burkhart, 62 Ind. 179, and Wren v. City of Indianapolis, 96 Ind. 206, are not applicable, for in each the performance of the act sought to be enforced was found to be “specially enjoined by law”.
Since the matter set up in the replies might be brought into an amended application, it may be well to observe that, when a person is summoned before a tribunal to challenge a charge against his property, he may not avoid the effect of non-attendance by averring in a different proceeding that he Avas misled as to the tribunal’s intended course of action; and this is especially true if he relies upon hearsay and rumor.
Judgment reversed, with directions to sustain the demurrers to the application and alternative Avrit.