The plaintiffs contest the validity of the acts purporting to authorize the assessments complained of, assigning for their objection several grounds which require examination.
’ They contend particularly that the act of 1921, Extra Session, is unenforceable because obnoxious to the due process clause of the State and Federal constitutions.
The right of the courts to declare a statute unconstitutional is regarded as a high prerogative which should be exercised with caution and careful attention to probable results. The Legislature is presumed to have observed the limitation of its powers; and if a statute is reasonably open to more than one construction, all doubts will be resolved in favor of sustaining it and reconciling its terms with the fundamental law. Hence a legislative enactment will not be construed as repugnant to the Constitution unless its invalidity is “clear, complete, and unmistakable,” or shown beyond a reasonable doubt.
King v. R. R.,
*456 Tbe Federal Constitution (Art. XIV, sec. 1) provides: “No State shall deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law, nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws”; and the State Constitution (Art. I, sec. 17), “No person ought to be deprived of his life, liberty, or property but by the law of the land.”
It is not inaccurate to say that the courts have not attempted to define with exactness and precision the term “due process of law,” but the words are generally understood to refer to the law of the land, and, as expressed by
Mr. Justice Johnson,
to he “intended to secure the individual from the arbitrary exercise of the powers of government, unrestrained by the established principles of private rights and distributive justice.”
Bank of Columbia v. O’Kelly,
4 Wheat. (U. S.), 235; 4 Law Ed., 561. See, also,
Twining v. New Jersey,
No question is raised as to the power of the Legislature to provide for the improvement of the streets of a municipal corporation or for an assessment against the abutting property benefited by such improvement; and such power, it has been held, is usually referred not to the right of eminent domain, but to the right of taxation. The subject is discussed in
Bauman v. Ross,
It is also established that the Legislature has the power to determine by the statute imposing the tax what property is benefited by the improvements; and when it does so its determination is conclusive upon the owners and the courts, and the owners have no right to be heard upon the question whether their lands are benefited or not, but only upon the validity of the assessment and its proper apportionment.
Spencer v. Merchant, supra.
Our own decisions are in accord with this principle. In
Tarboro v. Staton, supra, Mr. Justice Ilohe
quotes with approval the following excerpt from
Atlanta v. Hamelin,
The plaintiffs, however, earnestly contest the validity of the first proviso in the fourth section of the act. The proviso is this: the total cost of the street improvement in each district or section of the town as determined and declared by the board of aldermen shall be final and conclusive, subject to impeachment only for fraud or collusion, with the right of appeal.
With respect to this provision, the plaintiffs present the question whether the right of appeal is essential to due process of law. The question has frequently been considered by the courts and answered
*458
in the negative. In
Heets v. Michigan,
In
Spring Valley Waterworks v. Scottler,
In
Crane v. Hahlo,
From the act of 1921 (Private Laws, Extra Session, ch. 15), in which the method of determining the final assessment is set out, it appears that every abutting owner shall be given an 'opportunity to be heard and, if aggrieved by the findings or assessments of the board of alder *459 men with reference to the permanent improvements, to file his objections thereto with the clerk and to appeal from the decision of the board to the Superior Court in term, with right to file pleadings and have the issues tried and determined. The finding as to benefits is conclusive; the finding as to the total cost of the improvement is conclusive except in case of fraud or collusion. The determination of the total cost is only one step in the process of improvement and, however important, may under the authorities cited be committed to the board, of aldermen, subject to impeachment only for the causes stated, especially in view of the right to contest other questions and to have them finally decided on appeal.
The sufficiency of the notice prescribed in the act is sustained by a number of decisions. “It is settled that if provision is made for notice to and hearing of each proprietor at some stage of the proceedings upon the question what proportion of the tax shall be-assessed upon his land, there is no taking of his property without due process of law.”
McMillen v. Anderson,
The act referred to (Private Laws, Extra Session 1921, ch. 15) went into effect 14 December, 1921. On 2 September, 1922, the State Highway Commission and the town of Sanford entered into a contract in which the town agreed to pay the Atlantic Bitulithic Company the cost of constructing a portion of the State highway within the corporate limits of the town along Carthage Street and Hawkins Avenue, and the Highway Commission agreed to advance or pay to and reimburse the town. On the same day a supplemental contract was made by the town and the Atlantic Bitulithic Company in which the town agreed to pay the Atlantic Company the cost of such construction. Upon completion of the work the town paid the Atlantic Company for all the paving and other improvements done on the streets referred to, and the Highway Commission paid the town for that portion of the work for which it had promised reimbursement, and this amount was received by the town and applied as provided in section sixteen of the act.
The plaintiffs assail this section as an unlawful device by which 'some, of the owners of land abutting the State highway are assessed with costs paid by the Highway Commission and by which the funds of the commission are wrongfully diverted and committed to the discretion of the board of aldermen. This position, we think, cannot be maintained.
When a new governmental instrumentality is established, such as a municipal corporation, it takes control of the territory and affairs over *460 which it is given authority to the exclusion of other local governmental instrumentalities. The fact that a highway extends through the corporate limits of a town or city does not deprive the municipality of its exclusive control over the streets or relieve it of the duty of improving and keeping them in repair. “The object of incorporating a town or city is to invest the inhabitants of the locality with the government of all matters that are of special municipal concern, and certainly the streets are as much of special and local concern as anything connected with a town or city can well be. It ought, therefore, to be presumed that they pass under the exclusive control of the municipality as soon as it comes into existence under the law.” 1 Elliott on Roads and Streets, sec. 505; 2 Cooley on Taxation, 1251.
As we have heretofore indicated, the statutes prescribing the method of improving the streets of the town and regulating assessments against property are referred to the right of taxation, and the exercise of such right is not judicial but entirely legislative. The legislative authority is vested in the General Assembly (Const., Art. II, sec. 1), and counties and municipal corporations, as-was said in
Jones v. Comrs.,
What has been said applies also to the plaintiffs’ contention as to the storm sewer, for, as suggested heretofore, the finding by the board that a particular district is benefited is not subject to review in the absence of gross abuse of the privilege. The questions discussed in this connec *461 tion are addressed to tbe legislative discretion and are disposed of by tbe provisions of section fifteen.
In our opinion tbe statutes in question do not offend against tbe State Constitution or tbe due process clause of tbe Federal Constitution. On tbe other band tbey afford tbe plaintiffs adequate means for litigating tbe matters in controversy before tbe board of aldermen, and if desired, by appeal from tbeir decision to tbe Superior Court. We therefore bold that tbe statutory requirements should be observed and tbe injunction dissolved. His Honor’s judgment continuing tbe injunction to tbe final bearing is accordingly reversed. Let this be certified to tbe end that further proceedings be bad according to law.
Eeversed.
