77 Wash. 570 | Wash. | 1914
In 1882, the owners of certain lands, lying in sections 11, 12, and 13, in township 25, north, of range 3, east of the Willamette Meridian, in King county, Washington, caused the same to be platted into a number of 10-acre tracts, and to be recorded on the records of King county as the Farmdale Homestead Tracts. The appellants Bailey, in the year following, purchased one of such tracts, designated on the recorded plat as tract 38 of Farmdale Homesteads. For some reason, not shown in the record, the owners of the remaining tracts later became dissatisfied with the
In January, 1911, the city of Seattle, by ordinance, provided for the extension of the existing streets over the appellants’ property. The ordinance directed that the cost of the proceeding should be “paid for by special assessment upon the property specially benefited lying within the limits of Tract No. thirty-eight (88), of the Farmdale Homestead Tracts, in section 12, township 25, north, range 8, East, W. M.and that, “any part of the cost of said improvement that is not finally assessed against the property specially benefited shall be paid from the general fund of the city of Seattle;” the tract of land described being the land owned by the appellants. The ordinance further provided that condemnation proceedings be begun by the corporation counsel of the city of Seattle to acquire the land necessary to be taken for the purposes, and to ascertain the compensation to be paid the owners for the lands so taken. Proceedings looking to, that end were accordingly begun in the superior court of King county, and resulted in a judgment of condemnation of the land necessary to be taken for the streets, and an award to the owners by a jury of the sum of $20,985.70. The land taken consisted of a strip 80 feet in width off the west side of the tract; a triangular shaped piece off the south side; a strip 60 feet wide extending through the east side; and two strips each 60 feet in width, extending east and west through the tract; the relative situation being shown in the sketch following. The continuous line shows the boundaries of the appellants’ land, and the broken lines, the street extensions and the immediately surrounding territory.
After judgment had been entered on the award of the jury, supplemental proceedings were begun in the superior court to procure an assessment upon the property benefited to pay the judgment, in accordance with the terms of the ordinance directing the improvement to be made. A petition was filed asking a reference of the matter to the eminent domain commissioners, which the court granted, and that body subsequently filed an assessment roll, in which they assessed against the remaining lands of the appellants as one body, without discrimination as to the condition in which it was left, the entire judgment, together with interest on the same amounting to $1,047.66, and the costs of the city expended in the proceedings, consisting of the expenses of the corporation counsel, the city engineer, the county auditor, and the per diem and expenses of the eminent domain commissioners, totaling $451.42, the whole making a grand total of $22,452.38. Ex
The assignments of error made by the appellants can be reduced into two principal questions, namely: first, the validity of that part of the initiatory ordinance limiting the area to be assessed to pay the costs of the improvement, and second, the excessiveness of the levy as made. Noticing these questions, we shall first inquire as to the validity of the ordinance.
The right of a city in an ordinance initiating a public improvement to establish an assessment district which alone shall be assessed to pay the costs of the improvement has the sanction of legislative enactment. Rem. & Bal. Code, § 7790 (P. C. 171 § 75). The section of the statute expressly provides that the legislative body of a city directing a public improvement to be made “may in the ordinance initiating any such improvement establish an assessment district and said district when so established shall be deemed to include all the lands or other property especially benefited by the proposed improvement, and the limits of said district when so fixed shall be binding and conclusive on” the commissioners appointed to make the assessment. That such an enactment is within the power of the legislature is generally held by the courts. It was in effect so held by this court in the cases of In re
It is not to be understood, however, that the city can, even though directly authorized so to do by the legislature, levy the entire costs of the improvement on the district so fixed in the initiatory ordinance, regardless of the question of benefits. This, we think, is prohibited by that clause of the constitution authorizing the legislature to “vest the corporate authorities of cities, towns, and villages with power to make local improvements by special assessment, or by special taxation of property benefited.” True, there is here no direct prohibition against assessing property benefited by an improvement in excess of the benefits conferred thereby, but such is clearly its evident meaning. Const., art. 7, § 9.
The meaning of the constitutional provision is, however,
Tested by these principles, is the property of the appellants in this instance assessed beyond its just proportion of the costs of the improvement? It seems to us that the record justifies.the conclusion that it is palpably and grossly so. We are not unmindful of the rule, heretofore laid down by
Again, the eminent domain commissioners are alone in the opinion that the actual benefit conferred on the appellants’ property by the improvement equalled the sum assessed upon
The problem of the amount of the reduction that ought properly to be made is not easy of solution; but, from the record as a whole, we feel that any assessment greater than one-fourth of that levied upon the lands by the commission would be excessive. The order of the court will be, therefore, that the judgment confirming the assessment roll be set aside as to these appellants, and the cause remanded to the lower court with instructions to reduce the assessment upon the appellants’ property to the sum of $5,613.10, and confirmed in that sum.
Crow, C. J., Parker, Morris, and Mount, JJ., concur.