118 Wash. 464 | Wash. | 1922
— On June 25, 1918, the town of Grand-view, Washington, pursuant to a prior resolution, by ordinance established nine local improvement districts, 29 to 37 inclusive, for the purpose of constructing a sewer system consisting of a trunk sewer and sub-sewers or laterals. District 29 covered the trunk sewer, and the other eight districts the laterals. The district takes in a large area and includes the business section, the more thickly settled residence part of the town, and suburban and acreage property. Assessment or reassessment rolls were prepared and filed. Notice was given that a hearing upon them would be had before the town council on September 24, 1918. It appears, outside of the recorded proceedings of the town council, that certain property owners appeared to object orally to the assessments, and upon being advised protests should be in writing, were told they could do so at an
The first question is whether the protestants were properly allowed to maintain their appeal to the superior court. The contention is that the written objections were not timely filed. The statute (Rem. Code, §7892-21; P. C. § 1009) provides that the notice of hearing on the assessment roll shall notify all persons desiring to object ‘ ‘ to make such objections in writing and file them with such clerk at or prior to the date fixed for such hearing”, and it is argued that, as the written objections were not filed at or before September 24, 1918, nor earlier than the first adjourned meeting, October 15,1918, therefore they are too late, and that the superior court had no right to entertain the appeal upon its merits. The argument rests upon a part of § 7892-21, Rem. Code (P. C. § 1009); Laws of 1911, ch. 98, §21, p. 452, which provides: ‘ ‘All objections shall state clearly the grounds of objections; and objections not made
Formerly a property owner, without appearing before the city council, could, within a reasonable time, contest the validity of special assessments for local improvements by an independent action in court. Monk v. Ballard, 42 Wash. 35, 84 Pac. 397. Since the act of 1911, however, assuming power in the city to make the improvement, and in the absence of fraud, such independent action cannot be maintained except for causes mentioned in § 23, which are non-existent here. Shaser v. Olympia, 92 Wash. 466, 159 Pac. 756. Evidently the purpose of the law was to change the remedy and provide for appearance in the proceedings before the legislative body of the city. It is the property owner’s day in court, so to speak, and the penalty, upon his failure to so appear, is that he waives objections or the right to an independent suit in equity. But this does not argue that the city does not have the power, while the matter is yet pending and undetermined by an ordinance confirming and approving the assessment roll, to entertain protests filed in good faith. Had such been the intention of the legislature it would have said so. In Van Der Creek v. Spokane, 78 Wash. 94, 138 Pac. 560, speaking of these same provisions of the act of 1911, we said: “Manifestly, these
Next, it is claimed the written protests filed were not sufficient to raise the questions presented on the appeal from the approval of the assessment roll. An examination of the objections shows that, while they contain many things foreign to the inquiry made in the superior court, they were entirely sufficient to call the attention of the council to the claims that the assessments were not levied according to special benefits (in some cases no benefit at all), that they amounted to confiscation of property, were unreasonable, oppressive, arbitrary, and made upon a fundamentally wrong basis. The evidence supporting the judgment from which this appeal has been taken falls within the scope of the written objections, which are sufficient as to formality under the cases of Real Estate Investment Co. v. Spokane, 59 Wash. 416, 109 Pac. 1057, and In re Patterson, 98 Wash. 334, 167 Pac. 924.
Upon the merits, the statute, Rem. Code, § 7892-15 (P. C. §1003), relating to the construction of trunk sewers, reads:
“In any such case the district created to bear such assessment shall be outlined in conformity with topographical conditions, and in case of trunk sewers, shall include as near as may be all the territory which can be sewered or drained through such trunk sewer and the subsewers connected thereto, ... In distributing such assessments, there shall be levied against the*469 property lying between the termini of the improvement and back to the middle of the blocks along the marginal lines of the street or areas improved, such amounts as would represent the reasonable cost of a local sewer and its appurtenances, . . . suited to the requirements of such territory in the mode prescribed in section 7892-13, and the remainder of the cost and expense of such improvement shall be distributed over and assessed against all of the property within the bounds of said entire district in accordance with the special benefits conferred thereon and in proportion to area.”
Section 7892-13, Rem. Code (P. C. § 1001), just referred to, is the plan or system of assessments by subdivisions or zones paralleling the margin of a street or public place to be improved. Thus, by statute, in distributing the assessments for a trunk sewer, there shall be levied (1) against the property between the termini of the improvement and back to the middle of the blocks, such amounts as would represent the reasonable cost of a local sewer, in the mode prescribed in the section relating to the zone plan, and (2) the remainder of the total cost shall be distributed over all the property within the entire district in accordance with the special benefits conferred thereon and in proportion to area — not in proportion to area alone, but in accordance with the special benefits and in proportion to area.
The assessments for the trunk sewer that were approved by the city council were made by an engineer who lived in Spokane. He had never been in Grand-view and knew nothing of the topography of the improvement district. He was wholly unacquainted with the different, parcels of property as to whether they were improved or not, and he knew nothing of their locations with reference to the business and residence sections of the town. In arriving at part one of the
The rule is that the action of the city council in determining the amount of the assessment is conclusive, unless it is shown that the council acted arbitrarily, or proceeded upon a fundamentally wrong basis. Moore v. Spokane, 88 Wash. 203, 152 Pac. 999. Notwithstanding the fact that this improvement has diffused benefits generally throughout the municipality, that of itself is not sufficient, of course, to sustain this arbitrary assessment which has proceeded upon a wrong basis and in direct opposition to the wise and essential requirements of the statutes. “Taxation by special assessment is defensible only upon the theory of corresponding special benefits to the property assessed. Const., art. 7, sec. 9.” East Hoquiam Co. v. Hoquiam, 90 Wash. 210, 155 Pac. 754; In re West Marginal Way, 112 Wash. 418, 192 Pac. 961.
Some contention is made by the respondents in support of the judgment that the city council erred in excluding certain property from the boundaries of the district. Oftener than otherwise, this is a difficult matter to determine. Exactness can seldom be attained. In re Pine Street, 57 Wash. 178, 106 Pac. 755; Spokane v. Fonnell, 74 Wash. 417, 135 Pac. 211; In re Ninth Avenue, 79 Wash. 674, 141 Pac. 61. Like the trial court, we are not disposed to disturb the action of the city
Judgment affirmed.
Parker, O. J., Fullerton, Tolman, and Bridges, JJ., ■ concur.