69 Wash. 508 | Wash. | 1912
These appeals are from judgments of the superior court for King county affirming the action of the city council of Seattle in making and confirming a supplemental assessment against property of appellants for the cost of a local street improvement. Except as to certain contentions made by appellant Metropolitan Building Company, our discussion and conclusions will apply to all alike.
In December, 1905, the city council of Seattle passed Ordinance No. 13,074 providing for widening, extending and changing the grades of Fourth avenue and other streets in the city, providing for the prosecution of condemnation proceedings to acquire and damage property rights as against the owners of abutting property and property through which certain of the proposed extensions were to be made, and providing for the levying of a special assessment by eminent do
It is contended in behalf of appellant that since the actual cost of the improvement charged by special assessment against the property within the district exceeded the original estimated cost thereof, the supplemental assessment is void, at least to that extent. This contention is rested upon the decision of this court in Chehalis v. Cory, 54 Wash. 190, 102 Pac. 1027, 104 Pac. 768, where it was held in effect that, under the local assessment statutes applicable to cities of the third class, the original, estimated cost of the improvement fixed the limit of the total amount chargeable by special assessment against the property within the district benefited thereby. A reading of that decision will show, however, that the conclusions there reached by the court were because of the special provisions of the statute relating to local improvement assessments in cities of the third class, Rem. & Bal. Code, §§ 7705, 7706, requiring such estimate to be made, notice thereof to be given to the property owners, and an opportunity for them to protest against the making of the proposed improvement, before it could be finally ordered by the council, and prohibiting the council from ordering such improvement over the protest of the property owners except upon certain conditions. No other hearing was afforded the property owners before the council as to the making of the improvement nor as to the regularity and correctness of the assessment levied by the council. The only recourse of the property owners under that statute was by an original action in the courts against the assessment, or in resisting the lien of the assessment when it is sought to be foreclosed in the courts. The holding that the estimate and notice thereof to the property owners was a necessary jurisdictional step, and that such estimate could not be exceeded by the assessment,
“If the board of public works finds the facts set forth in said petition [for improvement] to be true, they shall cause an estimate of the cost and expense of such improvement to be made and transmit the same, together with all papers and information in their possession touching such improvement, with the estimated cost thereof, and their recommendations thereon, a description of the property which will be specially benefited thereby and a statement of the proportionate amount of the cost and expense of such improvement which shall be borne by such property, to the city council.”
No notice to the property owners of the amount of the estimate is required to be given; no provision is made for the council receiving protests from the property owners against the making of the improvement, nor for any hearing before the council upon that question. It is evident from the charter provisions that the estimate is to be furnished to the council simply to enable it to act advisedly in the ordering of the improvement, and especially to the end that it may be informed as to whether or not the cost of the proposed improvement will exceed fifty per cent of the assessed value of the property within the proposed local improvement district, that being the limit of special assessment prescribed by § 7571, Rem. & Bal. Code, and § 11, art. 8 of the city charter. The estimate is not made for the purpose of informing the property owners of the extreme possible cost of the improvement, and they are not given by statute or charter any hearing upon that question as a preliminary step to the ordering of the improvement, though they are later given ample opportunity to be heard upon the confirmation of the assessment roll
Counsel for appellants make some contentions which seem to be rested upon the fact that the record made upon the trial in the superior court does not affirmatively show the cause of the deficiency in the funds to pay the cost of the improvement to be such as in law renders their property chargeable by supplemental assessment to make up such deficiency. The cause of the deficiency in this case is not shown by the record before us, except in so far as such cause is shown by the passage of three ordinances cancelling certain assessments upon the original assessment roll. One of these ordinances, cancelling original assessments amounting to $12,543.13, contains recitals showing that such cancellations were because of the fact that the assessments so can-celled were void because they were against property which had been found and adjudged to be damaged by the improvement in the condemnation proceedings. This fact would render such assessments void and unenforcible under our decisions in Schuchard v. Seattle, 51 Wash. 41, 97 Pac. 1106; Seattle & Puget Sound Packing Co. v. Seattle, 51 Wash. 49, 97 Pac. 1093, and Hapgood v. Seattle, ante p. 497, 125 Pac. 965. The other two ordinances cancelled original assessments amounting to $20,669.42 without reciting any reasons therefor. So there was cancelled by these three ordinances, $33,212.55 of the original assessments. As to how the balance of the deficiency represented by the supplemental assessment was caused, the record does not inform us. By the sup
Now the only affirmative fact appearing in this record pointing to the lack of deficiency in the funds to the amount of the supplemental assessment requiring that assessment is the making and confirming of the original assessment. Counsel for appellants seem to rely upon the presumption of the validity of the original assessment as against the presumption of the validity of the later supplemental assessment. Of
Another contention made in behalf of appellants which seems to us to be rested upon their erroneous view of the presumed regularity of the original assessment, is that the original assessment is a final adjudication upon the amount of the benefits conferred upon appellants’ property and of the amount of benefits conferred upon property covered by the cancelled assessments; and that, therefore, no different or
Our attention is called to In re Sixth Avenue West, 59 Wash. 41, 109 Pac. 1052, Ann. Cas. 1912 A. 1047, in support of the contention that assessments, which would be chargeable to exempt property but for its exemption, cannot be charged to other benefited property. Whatever may be said of that view when dealing with property which is by law entirely exempt from taxation and local assessments under all circumstances, we are to remember that we are not here dealing with such property. It is true that property which in the condemnation proceeding is found to be damaged by the improvement, is spoken of as being exempt from the assessment for the improvement; it is not, however, property which is by law exempt from assessment generally. In this case the so-called exempt property is not assessable, only because it is not benefited. Hence, it is not a case of making appellants’ property bear the burden of such nonassessable property. So long as appellants’ property is not assessed by the combined original and supplemental assessments more than it is benefited, and so long as such assessments are not inequitably apportioned, there is not legal cause for objecting to such assessments. Of course the fifty per cent limit cannot be
Some other contentions are made by appellants, but we think they have been sufficiently disposed of in favor of the city by what has been said in the case of Hapgood v. Seattle, supra, except as to the appeal of the Metropolitan Building Company, which we will now notice. There is levied by this supplemental assessment a charge upon land held by the Metropolitan Building Company under a lease from the state of Washington, the land being a part of the old state university grounds. The record- indicates that, at the time of the condemnation proceedings, this land was held by the Seattle Realty & Building Company under a lease from the state. Just what the nature of that lease was is not shown; but, in any event, the Seattle Realty & Building Company was awarded compensation in the condemnation proceedings on account of damage to this same land resulting from the change of the grades of the streets and the improvement of them accordingly. It is contended that this resulted in rendering the land, and all interests therein, free from liability to special assessment to pay for the improvement, upon the ground that the award of such damages was in effect an adjudication that the land was not benefited by the improvement. In the light of Schuchard v. Seattle; Seattle & Puget Sound Packing Co. v. Seattle, and Hapgood v. Seattle, above cited, we are constrained to hold that this contention must be upheld. If there could be no original assessment, because of no benefits, as it was in effect adjudicated in the condemnation proceeding, there would, of course, be no benefits to support a supplemental assessment to aid in paying for the same improvement.
We are of the opinion that the judgment of the superior court should be affirmed, except as to the charge made by the supplemental assessment against the land held by the Metropolitan Building Company under its lease from the state; and that, in so far as that charge is concerned, the judgment
Crow and Gose, JJ., concur.