62 S.E. 1069 | N.C. | 1908
There was judgment for plaintiff for the amount of the assessment claimed, and defendants excepted and appealed, noting their exceptions as follows:
"The defendants excepted to the judgment rendered for the reason that, under the evidence and the facts found, it should have been rendered in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff, as no notice was given to the defendants of the assessment against the said land until after the assessment was made, and the defendants having been given no opportunity to appear before the board of aldermen before the assessment was made, the said assessment was the taking of property without due process of law, in violation of the Constitution of the United (256) States."
After stating the case: The right to make assessments of this character, and the reasons upon which it may be properly made to rest, are fully and forcibly stated in the opinion delivered by Shepherd, *188 J., for the Court, in Raleigh v. Peace,
In this case, the statute in question, Private Laws 1905, ch. 338, after authorizing the improvement, and establishing the method by which same shall be made and the cost collected, in the latter paragraph of section 9, and in reference to the collection of the assessment, provides: "That the same may be enforced and collected by suit instituted by the City of Kinston, in the Superior Court of Lenoir County, and in his answer to the action so instituted, the owner shall have the right to deny the whole, or any part, of the amount claimed to be due by the city, and to plead any irregularity in reference to the assessment or any fact relied upon, to question the legality of the assessment, (257) and the issues raised shall be tried, and the cause disposed of according to law and the course of practice of the court."
In the case before us it appears from the findings of fact, that the statutory methods have been strictly pursued. The order for the improvement was formally made, the work has been well done at a reasonable cost, and the amount assessed well within the limit allowed and established by the law; and in the present suit, instituted as provided by the statute, the defendants have been afforded opportunity to assert and establish every defense available to them, either by reason of irregularity or on the merits. In Davidson v. New Orleans,
The objections of defendant, therefore, urged on the ground that no proper notice was provided for, can not be sustained. The other objections adverted to in defendants' brief are not presented in the record, and, there being no valid objection shown, the judgment of the Superior Court is
Affirmed.
Cited: Kinston v. Wooten,
(258)