115 Ark. 594 | Ark. | 1914
(after stating the facts). The petition asking for the • formation of the improvement district designated it “for the purpose of building and laying concrete sidewalks on all public streets of the entire town of Cotton Plant.” The ordinance established the district prayed for as Improvement District No. 1, of the town of Cotton Plant, “for the purpose of building and laying concrete sidewalks on either or both sides of all public streets within said corporate limits.” The petition of the majority in value of property owners designated the said improvement as, “Said improvement to be the building and laying of concrete sidewalks on either or both sides of all public streets in said district.” The council laid off the whole town into an improvement district not for the purpose of building and laying concrete sidewalks on all public streets of the entire town of Cotton Plant and the board of improvement selected and designated for improvement, that portion of the streets of the town in the business and residence districts most used and where it was thought sidewalks were necessary and most desirable, leaving some portions of some of the streets without improvements and putting walks on only one side of other streets and at certain places thereon, leaving places on the improved streets without improvement where it was thought none was necessary and leaving oif entirely fourteen streets of the town without improvement.
In Watkins v. Griffith, supra, the court said: “The petition prescribed the extent of their authority and everything beyond that was without authority and void. The assent of the owners was never obtained, no petition was ever made for it and no power even given to the board to make it. The foundation of the improvement was the petition of the owners of real property situated in the proposed district. Under the statute the extent and character of the improvement as expressed in the ordinance must substantially comply with the terms of the petition upon which it is based.”
“It will be seen that our statutes require as a prerequisite to the exercise of the authority conferred upon the city council that a petition be first filed designating the boundaries of the district so that it may be easily distinguished. This is for the benefit of the property owners. A property owner might be willing to sign for the improvement district as designated in the first petition and might be unwilling to sign if a part of the property included within the boundaries of the district should be omitted. For this might have the effect of imposing upon the property owners additional and enlarged burdens which they did not contemplate when they signed the petition. A special limited ■jurisdiction is conferred upon the city council to lay off the district as designated by the property owners in the first petition and the council must conform strictly to the authority conferred upon it. For the same reason the chancery court had no power to change or alter the boundaries of the district, and it follows that in making up the valuation of the property in the district all the property situated in the district as it was created must be considered.” Smith v. Improvement District 108 Ark. 141.
In Harnwell v. White, supra, the court said: “Neither does the city or town council have authority to establish an improvement district for a purpose substantially at variance with the one prayed for, nor can the commissioners in the construction of the Improvement depart materially from the one designated in the petition praying and the ordinance establishing the district.”
Counsel insist that this view is in conflict with the holding in Boles v. Kelley, 90 Ark. 29, but we do not think so. The court passing upon'the sufficiency cf tliecomplaint there said: “We infer that the objection to the plans for paving the district is that the pavement did not embrace the whole of the streets, instead of a part. This is not a valid reason. The statute provides, that ‘immediately after their qualification the board shall form plans for the improvement within their district as prayed in the petition’ (Kirby’s Digest, 5672) ; and as soon as the plans have been formed and costs thereof ascertained it shall report the same to the city or town council. Kirby’s Digest, 5676. The petitions of property owners specify the improvement desired. In this case it was the pavement of the streets, but not how and to what extent they shall be paved. That was the duty of the board to determine.”
That improvement district was organized for “the pavement of the streets” and the designated purpose was definite and well understood, the obvious meaning of the expression “pavement of the streets,” requiring necessarily the laying of pavement upon a portion of the streets wide enough to accommodate the traffic thereon and conform to the purpose for which the district was organized. The court held “the how or manner of paving the streets and extent to which they should be paved was a matter for the board of improvement to determine, under the ordinance authorizing it.”
For said error the decree is reversed and the cause remanded with directions ito enter a decree perpetually enjoining the commissioners from the collection of assessments for the improvement, in accordance with the prayer of the petition.