134 Ark. 292 | Ark. | 1918
The General Assembly of 1917 enacted a special statute creating an improvement district covering the whole of Conway County for the purpose of constructing a bridge across the Arkansas River at a certain point in that county. Acts 1917, p. 314. The statute creates a board of commissioners to manage the affairs of the district and to provide for the construction of the improvement, and that board is in turn authorized by the statute to appoint a board of assessors “to assess the value of the benefits which will accrue to each piece of real property within said district, and also to all railroads, tramroads, street railroads, electric light and power plants, telephone and telegraph lines, pipe lines, and all other franchises connected with the realty within said district.” The statute further provides that the assessments of benefits made by the board of assessors shall be filed with the county clerk, and that notice thereof shall be given by publication in a newspaper, and that on a date to be fixed in the notice the board of assessors shall assemble to hear the complaints of property owners “and shall increase or decrease the assessments, after having heard the complaints of the property owners, so as to adjust the burden of the assessment to the benefit which will accrue to the property.”
The right of appeal by any aggrieved property owner from the action of the board of assessors to the the board of commissioners is conferred by the statute and also right of appeal to the circuit court from the action of the board of commissioners. The language of the statute conferring the right of appeal to the circuit court is as follows:
“The commission shall hear all appeals and determine the same. From such findings by the commissioners any property owner feeling himself aggrieved may appeal to the circuit court within sixty days, by filing his complaint in the circuit court setting up the facts, and serving a notice upon the chairman of the commissioners, and such complaint shall be heard and determined as any action at law.”
Appellant owns and operates a line of railroad through Conway County and its roadbed and other real property was included in the assessment of benefits. The company appealed from the board of assessors to the board of commissioners and thence to the circuit court in the manner pointed out by the statute. There was a trial of the case in the circuit court which resulted in a judgment sustaining the assessment of benefits fixed by the board of commissioners, and an appeal has been prosecuted to this court.
We will, therefore, confine this review to such questions as are authorized by statute to be inquired into in the circuit court, and we expressly refrain from deciding any question as to the validity of the statute with respect to the method of assessments, or the kind of property to be assessed. The validity of the statute in either respect must be tested, if at all, in another appropriate action instituted for that purpose.
On appeals in this character of cases we are concluded by the findings of the trial court upon legally sufficient evidence (St. L. & S. F. Rd. Co. v. Bridge Dist. supra). Therefore, the only question for decision is whether or not the evidence is legally sufficient to support the finding of the circuit court as to the amount of assessment against appellant’s property, and the uniformity of the assessment with those imposed upon other property in the district.
Onr conclusion is that the finding of the trial court was sustained by the evidence, and, as that is the only question properly presented on this appeal, the judgment must be affirmed, and it is so ordered.