64 So. 301 | Ala. | 1913
By the common-law writ of certiorari appellant sought to have the Madison law and equity court review and quash a proceeding assessing the cost of an attingent street improvement against her property. On the hearing the writ was quashed, after which this appeal was taken.
After a certified copy of the record of the proceeding of the city council and the city commissioners — a government by commission having been established pending the proceeding under authority of the act of April 21, 1911 (Acts 1911, p. 591 et seq.) — had been exhibited to the court to sustain the assessment, defendant was allowed to show aliunde the record the contents of the notice which had been published in a newspaper advising property owners that the assessment book was ready for inspection, and that the commission would sit at a designated time and place to hear objections, in pursuance of sections Í377-1379 of the Code. Appellant’s objection was that the notice should be shown by the record and not otherwise. Our judgment is that the notice was shown by the record, and that the error of admitting other evidence, if it -was error, was harmless. The final resolution confirming the assessment and fixing it as a charge against appellant’s property as shown by the record of the proceedings had by the city council and the board of commissioners, recited the fact that the requisite advertisement had been made in compliance with the statute, to wit, in the Mercury Banner, a newspaper published in the city of Huntsville, and of general circulation therein, on the 15th day of April, 1912, setting out a copy of the same. The statute evidently contemplates a record of proceedings for local assessments, and a record of some sort could not well be dispensed with. It provides, for example, that on appeal to the circuit court the cause “may be tried on the record without other pleadings.” — Section 1394. It
Shortly after the commission came into existence it proceeded to consider the assessment roll which had been prepared under the direction of the city council, and adopted a resolution fixing the assessment previously made for the improvement of Holmes street “from its intersection with Fifth street and Pratt avenue to Bison street.” The record shows that in all previous proceedings the proposed assessment had been described as for the improvement of Holmes street “from its intersection with the west property line of Pulaski road or pike to its intersection with the east property line of Pratt avenue and Fifth street.” The statute provides (section 1370 of the Code) that if the improvement be finally ordered and constructed, the council shall have power and authority, after completion and acceptance thereof, to assess the cost of constructing said improvement, or any part thereof, upon and against the property abutting on any street, etc. The resolution first adopted by the commission may, perhaps must, be construed as an effort to fasten the cost of the improvement upon abutting property in advance of a completion of the work as theretofore proposed. It, there
Appellant showed in her petition for certiorari that she had gone to the circuit court with her grievance immediately after those errors appeared which marked the first effort of the commissioners, and without waiting for further action by the commission, that the circuit court had taken jurisdiction, and that the proceeding was still pending in that court. Appellant contends that the pendency of the questions raised by the certiorari in the circuit court deprived the board of commissioners of the power to proceed to the correction of errors which we may suppose it was the purpose of the application to the circuit court to have corrected. We do not think so, but it will suffice for this case to say that we have before us no evidence of the pendency of the proceeding in the circuit court.
Section 1252 of the Code provides that: “No ordinance or resolution intended to be of permanent operation shall be adopted by the council at the same meeting at which it is introduced, unless unanimous consent of those present is given for the immediate consideration of such ordinance or resolution, such consent to be shown,” etc. Section 1258 provides for the publication of ordinances or resolutions of a general or permanent nature. Section 1185 provides for the transmission of ordinances and resolutions intended to be of
Appellant further complains that the publication ordered by the board of commissioners was made in a newspaper owned, edited, and published by one of the commissioners, and hence that a process so “conceived in sin and shapen in iniquity” cannot serve the purpose and end of that due process Avhich is required by the law of the land. It is provided (Code, §§ 1193, 1194) that neither councilmen nor aldermen shall be interested in any Avork, business, or contract, the expense, price, or consideration of which is paid from the treasury. Substantially the same inhibition is applied to commissioners where a commission form of municipal government is established. — Act April 8, 1911, p. 330, § 19. There is no statutory provision invalidating publications of notice made in the circumstances of which appellant complains. The element of publication by which the owners of property are affected and in which they are therefore interested is merely the fact of publication in a newspaper answering the requirements of the statute as to place of publication and generality of circulation.
Proceedings of this sort under review, though differing in some material respects from ordinary proceedings for the levy and collection of taxes, have root in the sovereign taxing power of the state. They must be so contrived and administered as to reach all property OAvners alike. If personal notice may be dispensed in one case it may in another. The theory on which constructive service is permitted in such cases is that no oAvner can hold his property exempt from the liabilities, duties, and obligations Avhich the state has a right to impose because he may not be reached by personal process. “In such cases some substantial form of notice has always
Appellant complains also that she has not been given a hearing by an impartial tribunal. She notes that the municipal authorities, as agents of the public, instituted the proceeding for the assessment against her property, superintended the procedure, and passed upon her objections, although it was really the municipality, the public- generally, for whose benefit the proceeding was had and the assessment made. In short, she objects, the city council and the board of commissioners were judges in their own case. It is fundamental that no man shall be judge in his own case, and due process requires an impartial tribunal. But it is settled that this principle, or these principles, do not exclude citizens from sitting as judges or jurors in cases in which the interests of the community in which they live are placed in opposition to the interests of private persons, nor do they extend to the action of municipal authorities in levying special assessments. — Hibben v. Smith, 191 U. S. 310, 21 Sup. Ct. 88, 48 L. Ed. 195; Lent v. Tillson, 110 U. S. 316, 11 Sup. 825, 35 L. Ed. 119.
Another objection, taken in rather a general way, to the effect that the proceeding authorized by the statute
Affirmed.