84 Wash. 660 | Wash. | 1915
The purpose of this action was to secure a permanent injunction against the letting of a contract for a local improvement by the defendant town acting through its proper officers. After a trial, a permanent injunction was granted. The defendants appeal.
The facts are in substance as follows: On March £5, 1914, the city council passed a resolution declaring its intention to improve “G” street, in the town of Cosmopolis, for a distance of six blocks. This improvement would extend from the principal business street outward. The pro
Upon the trial, certain property owners within the district testified that they did not desire the improvement. Certain others testified that they were in favor of the improvement. There are general expressions in the testimony that the property within the district will not be benefited by the improvement. There are other general expressions that the property within the district will be benefited substantially by the improvement. This action was brought by one of the property owners only, claiming, however, in the complaint, to bring it in behalf of all the other property owners similarly situated. The evidence as to the specific value of the property and the specific amount of the benefits that would accrue to any particular tract of property by reason of the improvement was confined largely to three lots owned by the respondent. These three lots, aside from the improvement, were of the approximate value of eight or nine hundred dollars. The amount which these lots would be as
The respondent claimed that her property would not be benefited by the improvement, and that the action of the city council in ordering the improvement for the cost of which she would be assessed $522 was arbitrary. The trial court made no statutory findings of fact, but filed a memorandum decision in which it was stated that the value of the improvement to the respondent’s property would be from $100 to $150; and concluded that, since the assessment would be a much larger sum than this, the council had acted in an arbitrary manner in ordering the improvement.
The controlling question in the case is: Assuming that the respondent’s property would be assessed for more than it would be benefited by the improvement, should the injunction have been issued restraining the city council from proceeding with the improvement? The local improvement code provides a method by which objections to the assessment roll may be filed, and in the event they are overruled by the city council, a right of appeal to the superior court is given, and from the superior court to this court. We think the respondent had an adequate remedy under the statute, which gives the right to file objections to the assessment roll, and an appeal therefrom. If the respondent has rights which are being invaded by the amount of the proposed assessment upon her property, they can be fully and adequately protected by means of the appeal provided by the statute. It would seem reasonably plain that one property owner within a district, even though her property would be assessed for a sum greater than the benefits which it would receive, should ■not, for this reason, prevent the prosecution of the entire improvement. ■
Something is said in the briefs about the cost of the improvement being greater than fifty per cent of- the assessed value’of the real’estate within the district. But the section
The judgment will be reversed.
Morris, C. J., Ellis, Fullerton, and Crow, JJ., concur.