Road Improvement District No. 1 v. Glover

86 Ark. 231 | Ark. | 1908

Hill, C. J.

The General Assembly of 1907 passed an act “to provide for the creation of improvement districts for the .building, constructing, maintaining and repairing of public roads in the State of Arkansas,” which was approved on the 4th of March, 1907, and applied to thirty-seven counties in the State. Pulaski County was one of the counties included in the act, and under its provisions the county court of Pulaski County created Road Improvement District No. 1, and -directors were elected, the benefits determined and assessments levied, and a contract was about to be let for the construction of the improved road, when Glover, a landowner in said district, brought a bill to enjoin the execution of the contract, the levying and collection of the assessments.

The complaint was met by a general demurrer, which was overruled, and judgment entered on the' complaint, and the district appealed. The complaint will be set out in the statement of facts. It will be seen therefrom that grave questions as to the constitutionality of the act are raised; and the questions therein raised and others have been presented to the court in-briefs and oral argument, and have' received consideration from the court.

But, under the settled practice of this and all other appel-' late courts not to pass upon the validity or the constitutionality of an act of a co-ordinate department of the government if the case can properly be decided upon any. other clear ground, the court finds it unnecessary to pass upon any of the constitutional-questions raised. Railway Company v. Smith, 60 Ark. 221; Martin v. State, 79 Ark. 236.

The complaint alleges: “That on November 26, 1907, it was found and ordered by said board of directors that all lands embraced in said district would be benefited by the building of said road, no notice of any hearing and no opportunity to be "heard upon this question having been given to any -of the owners of lands within said district, and neither the total amount of the benefit to the lands in said district nor the amount of the benefit to each part of said lands having been found.”

In Paulsen v. Portland, 149 U. S. 30, it was said: “While not questioning that notice to the taxpayer in some form must be given before an assessment for the construction of a sewer can be sustained, as in any other demand upon the individual for a portion of his property, we do not think it essential to the validity of a section in the charter of a city granting power to construct sewers that there should in terms be expressed either the necessity for or the time or manner of notice. The city is 3. miniature State, the council is its Legislature, the charter is its constitution; and it is enough if, in that, the power is granted in general terms, for, when granted, it must necessarily be exercised subject to all ‘limitations imposed by constitutional provisions, and the power to prescribe the mode of its exercise is, except as restricted, subject to the legislative discretion of the council. Thus, in the case of Gilmore v. Hentig, 33 Kan. 156, it was held thus: ‘Where a statute authorizes a city to provide for the construction of sewers and drains, and to tax the costs thereof upon the adjacent property owners, but does not require that any notice shall be given to the property owners, held, that such failure to require notice does not render the statute unconstitutional or void, but notice must nevertheless be given, and the city would have a broad discretion with reference to the kind of notice and the manner of giving the same.’ See also Cleveland v. Tripp, 13 R. I. 50; Davis v. Lynchburg, 84 Va. 861; Williams v. Detroit, 2 Mich. 560; Gatch v. Des Moines, 63 Ia. 718; Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. Pittsburgh, Wheeling, etc., Railroad, 17 W. Va. 812, 835.”

In Fallbrook Irr. District v. Bradley, 164 U. S. 112, it was said :■ “The Legislature, when it fixes the district itself, is supposed to have made proper inquiry, and to have finally and conclusively determined the fact of benefits to the land included in the district, and the citizen has no constitutional right to any other or further hearing upon that question. The right which he thereafter has is to a hearing upon the question of what is termed the apportionment of the tax, i. e., the amount of the tax which he is to pay. Paulsen v. Portland, 149 U. S. 30, 41. But when, as in this case, the determination of the question of what lands shall be included in the district is only to be decided after a decision as to what lands described in the petition will be benefited, and the decision of that question is submitted to some tribunal (the board of directors in this case), the parties whose lands are thus included in the petition are entitled to a hearing upon the question of benefits, and to have the lands excluded if the judgment of the board be against their being benefited. Unless the Legislature decide the question of benefits itself, the landowner has the right to be heard upon that question beffinc his property can be taken. This, in substance, was determined by the decisions of this court in Spencer v. Merchant, 125 U. S. 345, 356, and Walston v. Nevin, 128 U. S. 578.”

The doctrine of Paulsen v. Portland has been followed and approved frequently in the Supreme Court of the United States, and also in thé State courts. See 12 Rose’s Notes to U. S. Rep. 378, and 3 Supp. to Rose’s Notes, 357.

It will be seen from the above excerpts that the Legislature may determine the benefits to be assessed against property owners; but when the Legislature, instead of doing so itself, delegates that power to a city council, board of improvement or other governmental agency, then such inferior council or board must give notice in order to comply with the “due process” provision of the State and Federal constitutions. It- will be furdier seen that the lack of the requirement for such notice in the statute will not invalidate the statute, for the law will presume that the tribunal invested with this power will give notice before the assessments are determined; and therefore the courts read into, such statutes the requirement that notice be given before assessments can be assessed, in order that they may be constitutional.

This is but another application of the principle of construction that courts will always sustain a statute, if one construction will make it constitutional and another will malee it unconstitutional, by adopting the constitutional construction.

The admission that the allegation of the. complaint above quoted is true admits that no notice was given to the property owners of any hearing before the assessments were levied, and therefore the assessment, and consequently all actions of ' the board based upon such assessments, are void.. Before there could be a valid proceeding under this statute, such notice must be given to the landowners as will meet the requirements in the State and Federal constitutions of due process of law before assessments can be levied upon their property within the district.

The judgment is affirmed.

Opinion delivered May 23, 1908.

on motion to modify judgment.

Hile, C. J.

Appellant asks a modification of the judgment on the ground that the injunction is so broad that it will prohibit the district from proceeding under the act, and that the court, although it declined to pass upon the act, yet sustained an injunction against any proceeding under the act by the district.

But counsel are mistaken as to the scope of the injunction. It does not enjoin the district from proceeding under the act, but enjoins the commissioners from carrying out any contract or from letting any contract, or from issuing any bonds of the district with reference to a certain contract, or any other contract, or from levying any tax upon the propery within the district; and the collector was enjoined from attempting to collect any tax or enforcing any assessment upon the property within the district. While the language of the decree is somewhat broad as to the letting of any contract, yet it evidently means the specific contract mentioned in the complaint or any other based on the present proceedings. The court has held that the assessment, for reasons státed in the opinion, is void, and therefore all proceedings based upon it are void and should be enjoined. There is no injunction against the board proceeding under the act; and this court has declined to pass upon the act until there is a proceeding under it in conformity tc law.

'Counsel say that there are other questions raised which are too serious to permit of any further proceeding under the act without having them finally settled by this court, and say that if the board should go back and give notice as indicated in the opinion and proceed to make a levy, they would be. met by another injunction, and would be back to this court asking to have the same questions settled which have been already presented. “Not a cent can be borrowed by the district,” say counsel, “until these questions are finally settled by this court, and all the acts and proceedings of said board are held up, and have been- for a long time, awaiting the action of this court on these questions. This suit is one to test the validity of the act.”

It is not the duty of the courts to be an examiner of titles or an approver of bonds, but merely to determine litigated questions when properly presented before it; and a decent respect for the acts of a co-ordinate department of government always restrains them from passing upon the constitutionality of such acts if the decision can be placed upon any other clear ground.

Counsel also urge that a landowner is not entitled to two days in court before the question of benefits is passed on, and point out that under the act he would have a day in chancery court when his property is proceeded against to enforce the lien assessed against it; and it is argued that in that suit the due process of law requirement is met. The court is aware that there are some decisions which sustain this position, and considered them on the hearing, although it did not discuss them in the opinion. The purport of them is that, if no notice is provided before assessing the property, yet if the owner can be heard, in a suit to take the property for the tax, to assert the unconstitutionality. of the proceedings against his property, this is a compliance with the due process provision.

It can just as reasonably be argued that, because a landowner can go into a court of law or equity’ and obtain relief against some unconstitutional proceeding against his property or some proceeding against him without notice which would affect his property, this right to invoke the jurisdiction of a court to prevent the unwarranted taking of his property is a compliance with the due process provision of State and Federal constitutions. This view is not sound, and begs the whole question. The question is not as to the remedy of a landowner against an illegal exaction, but is as to the method to establish a valid lien against the property.

Under the principles involved, especially as declared by the Supreme Court of the United States, which is the final arbiter upon these questions, the rule is deduced that- a landowner is entitled to notice before an assessment, which is a lien upon his property, is established, and it can not be validly established until he has had an opportunity to be heard unless the Uegislature itself determines-t’he question of benefits — and even when it determines it there may yet be a judicial question left, as in Coffman v. Drainage District, 83 Ark. 54, and Norwood v. Baker, 172 U. S. 269.

Motion for rehearing denied.