92 Kan. 513 | Kan. | 1914
On March 4, 1911, B. Rockwell began an action to enjoin the city of Junction City from paving a street in front of his abutting lots and from collecting a special assessment levied upon them. He challenged the sufficiency of the petition upon which the mayor and council of the city had acted, and also the validity of the statute under which the proceedings were taken. Upon a trial judgment was rendered in favor of Rockwell, but while the case was pending in this court upon an appeal taken by the city a settlement was effected between the parties, and the appeal was dismissed. On June 14, 1911, the day on which the district court rendered its decision in favor of Rockwell, Bernard O’Malley, E. W. Roediger and W. O. Mullins filed a petition of intervention, alleging substantially the same facts and setting up the same grounds for injunction that had been pleaded by Rockwell. In its answer to the intervenors’ petition the city alleged, among other things, that the ordinance authorizing the special assessment was passed on March 13, 1911, and that as the proceeding of the intervenors was not commenced until June 14,1911, more than ninety days after the enactment of the city ordinance by which the assessment due on éach lot was. ascertained and the liability of the owner fixed, it was barred by the statutory limitation which prohibits the bringing of any action to set aside an assessment which is not begun within thirty days after such assessment is ascertained. While the court allowed the filing of intervenor’s petition, it finally sustained the contention of the city and held that the action of the intervenors. was barred by the thirty-day statute of limitation1. The validity of this ruling is the principal question, upon this appeal.
The statute provides that: “No suit to set aside the said assessments shall be brought after the expiration.
The contention that the action begun by Rockwell before the bar of limitation was complete inured to the benefit of the intervening appellants can not be sustained. While all of the owners of property abutting on the street to be improved might have united in an action, each would have been seeking to enjoin the levying of an assessment on his own particular property, and an order of injunction in favor of Rockwell would not have relieved the property of the appellants from the assessment. There was no privity of estate or community of interest between appellants and Rockwell, and hence the intervention of appellants did not relate back to the commencement of the action by Rockwell. Each was entitled to attack the proceedings for the protection of his own property within the thirty-day period, and until he did intervene the statute-of limitation continued to run. In Toby v. Allen, 3 Kan. 399, an action was brought to recover on a note and to foreclose a mortgage. A defendant against whom a judgment was rendered upon service by publication intervened and procured an opening up of the judgment, and then set up another note and a subsequent
“Where no community of interest or privity of estate exists between the intervener and another party or parties to the original action, the commencement of the action before the statute of limitations has run does not inure to the benefit of a person who intervenes after the time when an action would be barred.” (p. 665.)
Other cases bearing upon the question are: Mason v. City of Chicago, 163 Ill. 351, 45 N. E. 567; Duwphy v. Riddle et al., 86 Ill. 22; Burleson v. Burleson, 28 Tex. 383; Forrey v. Holmes, 65 Mo. App. 114; Jaicks v. Sullivan, 128 Mo. 177, 30 S. W. 890.
It is contended that the statute under which the street was improved is unconstitutional in that it delegates legislative authority to the petitioners, and is therefore invalid. This contention is based on the language of the section, wherein it provides that whenever three-fourths of the resident property owners fronting on a street shall petition the council for an improvement the council “shall” cause it to be made. (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 1420.) The word “shall” is often used interchangeably with “may,” and may very well be so construed where to give it the compulsory meaning would strike down the statute in which it appears. {Bank v. Lyman, 59 Kan. 410, 53 Pac. 125; The State v. Franklin County, 84 Kan. 404, 114 Pac. 247.) A similar question was before the court in Salt Co. v. Hutchinson, 72 Kan. 99, 82 Pac. 721, and it was there held that the term should be treated as directory, as that meaning seemed to be more in harmony with the legislative purpose as shown by other provisions of the law.
The defects in the preliminary proceedings, whatever they may have been, were waived by the failure of appellants to challenge their sufficiency within thirty days after the assessment was ascertained.
The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.