Sanderson v. City of Seattle

95 Wash. 582 | Wash. | 1917

Chadwick, J. —

In the year 1898, King county brought a condemnation proceeding in aid of the United States government project to dig the Lake Washington canal. The then city of Ballard was made a party claimant. In consideration of a judgment for $7,500 then entered and paid to the city as damages for flooding the streets of the city, the government was permitted to raise the waters of Salmon Bay nine feet above the city datum. The city did not use the award to raise the grade of its streets above the water level, but used the whole recovery in the construction of a city hall. Afterwards the city of Ballard was annexed to the city of Seattle and ceased its functions as a separate municipality.

On the 25th day of November, 1912, the city of Seattle passed ordinance No. 30,389 providing for the improvement of Shilshole avenue. A local improvement district was created, the object being to elevate the level of the streets (which would be flooded by the raise of the waters nine feet above the city datum) by filling with earth etc. and to tax the cost thereof to the abutting property. An assessment roll was made up, and on October 28, 1914, the council passed ordinance No. 33,863 approving and confirming it. It is further made to appear by the complaint:

“That the grading and other improvement of said Shilshole avenue and other streets and avenues included in said ordinance No. 30,389 is rendered necessary solely by the raising of the waters of Salmon Bay by the United States Government in its construction of a ship canal between Salmon Bay and Lake Union in said city of Seattle; and that such improvement is not a local or special improvement within the meaning of the constitution and laws of the state of Washington, and the said plaintiffs’ property and the other property within said local improvement, and none of said property is subject to special assessment therefor.
“That . . . the city of Ballard was annexed to the city of Seattle and the city of Seattle succeeded to all of the property of the city of Ballard, including said city hall and succeeded to all of its obligations and indebtedness. That by *584reason thereof, the city of Ballard became obligated to restore and improve said streets when submerged by the waters of Salmon Bay by the raising thereof in the construction of said ship canal, and said city of Ballard and its successor, city of Seattle, became and is estopped to assess any of its cost and expense of said improvement against the abutting property.
“That said city of Seattle had no power, authority and jurisdiction to create a local improvement district and charge the cost and expense of making said improvement against plaintiffs’ property and the other property located within said district No. 2,601; that to do so would be pro tanto the taking of plaintiffs’ property for a public use without compensation and against the constitution of the state of Washington.
“That said assessment was absolutely void and without law to support it.
■ “That the aggregate amount attempted to be levied against plaintiffs’ property heretofore described by said assessment roll above mentioned is the sum of $1,774.80. That on the 23d day of November, 1914, said plaintiffs, in order to avoid future charges for interests, cost and penalties, paid said amount to the city of Seattle under protest, demanding at said time that said amount so paid should be paid back to them in case it should be determined and adjudicated by the court that said assessment aforesaid be illegal and void.”

The court sustained a general demurrer to the complaint. The case is brought here upon an appeal from a judgment of dismissal. It is not made to appear that appellants appeared, objecting or protesting, at the time the assessment roll was made up and confirmed by the court.' Under any theory of the law, whether under the statute or the general rules of procedure, appellants having failed to object and having paid the assessment, we cannot inquire into any question going to the procedure. All informalities, as well as all defenses going to the amount of the assessment, are merged in the order of confirmation. The order of confirmation is not subject to collateral attack unless made void by some sub*585sequent proceeding. No general rule in special assessment cases is subject to as few exceptions as this. Hamilton, Law of Special Assessments, § § 633, 634; New Whatcom v. Bellingham Bay Imp. Co., 16 Wash. 131, 47 Pac. 236; Potter v. Whatcom, 25 Wash. 207, 65 Pac. 197; Martin v. Olympia, 69 Wash. 28, 124 Pac. 214; North American Lumber Co. v. Blaine, 89 Wash. 366, 154 Pac. 446.

The burden of appellants’ plea is that it was the duty of the city, having succeeded to the former corporation of Ballard, to pay at least the $7,500 recovered in the condemnation suit before coming onto the property of private owners. However appealing to the conscience this plea may be, it is without legal effect in a collateral suit. It is no more than a plea, a defense which, if permissible at all, might have been urged at the time the roll was made up and still open to obj ections. If then found to be meritorious, it could have been passed upon by the council, subject, of course, to a right of appeal to the superior court if rej ected by that body.

The city had jurisdiction of the subject-matter. To deny it the power to assess, there must be more than a showing of a lack of benefit, or that the assessment is too high, or that proper credits have not been given. Page and Jones, Taxation by Local and Special Assessments, § 933. There must be a lack of original jurisdiction to make the improvement. We understand this to be the meaning of Laws 1911, p. 455, § 23 (Rem. Code, § 7892-23).

Counsel cites many cases from this court holding to the principle that a court will interfere to prevent the collection of an assessment where the council had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter, or had so far departed from the forms of the statute as to oust itself of jurisdiction. Some of the cases cited have been seriously questioned if not really overruled. But in none of them is it held that the rule relied on would apply to such a state of facts as is disclosed in the record before us.

*586The city had power to make the assessment. An erroneous exercise of that power, although operating as a denial of a positive right, will not void a proceeding so as to make it vulnerable to collateral attack. This is always so where the thing complained of must be made to appear by resort to facts dehors the record of the original proceeding, for it is fundamental that courts will not hear, on collateral attack, nonjurisdictional objections which should have been urged before the tribunal created to hear and determine.

We find no merit in the contention that, inasmuch as the assessment was made necessary solely by reason of the government project, this is not such an improvement as to warrant assessment of appellants’ property as for a local improvement.

The raising of the streets is no part of the government project. If, by the raising of the waters, certain streets are flooded, it is the province as well as the duty of the city authorities to grade the streets to a proper level. Neither the conditions nor the cause of the conditions calling for the improvement in any way deprive the city of jurisdiction to improve its streets. If, in doing so, it fails to properly credit a proportionate amount of money collected upon a general judgment to abutting property, or which is the same thing, makes a greater assessment than should be laid upon the property, the remedy is in the proceeding and under the statute. Schuchard v. Seattle, 51 Wash. 41, 97 Pac. 1106, is not in point. In that case the amount of damage and benefit to the particular lot had been made the subject of a judicial inquiry. The judgment was held final as against a subsequent attempt of the city to satisfy its judgment by resort to the local improvement statutes. The only time the question of benefits to the particular property involved in this case has ever been considered was under ordinance No. 30,389. The case falls more nearly within the reasoning of the court in Grandin v. Tacoma, 87 Wash. 98, 151 Pac. 254.

*587Having neglected to assert their present plea as a defense in the assessment proceeding and having paid the assessment, appellants are without present remedy.

Affirmed.

Ellis, C. J., Main, and Webster, JJ., concur.