25 Wash. 300 | Wash. | 1901
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The complaint in this action in-substance alleges that the city of Seattle is a city of the first class; that the city has passed an ordinance providing for the laying of a water main, with the necessary gates, tees, crosses, fire hydrants and other appurtenances for a reasonable water service and fire protection, along a certain street in said city; that the plaintiff is the owner of a lot fronting on said street; that for the purpose of paying for said water main.and its gates, etc., the city has created a local improvement district, and that the lot of the plaintiff is in said district; that the ordinance provides that the property abutting on the street along which the main is laid, .especially benefited thereby, shall bear the costs of construction; that E. H. Thomson, Frank H. Little, and Luther B. Youngs constitute the board'of public works
The constitution provides that corporations for municipal purposes shall not be created by special laws, but that the legislature by general law shall provide for «uch
“To provide for making local improvements, and to levy and collect special assessments on property benefited thereby, and for paying for the same or any portion thereof; . . . To determine what work shall be done or improvements made at the expense, in whole or in part, of the owners of the adjoining, contiguous, or proximate property, or others specially benefited thereby, and to provide for the manner of making and collecting assessments therefor; to provide for erecting, purchasing or otherwise acquiring water works, within or without the corporate limits of said city, to supply said city and its inhabitants -with water, or to authorize the construction of same by others when deemed for the best interests of such city and its inhabitants, and to regulate and control the use and price of the water so supplied;”
and shall have power
“To provide for laying and collecting taxes on real and personal property for its corporate uses and purposes, and to provide for the payment of the debts and expenses of the corporation; ... To borrow money for corporate purposes on the credit of the corporation, and to issue negotiable bonds therefor, on such conditions and in*305 such manner as shall be prescribed in its charter; but no city shall, in any manner or for any purpose, become indebted to an amount in the aggregate to exceed ten per centum of the value of the taxable property therein, to be ascertained by the last assessment for city purposes previous to the incurring of such indebtedness.” Bah Code, § 739.
Many other powers are given by § 739, supra, but for the purposes of this ease it is unnecessary to enumerate them. It is also provided in the same act that a city adopting a charter under its provisions should have all the powers which are now or may hereafter be conferred upon incorporated towns and cities by the laws of this state, and all such powers as are usually exercised by municipal corporations of like character and degree, whether the same shall be specifically enumerated or not in the act; and that the rule that statutes in derogation of the common law should be strictly construed should have no application, but that the same should be liberally construed for the purpose of carrying out the object for which it was intended. Bal. Code, §§ 741, 742. This act was passed to carry out the mandatory provision of the constitution that the legislature should by general laws provide for the incorporation of cities, and that cities and towns should be subject to and controlled by such general laws. To this act and general laws we must look for the powers of such corporation, and the powers so given must control unless they clearly contravene some other constitutional provision.
The constitution, in addition to the powers conferred by § 10, art.'ll, supra, provides that
“The legislature may vest the corporate authorities of cities, towns and villages with the power to make local improvements by special assessment, or by special taxation of property benefited. For all corporate purposes, all*306 municipal corporations may be vested with authority to assess and collect taxes, and such taxes shall be uniform in respect to persons and property within the jurisdiction of the body levying the same.” Constitution, art. 7, § 9.
It will be observed that equality of taxation under this section applies only to general taxation for corporate purposes. The part of the section relating to local improvements permits taxation according to local benefits. The city charter of the city of Seattle provides that:
“Whenever the public interest or convenience may require, the city council is hereby authorized and empowered to order the whole or any part of the streets, lanes, alleys, squares or places of the city to be graded or regraded to the official grade, planked or replanked, paved or repaved, macadamized or remacadamized, graveled or regraveled, piled or repiled, capped or recapped, and to order sidewalks, sewers, manholes, culverts, bulkheads, retaining walls, water mains, curbing and cross walks to be constructed or repaired therein; and to order any and all work to be done which shall be necessary to complete the whole or any portion of the said streets, lanes, alleys, squares or places; and the city council may levy and collect an assessment upon all lots or parcels of land specially benefited by such improvements to defray the whole or any portion of the cost and expense thereof, which assessment shall become a first lien upon all property liable therefor, prior and superior to all other liens and encumbrances.” Charter, City of Seattle, art. 8, § 11, subd. 1.
This provision of the charter was adopted in March, 1900. The legislature in 1899 passed an act authorizing the issuance of bonds by cities to pay for local improvements. The first section of that act reads as follows:
“Whenever any city shall have power and- authority vested in it by its charter or by any law of this state to order or cause the whole or any part of the streets, lanes, alleys, squares or public places of such city to be graded, re-graded, planked, re-planked, graveled, re-graveled,*307 piled, re-piled, paved, re-paved, macadamized, re-macadamized, capped, re-capped, or to order or cause sidewalks, sewers, man-holes, culverts, curbing, gutters, water mains, or crosswalks to be constructed or to order or cause to be made any local improvement whatever, and to levy and collect assessments upon the property benefited thereby or abutting, adjoining, contiguous or approximate thereto, to defray the whole or any portion of the cost and expense of any such improvement, the proper authorities of such city may, in their discretion, proidde for the payment of the cost and expense of such improvement by bonds of the district, which shall include the property liable to assessment for the payment of the cost and expense of such improvement according to the charter of such city, issued to the contractor, or by the proceeds of such bonds to be issued and sold as hereinafter provided.” Laws 1899, p. 234.
Section 4 of this act provides that in all cases where any city shall issue bonds as provided in the act, to pay the cost and expense of any local improvement, the said cost and expense shall be assessed against the lots and parcels of land, which under the provision of law, and the charter of such city, shall be liable therefor. This act must be regarded as an amendment to the general incorporation laws theretofore enacted by the legislature under § 10, art. 11, of the constitution. The city of Seattle has declared the laying of a water main to be a local improvement, the same as the grading’ of a street. The legislature has recognized and declared it to be a local improvement in the same class as the grading of a street. To the legislature, by the constitution, was confided the duty, by general laws, of defining and limiting the powers of municipal corporations. By the express provision of § 10, art. 11, of the constitution, all city charters framed or adopted by authority of the constitution shall “be subject to and controlled by general laws.” Every act of the legislature is presumed to be valid and consti
“Legislators, as well as judges, are bound to obey and support the constitution, and it is to be understood that they have weighed the constitutional validity of every act they pass. Hence the presumption is always in favor of the constitutionality of a statute; every reasonable doubt must be resolved in favor of the statute, not against it; and the courts will not adjudge it invalid unless its violation of the constitution is, in their judgment, clear, complete, and unmistakable.” Black, Interpretation of LaAvs, p. 93, and cases cited.
A statute can he declared unconstitutional only where specific restrictions upon the power of the legislature can be pointed out, and the case shoAvn to come Avithin them, and not upon any general theory that the statute is unjust or oppressive or impolitic, or that it conflicts Avith a spirit supposed to pervade the constitution, but not expressed in words. Sawyer v. Dooley, 21 Nev. 390 (32 Pac. 487); Wadsworth v. Union Pacific Ry. Co., 18 Colo. 600 (33 Pac. 515, 36 Am. St. Rep. 280, 23 L. R. A. 812).
There is nothing in our constitution imposing specific restrictions upon the poAver of the legislature to incorporate cities and give to such the municipal poAvers Ave haAre heretofore pointed out, including the power to maintain water works, although the city may regulate and collect pay for the Avater used, and including the poAver to create local districts for the construction of Avater mains. It has been held in this country generally that water Avorks for the supplying of cities and toAvns AA'ith Avater are undoubtedly for public and municipal purposes, and that
Cooley on Taxation, in speaking of water pipes in streets, says:
“Of these it has been said that ‘the benefits are local, as the use of the water must necessarily be mostly restricted to the benefit of the property on the lines, both for domestic purposes and the extinguishment of fires. The effect of supplying the streets with water is to enhance the value of the dwelling-houses thereon. The maintenance of the pipes and the supplying of water are necessarily a continuing expense,’ and for these reasons the assessment of the cost upon adjacent property is within the general principle of local assessments.” Cooley, Taxation (2d ed.), 620; Allentown v. Henry, 73 Pa. St. 404; Northern Liberties v. St. Johns Church, 13 Pa. St. 104; Allen v. Drew, 44 Vt. 174; Hughes v. Momence, 163 Ill. 535 (45 N. E. 300).
Redfield, J., in Allen v. Drew, supra, explains the principle of such assessment, and says:
“It is not easy to see any distinction between an assessment for building a sewer or sidewalk, and an aqueduct. They are each, in degree, a general benefit to the public, and a special benefit to the local property, both in the uses and in the enhanced value of the property. The proprietor may, indeed, leave his house tenantless, and his vacant lots unvisited, but the assessment is not, for that reason, void. Such assessments are justified on the ground that the subject of the tax receives an equivalent
“The only essential elements of a ‘local improvement’ are those which the term implies, viz., that it shall benefit the property on which the cost is assessed in a manner local in its nature, and not enjoyed by property generally in the city. If it does this, — rendering the property more*310 attractive and comfortable, and hence more valuable for use, — then it is an improvement. . . . This construction is fully warranted by the definition of the word 'improvement’ given by lexicographers. It has been defined as 'that by which the value of anything is increased, its excellency enhanced, or the like;’ or 'an amelioration of the condition of property affected by the expenditure, of labor or money, for the purpose of rendering it useful for other purposes than those for which it was originally used, or more useful for the same purposes.’ ” State v. Reis, 38 Minn. 371 (38 N. W. 97).
The legislature has authorized the payment by cities for water mains by local assessments, the issuance of bonds, etc. (Laws 1899, p. 234.) The city of Seattle falls within the class of cities mentioned in the act. The legislature has power under the constitution to authorize local improvements, and discretion, which ordinarily courts cannot review, to decide on what is a local improvement. When this discretion is exercised, courts should not interfere unless it plainly and clearly appears that the improvement is not such as can be recognized as being local in its .nature. State v. Maginnis, 26 La. An. 558; State v. Clinton, 26 La. An. 561; Cooley, Taxation, 609.
The constitution, when limiting general county, city, town, school district, and other municipal indebtedness to one and one-half per centum of the taxable property, provides that any city or town, with the assent of three-fifths of the voters therein, may be allowed to become indebted to a larger amount, but not exceeding five per centmn additional, for supplying such city or town with water, artificial light, and sewers, when the works for supplying such water, light, and sewers shall be owned and controlled by the municipality. Constitution, § 6, art. 8. This court has held that the indebtedness here provided for is in excess of that provided for general municipal purposes, and is for the special purpose of supplying water, light,
When the constitution was framed it was well known that there were cities growing rapidly in population, that there was an inadequate supply of water, and that in most instances the supply would have to be conducted in aqueducts for a long distance before reaching the city; and under such circumstances it is reasonable to presume that the excess indebtedness authorized was to aid in the procurement and distribution of such water supply. Because a large sum of the money borrowed has been used in this particular case in extending water mains in the city is no reason for holding that local district assessment cannot be resorted to in supplying districts of the city which are at present without water, or where there is an inadequate supply. It would be just as reasonable to hold that, because a city had improved some of its streets from the general fund, therefore it could not create an assessment district for a particular street. We know that in supplying cities with water it is necessary, to lay upon some of the streets large mains, from which lateral mains conduct the water to outlying parts of the city. It would certainly be unjust to tax all the cost of such large mains to the property abutting on the street where they happen to be laid. . In the wisdom of the city authorities, it might be judged prudent to lay such mains and pay for the same out of the general fund. One drawing from this main through a lateral main receives a benefit for which he is not taxed in the local improvement. One having property on the main conduit, it is true, may escape local taxation. The same may be said of one having property on a street improved out of the general fund. These are matters that
“There is no imperative requirement that taxation shall be equal. If there were, the operations of government must come to a stop, from the absolute impossibility of fulfilling it. The most casual attention to .the nature and operation of taxes will put this beyond question. Ho single tax can be apportioned so as to be exactly just, and any combination of taxes is likely in individual cases to increase instead of diminish .the inequality.” Cooley, Taxation (2d ed.), 164.
The contention of the appellant that because the constitution has limited the indebtedness of cities for supplying the same with water, artificial light, and sewers to five per cent, additional to the amount allowed for general indebtedness, local assessment districts cannot be created for constructing water mains, is not sound. The constitution limits the general indebtedness of cities, yet in the case of Baker v. Seattle, 2 Wash. 576 (27 Pac. 462), this court held that the indebtedness of local assessment districts for street improvements was not to be considered ivhen computing the limit of municipal indebtedness. Por the same reason the debts of local assessment districts for laying Avater mains should not be considered as having any bearing on the limit of the indebtedness of cities for Avater, artificial light, and sewers.
But it is urged by the appellant that, because the city may charge for the water furnished to its inhabitants, and make a profit on the same, the city is like an independent corporation furnishing the city Avith Avater, and, as it is clear that such corporation would not have the power assumed by the city in creating local districts, therefore
It may be that the city is not authorized to charge for water so as to make a profit. The mere fact that in reality it charges so as to make a profit in no way determines the question of its power, which is all that is involved in this case, to create a local assessment district for the purpose of laying water mains. The argument of the appellant is based on the assumption that the city has a legal right to make a profit by the sale of water, the same as a private water company. In view of the legislation clearly authorizing the creation of local assessment districts for laying water mains, if the right to make a profit on the water sold, and the right to create the district cannot stand together, it would be our duty, for reasons heretofore given, to hold that the making of a profit by the sale of water was the unconstitutional act, and not the creation of the local improvement district. But the question whether or not the city can charge water consumers more than the amount necessary to pay for the costs and expenses of improving and maintaining the water system and the additional cost of bringing the water to the city for distribution is not properly before us in this action. The allegation of the complaint, in substance, is that the city of Seattle charges for the water supplied by it certain fixed rates, which are in excess of the actual cost to the city, and that the city requires payment in advance. The question suggested can be raised onlv by one who is charged such excessive rates, or who is refused 'water unless he pays such excessive rates. There is no allegation in this complaint that the
We hold that the city of Seattle, under its charter, the laws, and the constitution of this state, may create a local assessment district for the purpose of laying a water main; that it may charge the cost and expenses of the same according to benefits to the real property in such district, benefited thereby, and that the act of the legislature authorizing the issuance and sale of bonds by cities to pay for local improvements (Session Laws 1899, p. 234), applies to the city of Seattle.
The judgment of the court below is therefore affirmed.
Beavis, C. J., and Fullerton, Anders, Mount, Dunbar and Hadley, JJ., concur.