158 Ark. 187 | Ark. | 1923
Street Improvement District No. 296 of Little Rock was- created under general statutes (Crawford & Moses’ Digest, § 5647 et seq.) for the purpose of improving a certain street in the city. The district was legally created, and a majority of the property owners petitioned for the construction of the improvement, as provided in the statute, and, upon presentation of the petition to the city council, assessors were appointed to appraise the benefits. The list of assessments made by the board of assessors was filed with the city clerk, and notice thereof was given; protests were filed by certain property owners, and a time was set for hearing the protests, but, before the time arrived, the city council passed a resolution, upon the request of the commissioners of the district, allowing the assessment list to be withdrawn, which was done. A new assessment list was prepared and filed by the board of assessors, and, after notice thereof, was placed before the council.
There was an ordinance duly passed by the city council levying the assessments in installments on the real property in the district, and the ordinance was duly published as provided by statute. Crawford & Moses’ Digest, § 5668. More than thirty days thereafter appellant, who owns real property in the district, commenced this action to restrain the board of commissioners from enforcing payment of said assessments, on the ground that the levy was void for the reason that there was no authority for withdrawal of the first assessment list and the substitution of another list of assessments made by the board of commissioners. The court sustained a demurrer to the complaint and dismissed the complaint, and an appeal has been prosecuted tp this court.
Counsel for appellant rely upon the decision of this court in Kirst v. Street Improvement Dist., 86 Ark. 1, for support of the contention that there is no authority to withdraw a list of assessments in a district of this kind, or to make a new assessment after such withdrawal.
In the case cited we held that the maximum of authority to he exercised by the city council is to hear and determine appeals of individual property owners from the appraisement of their respective properties by the board of assessors, and that there was no authority on the part of the city council to undertake a general revision of the assessment list, or to require a newassessment to be made. The court did not hold, however, that 'there was no authority for a second assessment to be made after' the- first one had been, for any reason, discarded or found tp.be improper. On the contrary, the court held that, after a second assessment had been found to have been improperly made, it was still within the power of the board of commissioners to cause another assessment to be made. The statute places no limit upon the time within which the assessments shall be made, and, if any attempt to complete the list of assessments proves abortive, it is still within the power of the board of commissioners to require the board of assessors to assess the property and file a list thereof. This is entirely consistent with the view that a city council has no authority to revise the assessment list generally or to refer it back for a new assessment; for, as before stated, if, for any reason, the first assessment is found to be improper or erroneous before it becomes final, it, may be disregarded, and a new assessment made.
The statute provides a remedy in the chancery court for the correction of assessments after the • same have been''approved by the city'council, and, if the chancery court decides that the assessment is illegal, it "may restrain its enforcement. The board of commissioner's- may have- a new assessment made, and it would follow that, 'even-without such a decision against the validity of the assessment, the board of commissioners would have the "same power if the assessment was found to be improper or illegal.
The statute provides that actions “for the purpose of correcting or invalidating such assessment shall be forever barred and precluded” unless brought within thirty days after the publication of the ordinance. Crawford & Moses’ Digest, § 5608.
If the first assessment was withdrawn for insufficient reasons and a new list substituted therefor, it was a mere irregularity, which cannot be corrected except in •an action instituted within thirty days after the publication of the ordinance, for an action to test the validity of the assessment must be filed within thirty days. Such is tiie effect of our decision in Ingram v. Thames, 150 Ark. 443, where we held that an attack on the validity of the assessment on account of failure to file the plans and estimate within apt time must be made within thirty days after the publication of the ordinance levying t'he assessment.
This is the only point involved in the appeal, and, since we have found that the attack on the assessment list was not brought in apt time, it follows that the chancery court was correct in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint, and the decree is therefore affirmed.