244 P. 973 | Wash. | 1926
The plaintiff, Town of Brewster, a municipal corporation of the fourth class, commenced this action in the superior court for Okanogan county seeking foreclosure of local sidewalk assessment liens against the property of the defendants. A trial upon the merits resulted in a judgment of foreclosure against the several lots as prayed for, from which the defendants have appealed to this court.
On May 25, 1920, the town council passed a resolution ordering the construction, at the expense of the abutting property owners, of "a cement sidewalk 8 ft. in width on the northerly side of Bruce avenue between Second and Fourth avenue; and a cement sidewalk 8 ft. in width on the southerly side of Bruce avenue between Second and Fourth avenue;" according to *653 specifications adopted that day. The resolution directed its publication, and also notice to the property owners that they would have sixty days within which they might themselves construct the sidewalk in front of their respective properties. The resolution seems not to have been published, but there was an attempt made to notify the several property owners by delivering to them copies thereof, a considerable number of whom did not so receive notice of the resolution. No portion of the proposed sidewalks having been constructed within the sixty days, on August 16, 1920, the council invited bids for the construction of the whole of the sidewalks, and having received bids therefor, on August 28, 1920, awarded a contract for the work to one of the bidders. Thereafter the work was completed.
There does not seem to have been any formal acceptance of the work by an engineer acting for the city. However, thereafter the council caused an assessment roll to be made up, charging and apportioning the cost of the improvement to the abutting property according to benefits resulting thereto, as the council conceived such benefits to be. Thereafter there seems to have been some informal objections made to the assessment roll, and the council made some corrections therein, though, when considering such objections and making such corrections, the question of final approval and confirmation of the assessment roll was not before the council.
Thereafter the council caused due notice of the preparation and filing of the assessment roll, as corrected, and of the proposed final hearing thereon to be had before the council at the town council room on April 12, 1921, at 8:30 p.m., to be published in the Brewster Herald, a newspaper published and of general *654 circulation in the town. Thereafter at the time and place fixed for such hearing, the matter came on to be heard, and no one appearing or making any objections to the assessment roll, as then prepared and corrected, the council passed an ordinance in due form confirming and approving it. Thereafter notice being given to the owners of the several lots of the amount of the several assessments charged against them, and the particular assessments here in question becoming delinquent, this action was commenced by the town seeking foreclosure of the assessment liens so established.
[1] It is claimed in behalf of appellants that judgment of foreclosure should not be awarded, because of irregularities occurring in the initiation and prosecution of the improvement and assessment proceedings; the argument being, that such irregularities so far impair the jurisdiction of the council in the premises, that the confirmation of the assessment roll by the final ordinance passed in that behalf was ineffectual to establish assessment liens against the several lots. The claimed irregularities, as we understand counsel for appellants, are principally these: (1) That no sufficient notice of the intention of the council to make the improvement, or of the passing of the original resolution in that behalf, was given to the property owners; (2) that the specifications for the improvement were insufficient; (3) that the sidewalks were not constructed upon the proper grade and were in other respects defectively constructed; (4) that there was no approval of the work upon its completion by any engineer in behalf of the city; and (5) that the assessment was not according to benefits accruing to the several lots.
Under some of our earlier statutory provisions and decisions, as in Buckley v. Tacoma,
It is plain that the judgment of foreclosure must be affirmed. It is so ordered.
TOLMAN, C.J., MAIN, and MITCHELL, JJ., concur.