23 Haw. 487 | Haw. | 1916
OPINION OF THE JUSTICES BY
The plaintiff in this case is a citizen, resident and taxpayer of this Territory and the owner of land situated in Manoa Improvement District No. 1, a residential section of the city and county of Honolulu. He purports to enter into this submission on behalf of all other citizens and taxpayers of said district, as well as on his own behalf, but no others have appeared. The defendant, as treasurer of the city and county of Honolulu, in furtherance of certain ordinances passed by the board of supervisors of the city and county and pursuant to a certain resolution of said board, proposes to prepare, issue, sell and deliver certain improvement bonds of the city and county, and this the plaintiff seeks to have enjoined. The plaintiff claims that the statute under which the municipal officials have proceeded is in conflict with the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution and section 55 of the Organic Act of this Territory; that the proceedings were not in conformity with the statute; and that the bonds, if issued, will be invalid. The improvement statute, comprising sections 1793 to 1813, of the Revised Laws, as amended in certain respects by Act 164 of the Session Laws of 1915, provides in substance, as follows: That whenever in the opinion of the board of supervisors of the city and county of Honolulu it is desirable to open, extend or widen, or to grade, pave, curb or otherwise improve any highway, such betterments or im
The agreed facts show that on May 17, 1915, the board
On behalf of the plaintiff it is contended that the statute violates the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution by authorizing the taking of private property for public use without just compensation and without due process of law in that it fails to provide that the assessments on the different parcels of land affected must be in proportion to, and shall not exceed, the special benefits received from the improvements for making which the assessments are levied. True, as argued, the theory upon which taxation by special assessment for public improvements is sustained is that special benefits are conferred upon certain property and that that property shall contribute to the expense of the improvement in substantial proportion to the amount of benefit accruing to it from the improvement. 2 Page and Jones, Taxation by Assessment, Secs. 651, 665; 5 McQuillan, Mun. Corp. Sec. 2018. Special assessment statutes have given rise to a great mass of litigation and divergent views thereon have been expressed by different courts. It would be useless to attempt to review or reconcile the cases. Counsel for the plaintiff contend that their point must be sustained if it appears, as they claim it does appear, that the statute makes no provision that assessments shall not be in substantial excess of special benefits. Among the cases cited are Norwood v. Baker, 172 U. S. 269, and White v. Gove, 183 Mass. 333. In Norwood v. Baker, it appears that a strip of land was condemned and taken under the right of eminent domain for the purpose, of opening a street through to connect with an existing street on each side of the strip in question. Pursuant to a State statute the whole cost of the operation, including the value of the strip and the ex
It is contended that the statute is in conflict with section 55 of the Organic Act of this Territory in that it provides for the incurring of indebtedness and issuance of bonds for
It is contended that the proceedings did not comply with the statute in that they included a combined assessment according to area and frontage whereas the statute (Sec. 1793) provides for the use of those two methods in the alternative. We think there is no merit in this point. The agreed facts show that the plan intended to be carried through by the board of supervisors included a combination of improvements. The board was authorized to divide the district into sub-districts and to treat them differently according to their condition and situation, and the assessment for grading and paving according to area,'while that for
The plaintiff contends that in order that bonds issued under the statute may be valid every step required by the statute must have been taken strictly as directed, whereas the agreed facts in this case show that the contract and bond were not executed by the contractor within ten days from the date of the awarding of the contract, as required by section 1798. In Perine v. Forbush, 97 Cal. 305, the statute provided that “if said original bidder neglects, fails or refuses for fifteen days after the first posting of notice of the award to enter into the contract, then the city council shall again advertise for proposals, as in the first instance, and award the contract for said work to the then lowest regular responsible bidder.” The court said, “It is true that statutes which fix the time within which official acts are to be performed are often held to be merely directory as to the time so fixed, but such a statute is never so construed when its language indicates the contrary intention; as, for instance, when the statute attaches a consequence to the failure to perform the act within the time limited,” and held that the provision was mandatory. But the provision here is quite different: it is that “No bid shall be considered unless accompanied by a certified check, or equivalent, payable in and in favor of the city and county, for not less than ten per cent, of the amount bid; which check, or equivalent, shall be forfeited to the city and county unless the successful bidder shall sign the contract and furnish an approved bond within ten days after the contract is awarded.” The language of the California statute was equivalent to an express declaration that a contract should not be executed after the expiration of fifteen days from the date of the award. Our statute neither
A judgment denying the injunction prayed for may be entered.