58 Neb. 245 | Neb. | 1899
Appellant was denied relief in the district court of Douglas county, wherein she sought a perpetual injunction against the collection of a special assessment upon lots 5 and 6, in block 12, in the city of Omaha. One side of lot 5 faces upon the paved street with respect to which the assessment was made, and the opposite side of lot 5 forms the line of separation between lots 5 and 6. At the time the equalization of assessment was made upon these lots, section 21, chapter 13, Session Laws 1889, was in force, and among its provisions were the following: “The city clerk shall complete the assessment roll for the city on or before the second Monday of October in each year, * i:' * and when such roll is completed, the council shall hold a session of not less than five days as a board of equalization, giving notice of said sitting for at least six days prior thereto, in three daily papers of the city, * * and in all cases before any special taxes that may be levied, except for constructing wood sidewalks, shall be finally levied, it shall be the duty of the council to sit as a board of equalization, for the purpose of equalizing any such proposed levy of special taxes or assessments, and correcting any error therein, giving notice of such sitting in the same manner as above provided in this section. «- And thereupon such assessments and special taxes shall be finally made.” It was proved on the trial that preceding the assessment and levy under consideration there was but one publication in one daily paper in the city of Omaha, two publications in another, and that probably there was not a third paper of daily issue in the city. The city council had therefore no jurisdiction to make the adjustment, levy, and assessment attempted. (McGavok v. City of Omaha, 40 Neb. 64; Bellevue improvement
It is, however, urged that appellant should not be heard to allege the above-noted lack of jurisdiction, because of certain of her own acts. These were, first, that she signed the petition for the paving of the street. But this signing was before the pavement was put down and could have had no reference to a waiver of compliance with statutory requirements regulating the proceedings whereby the levy and assessment were to be made after final completion of the work. The other fact upon which appellee relies is that appellant paid without protest three of the ten annual installments into which the assessment was divided. The brief of appellee comments thus upon this branch of the case: “The plaintiff knew that this tax was a lien on her property; that it amounted in law to a judgment against herself and property. She proceeded to discharge the lien to pay that which amounted to a judgment, and all this with the certain knowledge of the steps necessary to be taken by the city council, and .yet no complaint for five years.” If this statement of the principle involved is correct, the analogy is destructive of appellee’s argument. If a judgment had been rendered against Mrs. Wakeley in a case wherein she had never been served with a summons and had never appeared, would the mere fact that subsequent to the date of the so-called judgment she made one or more payments estop her to deny the validity of the judgment when by process of law it was attenipted to collect the balance; and, if so, on what principle could the estoppel be founded? As to the payments actually made, she might, under some circumstances, be denied affirmative relief, but why should she be held concluded against asserting the invalidity of the balance of the judgment when payment thereof is sought to be coerced? The partial payments which prevent the running of the statute
Reversed and remanded.