96 Wash. 344 | Wash. | 1917
— The city of Seattle, by ordinance, provided for widening and extending a street situated within its boundaries, known in the record as Northlake avenue. The work required taking and damaging certain tracts of land owned in severalty by a number of persons. This action was brought to condemn the necessary land and to ascertain the just compensation required to be paid to the several owners. Among the tracts of land taken and damaged, were tracts belonging to the appellants in this action, who appeal because dissatisfied with the award made them. The errors assigned all relate to rulings of the court excluding evidence offered to show the value of the property taken.
Again, in this jurisdiction, the assessor places his own values on real property for the purposes of taxation. It is a matter of common knowledge, of which the courts can take judicial notice, that the valuations placed thereon by such officers for such purposes are relative rather than actual, that the functions of the board of equalization are not to correct insufficient or excessive valuations as a whole, but are to correct erroneous valuations, as applied to an individual or a community of individuals, so that the individual or the community of individuals are not called upon to bear either more or less than their just proportion of the burden of taxation. For these reasons, and for the further reason that the evidence is at best but secondary, the courts maintain the rule that assessment rolls are not independent evidence of the market value of real property in cases where such market value is the sole question at issue. The principles apply to the present case, and the court did not err in its rulings.
The appellant Magnesia Asbestos Supply Company makes the further contention that the court erred in refusing to permit it to show that its land had an additional value by reason of the fact that it owned adjacent shore lands abutting upon Lake Union which gave the land a water outlet. This land was separated from the lands a part of which was taken by a street, and was not included as lands taken or damaged in the petition to condemn. The tracts were, not used in common, and the most that could be said concerning them is that they could be so used by making use of the in
A witness called to testify as to the value of the property of the last named appellant was at first permitted to state the price he had paid for lands in the same vicinity although some distance from the land in question. Afterwards, on motion of the city, the testimony was withdrawn from the consideration of the jury, and error is assigned thereon. The trial court was of the opinion that the properties were not sufficiently similar in character and were too widely separated to render the evidence of probative valued These are matters on which no general rules can be laid down, and when and when not such evidence is admissible must rest largely in the discretion of the trial court, to be reviewed only for manifest abuse. We find no error in the ruling.
The appellant Wayland offered to show that the property taken in which she was interested had recently been administered upon in the probate court; that, in the course of administration, it had been appraised by the three disinterested competent persons appointed by the court as appraisers, and that an inheritance tax had been paid to the state based on the values shown by the appraisement; and proffered the return showing the appraisement as evidence of the value of the property. The trial court rejected the offered proofs, we think rightly. Many of the reasons for the rejection of the tax rolls are applicable to this return, but, in addition, the probate proceedings with reference to this proceeding fall within the maxim of res inter alios acta, and can in no way be binding upon, or be evidence against, those who were not parties to them.
The probable cost of a new grade and new paving is not recoverable for two reasons. In the first place, the duty to grade and pave a street in this jurisdiction is a municipal duty. The cost cannot be imposed upon private property except in those cases where the property is benefited by the work, and then only in an amount which does not exceed the benefits. The property owner does not, therefore, contribute to the expense from his own resources; he but refunds to the city in one kind of property that which the city has from the necessities of the case conferred upon him in property of another kind. In the second place, the cost of grading and paving a street that may thereafter be assessed upon abutting property is too uncertain, remote, and contingent to be recovered as damages in a condemnation proceeding brought to condemn land for the creation of the street. The city may or may not cause the street to be graded or paved; or, if it does, it has a wide choice of methods, it may establish the grade upon one line or another, and may order it paved to one width or another, and with any one of a variety of materials the cost of which will vary with the character of grade and materials chosen. Unless these are known in advance, which was not the case here, there is no basis upon which the jury can estimate the cost. Detroit v. Beecher, 75 Mich. 454, 42 N. W. 986, 4 L. R. A. 813.
The appellants Eason and Eyanson own land adjacent to the track of a railway company. They introduced evidence tending to show that their property was available for manufacturing purposes, and its location with reference to the railway company’s track, and tendered in evidence a map on which was delineated a line showing the manner by which the property could be connected with the existing railway by the construction of a spur track. The court refused to permit the map to go to the jury, and the appellants excepted. The map could properly have been submitted to the jury, but we
Our conclusion is that the judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.
Ellis, C. J., Mount, Parker, and Holcomb, JJ., concur.