JOHNSON
v.
CITY OF INKSTER
Docket No. 56632, (Calendar No. 12).
Supreme Court of Michigan.
Argued April 6, 1976. Decided October 6, 1977.Sommers, Schwartz, Silver, Schwartz, Tyler & Gordon, P.C. (by David L. Nelson), for plaintiff.
Harrison & Friedman, P.C. (by Bernard A. Friedman), for the City of Inkster.
LEVIN, J.
This is an action to enjoin collection of a special assessment for the widening of a section of Middlebelt Road levied against lots on residential streets having an outlet on the widened thoroughfare.[1]
The project was designed to eliminate traffic bottlenecks in the cities of Inkster and Westland caused by Middlebelt being narrower in those cities than it is to the north and south; the road was two lanes wide in Inkster and Westland, four lanes on the north and five lanes on the south. Safer and better access to Middlebelt is the special and peculiar benefit that assertedly justifies requiring the owners of interior residential lots to contribute to the cost.
Middlebelt is a county primary road extending north from the City of Inkster, in Wayne County, into Oakland County and extending south to the I-94 Expressway, Metropolitan Airport and beyond. It carries heavy traffic including large trucks going to and from the airport.
The Inkster section of Middlebelt was widened into a five-lane highway with two lanes each for north- and southbound traffic and a center left turn lane. Curbs, gutters and drainage facilities were also added.
The cost of the project was shared by the county *268 road commission and the cities. Inkster created a special assessment district to pay approximately one-half of its share of the cost.[2] The district consists of two land areas, one on each side of Middlebelt, 4000 feet along that road and 1500 feet deep.[3]
The trial judge found that the widening and improvement conferred a special benefit on the owners of interior residential lots justifying the special assessment. The Court of Appeals affirmed. We reverse.
"[T]he theory of the special assessment is that a special benefit has been conferred, over and above that conferred upon the community itself." Fluckey v Plymouth, 358 Mich. 447, 453; 100 NW2d 486 (1960).[4] The Court held that the widening of a two-lane rural blacktop road that was "amply adequate" for abutting residential owners into a four-lane concrete highway capable of carrying heavier vehicles did not confer a special benefit on abutting residential property. The Court saw the widening, improvements and changed conditions as a detriment to abutting residential owners.
Ten years later, in Brill v Grand Rapids, 383 Mich. 216; 174 NW2d 832 (1970), Fluckey was applied in setting aside a special assessment against residential property abutting a quiet residential *269 two-lane blacktop road transformed into a four-lane highway.
Although Middlebelt could not be characterized as a rural road or a quiet residential street and these interior residential lots do not abut the widened highway, the plaintiffs here, as in Fluckey and Brill, were not specially benefitted.
Every public improvement is "local" in the sense that it is located in a particular area; libraries, fire and police stations and street improvements are all located closer to property owned by some persons than to property of others.[5] The location of this widened highway closer to plaintiffs' homes than to other Inkster properties does not in itself justify requiring a special contribution to defray the cost.
The argument in support of the assessment is that traffic moves better because the bottlenecks have been eliminated. Eliminating the bottlenecks improves access to and from Middlebelt and interior lots. Interior lots should increase in market value because access is better or, at the very least, there is the benefit of safer and easier travel to and from homes in the assessment district.
Middlebelt was acknowledged by one of the city's experts to be a major thoroughfare. The need for the road improvements and their primary purpose was to facilitate the passage of traffic through the assessment district. See Brill v Grand Rapids, supra, p 222. As stated by one of the city's witnesses, "Middlebelt extends from the freeway to the north, here, up into the next county. The traffic is there, and you have to make provision for *270 the expeditious movement of that traffic, because that provides safer travel for the residents in the area and less of a nuisance factor" (emphasis added).
Another witness for the city testified that a master plan proposed the use of Middlebelt "as a major thoroughfare to handle truck traffic".
While the improved road contains features such as the left-turn lane benefitting local residents, the primary purpose of both that lane and the need for it is to facilitate the movement of through traffic.
The benefits found by the trial judge elimination of hazardous traffic conditions and of the deteriorated condition of Middlebelt, improved access to and improved movement of through traffic on Middlebelt and the factors emphasized by the Court of Appeals,[6] all relate to conditions brought about by the heavy use of Middlebelt by persons residing outside the assessment district.
The asserted benefit to residents of the assessment district is in being relieved of conditions caused by increased use of Middlebelt by nonresidents. But for heavy and increasing use by nonresidents, the road would have been "amply adequate" for the needs of the residents and businesses in the district. A five-lane highway was not required for their use.
The principle that persons who "are made to bear the cost of a public work, are at the same time to suffer no pecuniary loss thereby"[7] does not *271 accommodate an assessment to defray the cost of rectifying conditions mainly brought about by the public at large and not "specially and peculiarly"[8] related to the use or needs of persons residing in the assessment district. The plaintiffs' homes were not specially and peculiarly advantaged by restoring safe and ready access to and from a road adequate to serve their needs and which would have remained adequate but for pre-emptive use emanating from outside the assessment district. "There has been no enhancement." Fluckey v Plymouth, supra, p 454.
The "elimination of open ditches and swales which occasionally contain stagnant water", also mentioned by the judge, was of primary benefit to abutting property owners, and only incidentally benefitted interior lot owners. We respond, as did the Court in Fluckey, where it was asserted that abutting owners had benefitted not only from the widening of the road but also from the elimination of dirt shoulders and the filling of depressions or ditches along the old road: "The doctrine of de minimis is fully applicable to alleged benefits conferred by the elimination of problems so nebulous." Fluckey v Plymouth, supra, p 454.
We conclude that where an existing road is adequate for the use of local residents and businesses and its widening and improvement is designed to benefit primarily the public at large and to ameliorate conditions caused by its increased use of the road, there is no special benefit to residential owners warranting a special assessment.
*272 Reversed. Costs to appellant.
KAVANAGH, C.J., and WILLIAMS, COLEMAN, and FITZGERALD, JJ., concurred with LEVIN, J.
RYAN, J. (dissenting).
I dissent.
Plaintiff Willie Johnson initiated this action as representative of a class of similarly situated property owners subject to a special assessment levied by the City of Inkster to finance a portion of its share of the cost of widening Middlebelt Road. The assessment district consisted of nonabutting interior residential property on each side of the improved portion of the road, extending approximately halfway to the next major north-south street parallel to Middlebelt.
The distinguished trial judge, James Montante, sustained the assessment, finding it to be not in contravention of law, and that decision was affirmed by the Court of Appeals. Johnson v Inkster, 56 Mich. App. 581; 224 NW2d 664 (1974).
I
The trial court found that the improvement to Middlebelt Road conferred a special benefit on the assessed interior properties, a finding affirmed by the Court of Appeals. My colleagues reverse, finding "[t]here has been no enhancement" and, in justification thereof announce a standard for measuring "special benefit" which is heretofore unknown in the law[1] and without logical basis. I cannot agree.
The City of Inkster, as a home-rule city, possesses *273 the authority, by virtue of § 4d(1) of the home rule cities act and its own charter to levy special assessments on specially benefited districts to finance the cost of public improvements. MCLA 117.4d(1); MSA 5.2077(1). The power to levy special assessments is derived from the power to tax. Williams v Mayor of Detroit, 2 Mich. 560 (1853). We have repeatedly said that the establishment of special assessment districts and the determination of the amount to be assessed on a particular property are legislative acts. In re Petition of Macomb County Drain Comm'r, 369 Mich. 641; 120 NW2d 789 (1963); Crampton v Royal Oak, 362 Mich. 503; 108 NW2d 16 (1961); Cummings v Garner, 213 Mich. 408; 182 N.W. 9 (1921); Voigt v Detroit, 123 Mich. 547; 82 N.W. 253 (1900). We do not review the exercise of the legislative power to tax solely on grounds of unwisdom or our own view of public policy. Ford Motor Co v State Tax Commission, 400 Mich. 499; 255 NW2d 608 (1977).
Our role in this type of case is a limited one.
The proper inquiry for our review is whether the trial court was clearly in error in finding that the property of plaintiff and similarly situated property owners was specially benefited. GCR 1963, 517. In chancery cases the scope of review has also been stated as being "de novo", but in Papin v Demski, 383 Mich. 561; 177 NW2d 166 (1970), we said that GCR 1963, 517 did not alter an appellate court's power of review in those cases.
The trial court correctly stated that the assessment should be upheld where there are special benefits to the property specially assessed, such as an increase in value, relief from a burden or a special adaptability in the land. Soncoff v Inkster, 22 Mich. App. 358; 177 NW2d 243 (1970). Where the legislative body has correctly determined that special *274 benefits exist, the courts will ordinarily not disturb its judgment as to the inclusion or exclusion of specific property in the special assessment district or the proper amount of individual assessments. These are questions concerning which reasonable people may widely and honestly differ. In the absence of fraud or bad faith, or the following of a plan incapable of producing reasonable equality, the legislative judgment will be presumed to be valid. Crampton v Royal Oak, supra; Marks v Detroit, 246 Mich. 517; 224 NW2d 619 (1929).
The trial court found that properties in the assessment district were specially benefited as a result of the improvements to Middlebelt through: improved access; elimination of hazardous traffic, deteriorated road conditions, and open ditches and swales; stabilization of the neighborhood; and enhancement of the value of assessed property.
There is ample evidence in the record to support the finding of the trial court that the assessed properties did receive substantial, not merely incidental, benefits beyond those enjoyed by members of the general public. The testimony of experts in the areas of property appraisal and municipal finance supports the conclusion that the project would appreciably improve the surrounding neighborhood. I do not conclude I would have arrived at a different result had I been in the position of the trial judge. Papin v Demski, supra; Christine Building Co v Troy, 367 Mich. 508; 116 NW2d 816 (1962).
Moreover, I do not agree that the fact that the improvement to Middlebelt conferred a substantial benefit on the general public in any way affects the validity of these special assessments. The county taxpayers and the taxpayers of the City of Inkster have assumed a substantial share of the *275 burden. The County of Wayne assumed 60% of the cost of the improvement and the City of Inkster assumed slightly more than 20%. The assessed property was itself specially benefited. I cannot say plaintiff class was asked to pay for benefits received by the general public or that the share of the cost imposed on them exceeded the benefits received and, therefore, I perceive no denial of due process. See Detroit v Judge of Recorder's Court, 112 Mich. 588; 70 N.W. 149 (1897).
Fluckey v Plymouth, 358 Mich. 447; 100 NW2d 486 (1960), and Brill v Grand Rapids, 383 Mich. 216; 174 NW2d 832 (1970), do not compel us to enjoin the assessment levied by the City of Inkster. Fluckey involved an assessment against residential property abutting a road improved from two lanes of blacktop road to a four-lane concrete highway. The Court said:
"It must be stressed that the facts before us do not involve a mere error in judgment on the part of assessing authorities. We do not trifle with such. Nor do they involve the substitution of the judgment of the court upon the worth of special benefits conferred. The assessors, not the court, weigh the benefits, if, in truth, there are benefits to be weighed. The point here is more fundamental: where, viewed in its entirety, no benefit upon abutting property owners has been conferred by the improvement, but rather a detriment suffered, a special assessment based upon the enhancement of the value of the property is a fraud in law upon such property owners." 358 Mich. 447, 454.
Brill relied on Fluckey and, like the latter, found a showing of detriment resulting from one's home being within a few feet of a major thoroughfare. It applies to abutting residential property. The special assessment district we consider here contains no abutting residential property.
*276 II
Plaintiff class further contends that the formula used to determine the amount of the special assessment and the perimeters of the special assessment district were arbitrarily and capriciously determined. I cannot agree.
First, it was not unreasonable to assume that property within a certain distance from the improvement would receive substantial benefits. Boundaries must be drawn. It was entirely reasonable to assume that properties closer to the next major north-south street would be likely to receive fewer benefits. Special assessments for road improvements need not be made only against abutting property. There is no reason to assume benefits cease at property lines. See Goodrich v Detroit, 123 Mich. 559; 82 N.W. 255 (1900). The trial court was not clearly in error in finding that plaintiff had not shown the perimeters of the district were arbitrarily drawn.
Nor was the mode of assessment incapable of producing reasonable equality. See Crampton, supra.
The trial court found that the city assessor first estimated that the interior properties benefited by at least $150 and that he then adopted a "unit of benefit method" of apportionment ultimately resulting in an assessment on single-family dwellings in the amount of $109.80, and $219.60 on multiple-family dwellings.
This method of assessment is a far cry from the one found arbitrary and impermissible in I.H. Gingrich & Sons v Grand Rapids, 256 Mich. 661; 239 N.W. 876 (1932), in which property on one side of the pavement was assessed more than twice as much as owners of equal frontage on the other *277 side. In contrast, the assessments here in question were reasonably designed to achieve a fair exaction for benefits received. I would not disturb the presumptively valid determination of the Inkster City Council.
It is also argued that the assessments are invalid because the contract for construction between the County of Wayne and the city was made in violation of the city charter and special assessment ordinance.
The Inkster charter provides that contracts shall not be made for public works or improvements until provision is made for financing. The contract with Wayne County was entered into prior to the completion of arrangements for financing, but the city's liability thereunder was made conditional on the successful acquisition of funds.
I concur in and adopt the reasoning of the Court of Appeals.
That court affirmed the trial court's finding that the agreement substantially complied with the applicable law. The city charter provision and special assessment ordinance relied on are designed to prevent the city from constructing improvements that it does not have the means to pay for. By making its liability conditional on successful financing, the city complied with the spirit and purpose of its ordinance provision. This case is distinguishable from Smith v Garden City, 372 Mich. 189; 125 NW2d 269 (1963), where an improvement was completed three years prior to the levy of an assessment to pay for it, completely foreclosing a charter-guaranteed right to have a public hearing and opportunity to object to the improvement and assessment.
Plaintiff class's final contention is totally without merit.
*278 III
My colleagues would hereby remove from home-rule cities the authority to use special assessments against residential property to finance certain road improvements. The use of special assessments has long been an acceptable means for local governments to finance local improvements. This Court has traditionally deferred to those units and upheld their use of the special assessment mode of financing except where those bodies have abused their discretion. I would not decrease the flexibility available to cities of widely differing resources and needs by forever precluding them from making reasonable use of such special assessments to achieve an orderly plan to pay for a scheme of local road improvements.
I would affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals.
BLAIR MOODY, JR., J., took no part in the decision of this case.
NOTES
[1] Abutting commercial property was also assessed, but no issue is raised regarding such assessments in this class action in behalf of the owners of interior residential lots.
Residential lots abutting Middlebelt were not assessed; see Fluckey v Plymouth, 358 Mich. 447; 100 NW2d 486 (1960), discussed in the text, infra.
[2] There are approximately 800 homes in the district ranging in value from $10,000 to $24,000. The final assessment was $109.80 for single-family residences and $219.60 for two- and four-family residences.
[3] Fifteen hundred feet is approximately one-half the distance to the next major street providing access to Michigan Avenue, a state highway.
[4] "It is the settled law that special assessments may be sustained upon the theory that the property assessed receives some special benefit from the improvement differing from the benefit that the general public enjoy." Lansing v Jenison, 201 Mich. 491, 497; 167 N.W. 947 (1918).
[5] "An improvement is not a local improvement merely because it is constructed in a particular locality, since every improvement has a particular location, and is also local in the sense of being nearer to some persons and property than to others." 70 Am Jur 2d, Special or Local Assessments, § 20, p 860.
[6] Police officers and firefighters "can reach their destinations considerably faster". Residents of the district will be benefitted by "a safer and faster-moving Middlebelt [Road]". "[I]mproved * * * access * * * enhanced the value of these lots * * *." Johnson v Inkster, 56 Mich. App. 581, 588; 224 NW2d 664 (1974).
[7] "The justice of demanding the special contribution is supposed to be evident in the fact that the persons who are to make it, while they are made to bear the cost of a public work, are at the same time to suffer no pecuniary loss thereby; their property being increased in value by the expenditure to an amount at least equal to the sum they are required to pay." 2 Cooley, Taxation (3d ed), p 1154, quoted with approval in Fluckey v Plymouth, 454.
[8] 2 Cooley, supra, p 1153, quoted with approval in Fluckey v Plymouth, 453.
[1] "We conclude that where an existing road is adequate for the use of local residents and businesses and its widening and improvement is designed to benefit primarily the public at large and to ameliorate conditions caused by its increased use of the road, there is no special benefit to residential owners warranting a special assessment."