English v. Territory of Arizona ex rel. Bogan

SLOAN, J.

— This is a suit brought in the court below by 'the treasurer and ex officio tax collector of Pima county, in the name of the territory, against Allan R. English and his wife, to collect a delinquent special assessment levied by the city of Tucson against the property of the defendants to the suit. The assessment was levied under the provisions of chapter 2 of title 11 of the Revised Statutes of 1901 to pay, in part, for the improvement of Congress street in said city. The improvement consisted of the widening of said street by the condemnation of block No. 206, commonly known as “the Wedge.” The amount assessed against the property of the defendants to the action was the sum of $12,533.75. The prayer of the complaint was for this amount, with interest and costs. Judgment was entered for plaintiff in the action, and from this judgment the defendants have appealed.

The first question presented for our consideration by the appellants is as to the rights of the territory, at the relation of the treasurer and ex officio tax collector of Pima county, to bring this suit. The assessment wag/levied in December, 1903. Warrant for the collection of this assessment was issued by the mayor and recorder of the city to the city assessor and tax collector on the fifteenth day of February, 1904. The assessment became delinquent on December 21, 1904. Thereafter the city tax collector made a report of all the delinquent special assessments to the treasurer and ex officio tax collector of Pima county, who thereupon incorporated said list, including the special assessment levied against the property of appellants, with the county delinquent list. *93The said special assessment was thereafter and for the year 1904 entered upon the hack tax book of said county. The said tax collector thereupon brought this suit.

It is contended by counsel for appellants that Act No. 92, page 148, of the Laws of 1903, providing for suits to be instituted to recover delinquent taxes by the tax collectors of the several counties in the name of the territory, has no application to delinquent special assessments levied by cities under the provisions of said chapter 2, title 11, Revised Statutes. Paragraph 483 of the Revised Statutes of 1901, being section 19 of said chapter 2, title 11, provides that when the city collector shall be unable, before the twen(vjirst day of December of the year in which any special assessment is made, to collect any such special assessment, he shall deliver the delinquent list of all the lands, town lots and real property upon which he shall have been unable to collect such special assessments, with the amount of the same due and unpaid, to the tax collector of the county, who shall incorporate said list with the county delinquent list. The next section provides that the tax collector of the county shall sell delinquent city property for city delinquent special assessments at the same time and in the same manner as real property is required to be sold by law for county and territorial delinquent taxes. These sections, considered alone, might well be construed as excluding any other method of collecting delinquent special assessments than as therein provided, which was the method provided by the general revenue laws of the territory for the collection of delinquent taxes on real property in force at the time chapter 2, title 2, took effect. We think, however, that paragraph 488 should be construed with paragraph 484 in this connection. Paragraph 488 reads: “The general revenue laws of this territory in reference to proceedings for the collection of delinquent taxes on real property, the sale thereof, the executions of certificates ■ of sale and deeds thereon, the force and effect of such deeds and sales, and all other laws in relation to the enforcement and collection of delinquent taxes and redemption of tax sales, except as herein otherwise provided, shall be applicable to proceedings to collect such special assessments.” Act No. 92, page 148, of the Laws of 1903, repealed the general revenue law of the territory in reference to proceedings for the collection of delinquent taxes on real property. By this act the tax collector was deprived of his power to sell real *94property for delinquent taxes levied thereon. In lieu of such sale the statute provided for suits to be instituted against the several delinquent taxpayers by the tax collector in the name of and for the use of the territory. Unless, therefore, the act of 1903 applies to delinquent special assessments, there would be no method provided by the existing statutes for the sale of delinquent city property for delinquent special assessments. A reading of section 84 (page 150) of the act will make it clear that the intent of the legislature was to make the method of collecting delinquent taxes provided for in the act applicable to all delinquent taxes which may appear on the tax-roll. Said section reads: “Within sixty days after the taking effect of this chapter, and every year thereafter, within thirty days after the settlement of the tax collector, the several clerks of the county boards of supervisors in each county in this territory, shall make in a book to be called the ‘back tax book’ a correct list in numerical order of all tracts of land and town lots on which back taxes shall be due in such county, city or town, setting forth opposite each tract of land or town lot the name of the owner,” etc. Again, section 96 (page 156) of said act reads: “All back taxes, of whatever kind, appearing due upon delinquent real estate shall be extended in the ‘back tax book’ made under the chapter, and collected by the tax collector under authority of this chapter.” We conclude, therefore, that this suit has properly been brought in the name of the territory, at and by the relation and to the use of the treasurer and tax collector of the county.

It is further claimed by the appellants that the assessment made by the city against their property was erroneous, for two reasons: First, that the committee appointed under the provisions of paragraph 472, being section 8 of chapter 2, title 2, to estimate what proportion of' the cost of the improvement made should be taxed against the property of appellants, erred in the respect that it divided the cost of the improvement by the arbitrary front-foot rule, and assessed the property of appellants upon that basis, and not upon the basis of benefits derived from such improvement. Second, it improperly assessed the property of appellants, in that the committee took into consideration the value to appellants of a certain narrow strip of land, lying between the lot of appellants and Congress street, left open and unoccupied in the widening and improvement of said street. Even should *95the record sustain counsel for appellants in their contention that the committee, in the respects named, improperly assessed the property of appellants, it does not follow that the latter may successfully defend this suit upon these grounds. The general rule applicable to all assessments is stated in Stanley v. Supervisors, 121 U. S. 550, 7 Sup. Ct. 1239, 30 L. Ed. 1000, as follows: “In nearly all the states, probably in all of them, provision is made by law for the correction of errors in irregularities of assessors in the assessment of property for the purposes of taxation. This is generally through boards of revision or equalization, as they are often termed, with sometimes a right of appeal from their decision to the courts of law. ... To these boards of revision, by whatever name they may be called, the citizen must apply for relief against excessive and irregular taxation, where the assessing officers had jurisdiction to assess the property. Their action is judicial in its character. They pass judgment on the value of the property upon personal examination and evidence respecting it. Their action being judicial, their judgments in cases within their jurisdiction are not open to collateral attack. If not corrected by some of the modes pointed out by-statute, they are conclusive, whatever errors may have been committed in the assessment.” Paragraph 478, Revised Statutes of 1901, provides that: “If the owner of any parcel of land assessed for such improvement by special tax feels himself aggrieved by reason of the determination made by the common council, he may within twenty (20) days after the date of such determination, appeal therefrom to the district court.” Paragraph 479 provides that: “The appeal given by the last section shall be the only remedy of the owner of any parcel of land, or of any person interested therein, affected by said improvement, for the redress of any grievance he may have by reason of the making of such improvement.” We construe the latter paragraph to mean that the remedy by appeal excludes all other remedies where the grievance complained of is one that the common council has power to remedy. The common council would not have the power to remedy any grievance arising from some jurisdictional defect in the proceedings which would render subsequent proceedings void. There could be no doubt but that, under the statute, if the committee had erroneously assessed the property of appellants by applying an arbitrary front-foot rule, or by improperly including a possible use by ap*96pellants of a vacant, piece of ground belonging to the city as among the benefits accruing to the property of appellants by reason of the improvement made, such errors were within the power of the common council to correct so as to give validity to subsequent proceedings. It is quite clear, therefore, that under the statutes above quoted, the only remedy available to the appellants for the correction of any irregularity in the assessment in any of the respects complained of was an appeal to the district court within twenty days after the committee had reported its action to the common council and the latter had made its determination by affirming the report.

Counsel for appellants seek to avoid the effect of the statute with the suggestion that appellants had no notice, actual or constructive, of the time when the common council would act upon the report of the committee, and had no notice, actual or constructive, of the actual determination of this matter by the common council until after the statutory time for taking the appeal had elapsed, and that, therefore, appellants had no ojpportunity to avail themselves of the remedy by appeal. The statute does not provide for notice to the property owners affected of the time when the common council shall act upon the report of the committee, and the record does not show that any such notice was given. The statute does provide for notice to be given such property owners of the time and place of the hearing by the assessment committee. It is shown by the record and found by the court that the appellants did receive such notice and were represented before the committee at the time the assessment was levied. Following the analogy of court proceedings the appellants had their “day in court,” and, being in court, were chargeable with notice of all proceedings thereafter taken in accordance with the statute. It was their duty, in case they desired to appeal from the action of the common council, to follow up the proceedings and ascertain what was being done. It is not pleaded, nor was it attempted to be shown by appellants, that fraud was practiced upon them which prevented their ascertaining the time when the confirmation was to be made and from taking their appeal within the statutory time thereafter. We think the appellants, by failing to appeal, have lost their remedy for correcting any error which may have been made by the assessment committee in assessing the special tax against their property. *97Another reason which may be urged against the right of appellants to raise these objections in this connection arises under a provision in paragraph 483, Bevised Statutes of 1901. This provision is as follows: “And in any action before any court, wherein the question of the validity of such assessment is an issue, no defense or objection shall be made or heard, which might have been interposed in the proceedings for the making of such assessment or the application for the confirmation thereof.” As we have stated, the record discloses that the appellants had notice of the proceedings for the making of the assessment and were actually represented at the time of the assessment before the assessment committee. It does not appear that they made any objection to the assessment, either to the committee or to the common council. They are, therefore, under the statute, concluded from raising the objections specified in this proceeding as a defense to the 'action. -

The objection raised to the proceedings by appellants, that the property was not subject to the special assessment for the reason that it was not contiguous to the improvement made, cannot avail them, inasmuch as the complaint states that their property was so contiguous, which allegation is not controverted by the answer, and must therefore be taken to be true. Evans v. Glencross, 4 Ariz. 222, 36 Pac. 212.

We find no reversible error in the record, and judgment is therefore affirmed.

KENT, C. J., and DOAN and NAVE, JJ., concur.