Earl v. Board of Improvement

Hughes, J.,

(after stating the facts). Passing by the contention of the appellee that there is no proper bill of exceptions in the case, and also the contention of appellee that injunction will . not lie in this ease, we proceed to dispose of the case upon what we consider the merits on the two main questions presented.

From the appellants’ presentation of the ease, in what they present as their bill of exceptions, and the record in the case, does it appear that there was not a majority in value of the property holders in the improvement district who signed the petition for the levy of the tax with which to make the proposed improvement ? The total value of property in real estate, as appears by the assessment for state and county taxes, including the railroad property, is $268,279. The court below found that this was exclusive of railroad property, but this was error, for it includes the railroad property. The court found the assessable value of the church property, which was not on the tax books, to be $15,000. There was evidence tending to show that it was worth in the neighborhood of $30,000, bnt there was also evidence that it was not worth nearly so much, and that the usual way of assessing property for taxation in that county was at about 50 per cent, of its value.. Considering the conflict in the testimony as to its real value and the evidence as to the manner of assessing real property in that county, we cannot say the court erred in putting its value at $15,000 for the purpose of this ease. Add the value of the church property, and we have $283,289 as the total value of the property in the district assessable for the purposes of the improvement. This amount includes the value of railroad and church property. We find that the total value of the property of the petitioners is $165,179, from which let us deduct $26,120, which is the amount that the appellants claim should be deducted on various accounts, and the petition will then have $139,059. But included in this amount deducted are the following amounts, to-wit: $2,050 to Orrel Bros., and $2,400 to W. T. and S. J. Orrel, which makes $4,450. W. T. Orrel signed the petition, and we give to the petition one-half of this $4,450, or $2,225. The evidence shows that W. T. and S. J. Orrel composed the firm of Orrel Bros.; that $3,465 in the name of Mrs. E. M. Morril, whose name does not appear on the petition, but who, the evidence shows, did sign the petition as L. B. Morril, should be corrected on the petition. These two amounts aggregate $5,690, which added to $139,059, the amount left after deducting from the amount on the petition, leaves on it still $144,649, from which take the amount necessary to a majority, $141,649, and the petition then has a majority in value of the property in the district of $3,005. The amount corrected on the petition (one-half the amount) to W. T. and S. J. Orrel is in accordance with Ahern v. Board of Improvement, 69 Ark. 68, 61 S. W. 575. To the above amount of $3,005 should be added the individual assessment of W. T. Orrel of $200, increasing the majority for the petition to $3,205.

The question of the validity of the second levy of $21,000 by the city council without a new petition is to be considered. Appellant says it would make the amount exceed 20 per cent, of the total value of the property in the district, the limit beyond which the law forbids them to go. The total value is $292,284. Twenty per cent, of this is $58,456.80. Original levy, $32,000. Second levy, $21,000. Total, $53,000. So the limit of 20 per cent, was not reached by $5,456.80.

Now, as to the validity of this second levy of $21,000 by the council without any new petition. The statute in reference to this is section 5366 of Sandels & HilFs Digest, which reads as follows: “ If the assessment first levied shall prove insufficient to complete the improvement, the board shall report the amount of the deficiency to the council, and the council shall thereupon make another assessment on the property previously assessed, for a sum sufficient to complete the improvement, which shall be collected in the same manner as the first assessment. Provided, that when any work has been begun, under the provisions of this act, which shall not be completed and paid for out of the first or other assessment, it shall be the duty of the said council to make such assessment for its completion, from year to year, until twenty per centum on the value of the real property of such district shall be collected and consumed in such improvement, unless it be sooner completed; and the performance of such duty may be enforced by mandamus, at the instance of any person or board interested.”

It will be perceived that the proviso in this section does not control the discretion of the court in making a second assessment before the first is exhausted, because it appears from the language of the section “that when any work has been begun, * * * which shall not be completed and paid for out of the first or other assessment, it shall be the duty of said council to make such assessment for its completion from year to year until twenty per centum on the value of the real property of such district shall be collected and consumed in such improvement, unless it be sooner completed; and the performance of such duty may be enforced by mandamus,” etc. This seems to contemplate that more than one assessment may be made before the proviso becomes operative. The first part of this section, that, “if the assessment first levied shall prove insufficient to complete the improvement, the board shall report the amount of the deficiency to the council, and the council shall thereupon make another assessment of the property previously assessed, for a sum sufficient to complete the improvement, which shall be collected in the same manner as the first assessment,” provided that not more than 1 per centum per annum can be levied till the improvement is paid for, and provided that not more than 20 per centum shall be collected in all, does not restrict the board in the means of ascertaining that the first assessment will prove insufficient. It may ascertain this by proper estimates made by competent engineers, for instance, or by the testimony and estimates of experts familiar with such work, who had knowledge of the place and conditions where such improvement is to be made. That a second assessment should be made, when necessary, before the first is exhausted seems important, as, in the case at bar, it appears that, without a sufficient assessment to complete the work, bonds cannot be sold to obtain money to- have the work done.

Affirmed.