Salmon v. Board of Directors of Long Prairie Levee District

McCulloch, C. J.

Appellee, Board of Directors of Long Prairie Levee District, instituted actions against appellant, W. R. Salmon, and others to force payment of delinquent levee taxes — one for the assessments for. the years 1907 and 1908, and the other for the year 1909. Decrees were rendered in accordance with the prayer of each complaint, and Salmon only has appealed. Substantially the same questions are raised in each of the two cases, and they have been heard together as one case. The court overruled a demurrer to certain paragraphs of the complaint in the first case, and sustained demurrers to all the paragraphs of the answers, save those denying that the assessments were levied in accordance with the terms of the statute. The entire levee was not constructed during the years 1907 and 1908, and it is alleged that appellant’s lands received no protection from the portion which had been constructed at that time. It is insisted that the lands were not subject to taxation before they derived some benefit in the way of protection from overflow. This contention is unsound. The scheme contemplated by the creation of the district was for the construction of the levee as a whole, and the benefits were to accrue from the consummation of the plan. The statute authorizes assessments for the construction and maintenance of the levee, and the assessments can, of course, be laid and collected in advance of the construction of the levee. The denial of authority to do that might frustrate the whole scheme, for construction work could not be begun until funds were raised for the purpose, either from assessments or from the sale of bonds upon anticipated assessments. If authority exists to lay and collect assessments before commencing the construction work, it follows that lands in the district can not escape taxes for years prior to the completion of. the levee to a point where it will afford protection of those lands from overflow.

The legislative enactment creating the district authorized annual assessments not exceeding eight per cent, of the valuation of the land, the rate to be determined by the board at a meeting to beheld on the third Tuesday in May of each year. In the year 1907, on the day named, the board levied assessment for that year at the maximum rate authorized by statute. Later in the year the board lowered the rate to 4 per cent, of the valuation, and, still later, raised it to . 5 per cent, of the valuation. It is contended that the requirements as to time for fixing the rate is mandatory, and that the subsequent action of the board in lowering the rate and then raising it to 5 per per cent, was void. If it be conceded that the statutory specification as to time is mandatory, and that the board has no authority to subsequently change the rate of assessment, appellant can not escape payment of the 5 per cent, claimed, for, if his contention be sound, the rate should be 8 per cent., as originally fixed by the board, and he can not complain of the lower assessment.

Again, it is alleged in the answer, and it is now insisted, that the benefits to the land in question to be derived from the improvement will not be commensurate with the amount of assessments levied, and that the annual assessment should not have exceeded 4 per cent, of the valuation of the lands, which amount appellant tendered in court. The legislative branch of the government is, as we have said in several cases, the-sole judge in the matter of creating improvement districts of this character, in establishing the boundaries thereof and in determining, or in providing means for determining, the amount of assessments based on benefits, and the courts will not interfere unless an arbitrary and manifest abuse of the power is shown. Mere mistakes of the lawmakers, or of those empowered by the lawmakers to make assessments, in fixing the amount or rate of assessment will not be reviewed and corrected by the courts. Moore v. Board of Directors Long Prairie Levee District, 98 Ark. 113; Board of Improvement v. Pollard, 98 Ark. 543.

There is no merit in the contention that appellant’s lands can not be taxed because the levee was not properly constructed, or because it has caved away so that it no longer affords protection from overflow. The anticipated benefits were estimated in advance, and the assessments were levied accordingly, and the fact that the benefits have not been fully realized affords no avenue of escape from payment of assessments to defray the cost of the improvement.

The rulings of the chancellor were correct, and the decree is affirmed.