delivered the opinion of the court :
The city and county of Denver is a municipal corporation created by and under the provisions of article XX of the state constitution. March 29, 1904, it adopted a charter which divides its territory into four park districts, and places them under the control of a park commission composed of five commissioners. It authorizes the park commission, with the appfoval of the mayor, upon certain conditions hereinafter stated, to select and acquire by purchase or condemnation proceedings, in the name of the city and county, for the use of .any such park district, lands therein, for parks and park-ways,' to be paid for, either in whole or in part, by special assessments upon the real estate, except parks, park-ways and streets, comprising such district. Sections 92, 324, 325; 326, 327 and 328. • •
The section further provides, that “The commission shall, at the time specified, 1 or thereafter, consider ,. all such''complaints and objections, and may modify or confirm 'their apportionments, and shall finally determine whether said lands shall be acquired for said 'purpose;, , but if, within the time above specified, a remonstrance
The section also provides, that “the finding of the council by ordinance that such notice was duly given, or that such remonstrance was or was not filed, or was or was not subscribed by the required number of owners aforesaid, shall be conclusive in every court or other tribunal.”
Certain sections of the charter make it incumbent upon the park' commission, when the cost of any park-site or park-way is definitely determined, to file with the city clerk a certified statement showing- the cost of the improvements, the apportionment thereof upon each lot 01-tract of land to be assessed; and requires the clerk thereupon,' by advertisement for ten days in some newspaper of general circulation published in the municipality, to'notify the owners of the real estate to be assessed, that the improvements have been, or are about to' be completed and accepted, specifying- the whole cost of the improvements and the share apportioned to each lot or tract of land; and'that any complaints or objections that may be made in writing by such owners and filed with the clerk within sixty dáys from the first publication of such notice, will be heard and determined by the proper municipal authorities at á time designated in the notice and before' thé passage by the city council of any ordinance assessing the cost of such improvements. Sections 298, 299, 300 and 328.
Under these provisions of the charter, proceedings were initiated to acquire lands for parks and'park-ways, in that portion of the municipality known' as' the “East
The complaint sets forth some of the provisions of the charter, the notice given by the park commission as proAÚded by section 327, and charges that the rules therein adopted by the park commission, for apportion
A demurrer was interposed to the complaint, sustained by the court, and the cause dismissed. The plaintiff brings the case here on error, and seeks a reversal of the judgment. The important propositions presented, the only ones we deem necessary to consider, will bé disposed of in the order we deem most convenient.
i. Plaintiff’s contention, as to the lack of power in the municipality to acquire lands for parks or parkways by condemnation proceedings; or by purchase, except upon a vote of the taxpaying electors therein approving and ordering a bond issue therefor, is based
We are of the opinion that the assumption is not well based. In Denver v. Hallett, 34 Colo. 393, 416, we expressly held, that the limited grant of power contained in section 1 of article XX of the constitution is not the only, power possessed by the municipality. We therein, on pages 398 and 399, said:
“The statement contained in the first section was not intended to be an enumeration of powers conferred, but simply the expression of a few of the more prominent powers which municipal corporations are frequently granted. The purpose of the twentieth article was to grant home rule to Denver and the other municipalities of the state, and it was intended to enlarge the powers beyond those usually granted by the legislature; and so it was declared in the article that until the adoption of the new charter by the people that the charter as it then existed should be the charter of the municipality, and further that the people of Denver shall always have the exclusive power of making, altering, revising or amending- their charter; and further that the charter, when adopted by the people, should be the organic law of the municipality and should supersede all other charters.
It was intended to confer not only the powers specially mentioned, but to bestow upon the people of Denver every power possessed by the legislature in the making of a charter for Denver.”
By that decision we determined that the powers enumerated in section 1 of article XX of the constitution do not constitute a limitation of the powers conferred on the municipality; and, moreover, the article conferred
There being no constitutional limitation on the exercise of these powers by the municipality, it necessarily follows, that the people of the city and county of Denver, on whom was “conferred every power possessed by the legislature in the making of a charter for Denver,” could therein grant or withhold such powers.
It is elementar)' that, except 'as limited by the federal or state constitution, the legislative authority over municipal corporations is supreme or plenary. It is “a legislative function to determine what power shall be granted, what withheld, and what restrictions shall be imposed in the exercise of the powers granted.”—Denver v. Hallett, supra, Dillon on Munc. Corp., secs. 9, 44.
It is equally certain that “the right to appropriate private property to public uses lies dormant in the state, until legislative action is had, pointing out the occasions, the modes, condition's, and agencies for its appropriations. Private property can only be taken pursuant to law; but a legislative act declaring the necessity, being the customary mode in which that fact is determined, must be held for this purpose, ‘the law of the land/ and no further finding or adjudication can be essential, unless the constitution of the state has expressly required it.”—Cooley’s Const. Lim., pp. 759, 760.
The acquisition of lands, for parks is unquestionably for a public purpose and is so conceded. Likewise, “It is
We, therefore, conclude that the people of the.city and county of Denver, when making a charter for. the municipality, had the power to write therein provisions for the purchase of lands, or for the exercise of the. pqwer of eminent domain in acquiring lands for parks and park-ways, and the payment therefor, in whole or i.11 part, by collections ai'ising from assessments made upon the property within the districts specially benefited by the improvements, and that the charter provisions in that respect are constitutional.
2. The charter provisions authorize the board-of park commissioners to initiate the public improvements in question, and to finally, determine whether the lands, necessary therefor, shall be acquired, subject, however, to the will of the owners of a certain percentage in area of the real estate to be assessed for-the cost thereof,,.to annul that authority by expressing- their disapproval of the proposed improvements within a designated time. It, therefore, follows, that until the property owners have, by their non-action approved, or by their action disapproved the proposed improvements, the power to. proceed lies in abeyance.
However, as the matters upon which the findings, here sought to be restrained, pertain to questions preliminary in their nature, they do not affect the constitu
It is ordinarily a legislative function to create special taxing districts and to charge the cost of a local improvement therein, in whole or in part, on the property benefited in proportion to the benefits thereto. Webster v. Fargo, 181 U. S., 394. And the charter of the city and county of Denver, adopted in obedience to an express mandate of the constitution of the state, with respect to municipal, matters, including the creation of taxing districts for local improvements and special assessments for the cost of the latter, has all the force and effect of an act of the legislature. The east Denver park district was so created and the proposed improvement authorized. Under these circumstances, the only constitutional right possessed by the property owner, as to the making of the proposed improvement, is to a hearing upon the question of what is termed, the apportionment of the tax; i. e., the amount of the tax which he is to pay.—Voigt v. Detroit, 184 U. S., 115; Goodrich v. Detroit, idem, 432.
This constitutional right is fully protected by the notice which the charter, sections 299 and 328, “requires shall be given by the city clerk and the proceedings in accordance therewith, afford the owners full opportunity to be heard on the question of assessments against their property.”—Denver v. Dumars, 33 Colo. 94, 101.
It is well established that as to all statutory proceedings or acts essential fe> the validity of local improvements, excepting those that are necessary to constitute due process, of law or to' comply with other constitutional prerequisites, “the same power (legislative) which prescribes them is competent to declare that their nonobservance shall not be fatal to the validity of the tax and that no inquiry may be made concerning them.”— Chase v. Trout, 146 Calif. 350, 359; In the matter of Kiernan, 62 N. Y. 457.
In Scranton v. Jermyn, 156 Pa. St. 107, no, in, the .law under, consideration authorized city councils by ordinance to direct the paving of streets, etc., but if the cost thereof was to be paid by the abutting property owners, certain conditions were attached to the manner of the exercise of the municipal authority, one of which was, that the paving, etc., shall be petitioned for by a majority of the owners, or the owners of the majority of the feet front on the street. A section of the same law provided, that where the paving had been petitioned for,
“The legislature, (in this instance the people of the municipality), has the authority, so long as constitutional rights are not invaded, to provide in special proceedings what questions may be tried by the courts, and what not.” —Denver v. Dumars, supra.
To the same effect is Page and Jones on Taxation by Assessment, section 795. Analogous in principle, and announcing the like doctrine is Denver v. Londoner, 33 Colo. 104, which was carried to the supreme court of the United States, where, in Londoner v. Denver, supra, it is said: “The legislature might have authorized the making of improvements by the* city council without any petition.' If it chose to exact a petition as a security for wise and just action it could, * * * accompany that petition with a provision that the council, with or without notice, should determine finally whether it had been performed.” ■
In the same opinion we find the following: “It is contended, however, that there was wanting an essential' condition of the jurisdiction of the board, namely, such a petition from the owners as the law requires. The trial
The rule stated in Willcox v. Engebretsen, el al., a recent decision of the supreme court of California, 116 Pac. 750, 751, is as follows:
“Where a statute requires such a petition to be filed as a condition precedent to the making of such order, (for a public improvement), the board or council has no power to make .the order until a sufficient petition has been filed. This is settled by the cases of Turrill v. Grattan, 52 Calif. 97; Dyer v. Miller, supra, (58 Calif. 585) ; Mulligan v. Smith, supra, (59 Calif. 206), and Kahn v. Board, supra, (79 Calif. 388, 396), and as to that point there is no dispute. But the necessity for such petition is the creature of the statute. It is not required by any constitutional guaranty. From this it follows that the statute may dispense with such requirement, or it may provide that the decision of the board or council as to its sufficiency, or any subsequent act depending upon it, such as the issuance of the bonds, shall be conclusive evidence of the- fact that a sufficient petition has been filed. Such provisions will be upheld as valid,” citing Chase v. Trout, supra.
3. Plaintiff however, contends, that the charter, though declaring the effect of the findings of the city council, does not make it the duty of that body to pass upon the matters of which complaint is made, and that, therefore, the council is not the tribunal designated to ascertain the facts involved. We are unable to ascribe such meaning to the charter provisions. The declaration
The rule is stated in 28 Cyc. 1023, as follows: “If the municipal authorities are empowered, either expressly or by fair implication, to determine- whether the requisite number of property-owners have assented to an improvement, their action in ordering the improvement is a conclusive determination of that question; but where this duty is not conferred, the courts may inquire whether the requisite number have so assented.”
In Spaulding v. North San Francisco Homestead, etc., 37 Calif. 40, 45, upon a matter involving a like question, the court said: “In exercising the jurisdiction thus obtained, and in granting the petition, the board of supervisors must necessarily have found that the petitioner was the owner of a majority of the frontage to be affected by the proposed improvement. Even if, as seemingly suggested by counsel for appellant, the act referred to does not provide, in express terms, for any determination of the matter of a petition, clearly, where a board is empowered to receive a petition, and is invested with discretion in regard to the subject-matter, it has the implied power to determine whether it shall be g-ranted or not.”
The charter provisions, by necessary implication, provide for two adjudications of the facts as to the sufficiency of the notice given and the remonstrances filed. One, a direct hearing before the board of park commissioners, upon written complaints and remonstrances after notice given. The other, in the nature of a review
In section 331 of the last cited authority, it is said: “A large number of persons and of tribunals, not ordinarily spoken of as ‘judges,’ nor as ‘courts,’ are nevertheless authorized to investigate and determine certain questions. Their authority in this respect is judicial,” and the legislative pronouncement measures the extent and effect of their acts.
The people of the municipality, having full and unrestricted power over the matters" involved, vested in the city council the power to pass' upon and make conclusive findings as to the existence or non-existence of certain things which might have been dispensed with entirely by the legislative power. Nor did such people see fit to provide any mode of review of the acts of that tribunal, but declared that its findings thereon “shall be conclusive in every court or other tribunal.” We think the jurisdiction conferred upon the park commission, in the first instance, and in the city council finally, to pass-upon and determine the existence or non-existence of the alleged jurisdictional facts, is absolute'and exclusive.
• “The rule is well settled that where a statute upon a particular subject, has provided a special tribunal for the • determination of questions pertaining to that subject, the jurisdiction thus conferred is exclusive, unless otherwise expressed or clearly manifested.”—Hendreshke v. Harvard H. S. Dist., 35 Neb. 400, 401.
In Dudley v. Mayhem, 3 Coms. 9, the question was, asito the jurisdiction of the state courts to restrain the infringement of a patent right, and it- was held, that when a person is confined to a statutory remedy on a statute right, the party must take it as conferred; that
In Reed v. Omnibus R. R. Co., 33 Calif. 212, 217, it is said: “When the statute creating the new right and prescribing the particular remedy for violation thereof, provides that the remedy must be' pursued in a particular court, the rule we are considering excludes all other jurisdictions. The forum named in the statute is an element in the method of redress, and that method is at once integral to the remedy and to the right.”
In Armstrong, et al., v. Mayer, et at., 60 Neb. 423, it is held, quoting from the syllabus: “Where a right is
given by statute and a specific remedy is provided, designating the tribunal for the enforcement thereof, the jurisdiction of such tribunal is exclusive, unless the law otherwise provides.”
Applying the rule as stated: We have here a statute, the charter, upon a particular subject, the acquiring of lands for, and - the making of certain kind of public improvements. That charter has provided special tribunals, to-wit: the board of park commissioners, in the first instance, and in the way of review, the city council, for the determination of questions pertaining to that subject. The jurisdiction thus conferred is exclusive for it is not “otherwise expressed or clearly manifested.” The same principle is announced and applied in Spaulding v. North San Francisco Homestead etc., supra, wherein and to the particular point,- Jennings v. Le Breton, 80 Calif. 9, is cited.
Moreover, if the jurisdiction conferred upon the board of park commissioners and the city council be not exclusive, as well as conclusive, an anomalous condition of things might arise. Suppose proceedings were instituted to acquire by condemnation, a particular lot, and
While it may be true, as plaintiff contends, that the finding by the council upon the matters involved is not a necessary act to the validity of the proceedings, we think it quite probable that until such finding, condemnation and other proceedings of the park commission, for the acquirement of lands for the purposes proposed, could be stayed. It will' be observed that the charter, section 327, containing the conditions upon which the board of park commissioners may act, likewise embodies therein the clause relative to the conclusive nature of the findings of the council as to the notice, remonstrance and other preliminary proceedings, 'whereas it is, in another section of the charter, and after completion of the work, or, at least, ascertainment of- the full cost thereof, and after another report to the council, from the board of' park commissioners, covering all such matters, that the council is authorized to make the final assessment. Lrom this it would seem that the charter intended that all matters, not going to the constitutional rights of the par
4. Plaintiff concedes, and we have frequently held, that should a property owner defer action until the city council has, by ordinance, determined the matters committed to it, such findings are conclusive, and the property owner is precluded from questioning the same. He, however, insists that upon principle we have held, that prior to such finding by the city council, any person whose property is to be assessed for the cost of the improvement, may invoke the powers of a court of equity to inquire into the existence or non-existence of such facts.
The contention is based upon certain language in Denver v. Londoner, supra, to the effect, that where a city charter authorizes the boa'rd of public works to order the grading, curbing and paving of streets, provided the owners of a majority of the frontage of the lots to be assessed for the cost thereof, shall petition therefor; and authorizes the city council to create a local improvement district and apportion and finally assess the cost of the improvement ag-ainst the property benefited, the presentation to the board of public works of the petition designated, is jurisdictional, and until the city council determines, as provided by ordinance, that the necessary peti
A consideration of that case shows, that the question, under discussion, in which the language was used, was not necessary to a decision of the controversy. The point was not involved in the case. Moreover, in that opinion there is no holding, expression or intimation that the city council could be enjoined from acting in the premises, and especially after it had assumed jurisdiction of the matters involved. On the contrary, the holding to which that language applies, is confined to the right to enjoin the board of public'works from making any recommendation to the council. In that case the board of public works had ordered the improvement, had prepared specifications therefor, reported its acts in that respect to the city council, and the latter body had determined that certain preliminary steps, which the law required to be taken by the board of public works, had been performed, and thereupon, before the injunction suit was brought, created the improvement district. In the case at bar the charter itself created the improvement district, the board of park commissioners initiated the improvements proposed, - assumed to comply with all the provisions of the charter, and finally determined to make the improvements, and made report of its acts in that respect to the city council before the injunction suit was filed. Thus the board of park commissioners had already done the very thing which in that case it is said the board of public works might be enjoined from doing, to-wit: made its report to the city council. Moreover, the latter body had assumed jurisdiction of the matter and were about to do the very thing the charter authorized them to do.
of that event have been brought to our attention by a plea in bar. After the injunction, sought to be obtained, had been denied by the court below, the ease dismissed, and the writ of error from this court sued out to review the judgment of the lower court, the city council duly, made the findings., and passed the ordinance sought to be restrained. The mayor approved the same, and it was duly published. No application was made to this court for a restraining order, or stay of any kind, and none was issued against the council or the defendants herein pending the determination of the writ of error. The city council, in the exercise of the power vested in it by the charter, and unrestrained by any authority, duly enacted an ordinance, declaring the existence of the essential facts. This ordinance has the effect of a statute; and the mandate of the people of the municipality, expressed through their charter, is, that such findings shall be conclusive upon every court or other tribunal. The city council, possessing the power to make such findings, assumed jurisdiction, before that of this court, or the court below, was sought to be invoked. Under these circumstances, we certainly do not have the power to nullify the legislative mandate, that the finding of the council shall be conclusive upon every court or other tribunal, and declare that it is not conclusive upon us.
5. Assuming, but not deciding, -that in this character of suit we can inquire into the matter of fraud, one question remains which we will consider. The plaintiff contends, that the action of the- board of park commissioners to acquire the lands and make the public improvement, was based upon fraud, and should be set aside, and the council restrained from passing upon the matter, because of the alleged fraudulent acts of the park commission.
The complaint in no wise charges fraud against the city council, or that that body has been, or will be wrongfully influenced, or that it will proceed in any manner other than the law requires. The allegations of wrongdoing apply solely to the acts of the board of park commissioners. Moreover, the alleged wrongdoing upon the part of that tribunal, does not, as will presently be' seen, constitute fraud, or even bad faith, but mounts no higher than an allegation of an honest mistake in judgment.
The charter does not require the enumeration in the preliminary notice of the lot area to be assessed, except as it may be, and in this case was, included in the rules adopted for the proposed apportionment of the cost of the improvement. Neither the rules adopted, nor the proposed apportionment by the board of park commissioners, or the latter’s estimaté of the area within the district, or
Moreover, the claim is not made that there is not within the park district an area equivalent to that claimed, but only that certain lands within the district alleged to be non-assessable, were included in ascertaining that area) and in determining the sufficiency or non-sufficiency of the remonstrances.
Under these circumstances, and in view of the fact that the charter expressly requires that the special assessments for the cost of the improvement shall be levied upon <(the real estate, except parks, park-ways and streets, comprising such district,” and the further fact of the uncertainty of the law as to what public property may, or may not, be assessed for the cost of the improvement under the charter, we can not say that the inclusion of such lots by the board of park commissioners was, if error at all, more than an honest mistake. It is very certain that public property, other than that owned by the United States, may be taxed or exempted for local improvements, at the discretion of the legislature, and this may extend to and include lands belonging to the state itself.—Page & Jones on Tax. by Assess., sections 579, 580, 581, 582, 583, 584 and 586.
The allegation, as to the inclusion of non-assessable property, covers not only lands belonging to the United States, to the state, to the city and county, but school, church and cemetery as well. The exemption of property
We are fully persuaded that upon the record as here-presented, a court of equity can grant no relief to plaintiff in error.
In the views herein expressed, Mr. Justice Garri-GUES and Mr. Justice BaieEy fully concur. Mr. Justice. Hiee concurs therein as to the power of the city and county of Denver to acquire lands for parks and parkways by purchase or condemnation, as in the charter provided, and also' that the plea in bar to the writ of error should be sustained. Mr. Justice Musser and Mr. Justice GabberT likewise concur as to the power of the city and county of Denver to so acquire lands for parks and park-ways, but dissent as to all other matters. ChiEE' Justice Campbeee does not participate in the opinion.
The plea in bar is, accordingly, sustained, and the writ of error dismissed. Writ dismissed.
Decision en banc.