City of Kansas City v. Napiecek

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mason, J.:

The city council of Kansas City undertook to open a street through a block and to charge a portion of the cost to the property within a benefit district. The owners of several tracts affected obtained a permanent injunction against the enforcement of the resulting assessments, and the city prosecutes error.

The plaintiffs concede that to sustain the judgment it is necessary for them to show that the proceedings which culminated in the tax complained of were absolutely void. The first defect specified is that the report of the appraisers appointed' to assess the damages occasioned by the taking of the land required for the street made their estimates upon the basis that the owner should retain all buildings located thereon and remove them at his own expense. It is true that the rule is said to be that where land is taken for a public purpose the title to permanent improvements thereon passes to the public and the owner must be paid for them. (Mills, Em. Dom., 2d ed., § 223; The City of Kansas v. Morse, 105 Mo. 510, 16 S. W. 893; Finn v. Providence Gas and Water Co., 99 Pa. St. 631. See, also, 10 A. & E. Encycl. of L. 1158; 15 Cyc. 762.) There is nothing, however, inherently vicious about the *695method pursued. Indeed it seems better calculated to yield just results than the one usually adopted.. If it was satisfactory to the parties directly concerned — the owners and the city — it is not apparent how the plaintiffs were injured by it. But at most it merely resulted in an erroneous award of damages, which could have been corrected on appeal as provided by the statute (Laws 1903, ch. 122, § 162), and which, not having been challenged in that manner, became final. It is not unusual for condemnation commissioners to attach conditions to their assessment, as by allowing some privilege to the owner in reduction of the amount of his damages. Of this practice it is said, in volume 2 of the second edition of Lewis on Eminent Domain, section 505:

“Awards of this character are not, however, void unless repugnant to the legal effect of the condemnation, as where the statute vests a fee in the party condemning, and the award reserves an easement to the owner, or is contrary to a provision of positive law.”

The notice given by the appraisers of the time and place of their meeting recited that they had been appointed “to appraise and assess the actual value of the land proposed to be taken, . . . and the actual damages done to all other property •. . . and for the payment of such value and damages assess against said city . . . the amount of benefit to the public generally, and the remainder of such damages caused by the opening of said street against the property in the benefit district.” It is insisted that this could only mean that the appraisers were to assess against the city both the value of the land taken and the damages to other property, but against the property specially benefited only the damages to other property than that appropriated. The language considered by itself might be susceptible of such a construction, but it is in substance borrowed from the statute, where the word “damages” in the phrase “the remainder of such damages” obviously refers to all the damages occasioned *696by the improvement, including the amount allowed as compensation for the land taken. Complaint is also made 'that .by referring to the assessment of the damages done to “all other property” the notice and the ordinance on which it was based implied that damages would be allowed with respect to lands not a part of the tract through which the street was to be opened. As the expression thus complained of is also found in the statute no serious objection can be based upon its repetition in the notice and ordinance.

The report is further criticised because, although the various tracts referred to therein were otherwise sufficiently described, the names of the city and county were not stated in that connection. There was no occasion for stating them. The various subdivisions named must be understood to be those of the municipality which had instituted and was carrying on the proceeding.

Another objection to the report is that it does not disclose by what rule or method the amount required to be raised by special assessments was apportioned among the property of the benefit district. The legislature might doubtless have provided for an apportionment according to the area, or to the frontage, or to the value. (25 A. & E. Encycl. of L. 1200, 1201.) What it intended in this regard must be found in these words of the statute:

“For the payment of such value and damages, the appraisers shall assess against the city the amount of benefit to the public generally, and the remainder of such damages against the property within the benefit district which shall, in the opinion of said appraisers, be especially benefited by the proposed improvement.” (Laws 1903, ch. 122, § 160.)

This can only be interpreted to mean that the amount to be charged against the tracts especially benefited shall be distributed in proportion to the actual benefit respectively received by each in the opinion of the ap*697praisers. The report, so far as material, was thus worded:

“We, the undersigned appraisers appointed to ascertain the actual value of the land proposed to be condemned and taken, and to assess the benefits and damages sustained by all property owners by reason of the [improvement in question], beg leave to report that . . . we assessed against the city the amount of benefits to the public generally by reason of the opening, widening or extending of said highway, and the remainder of such damages, including the value of the land to be taken and the damages to all other property, we assessed as benefits against the specific property embraced in the benefit district fixed by said ordinance which will be especially benefited by the proposed improvement, as shown by the schedule hereto attached and made a part hereof, and we now report the same as a full and complete assessment.”

The appraisers’ oath, which was referred to in and made a part of the report, contained an engagement that they would “make a true, correct and equitable appraisement of the actual value of the land proposed to be condemned and taken, and of the benefits and damages to all other lots and pieces of land.” In view of the terms of the statute the report sufficiently showed that the plan adopted was that of apportioning the damages according to the actual benefits received. It is.now claimed that the £otal benefits estimated exceed the total damages by a few dollars, that one tract was assessed twice, and that in several instances the assessment levied does not correspond with the estimate of the appraisers. These matters, however, need not be considered, for they were not referred to in the petition, which undertook to set out the plaintiffs’ grievances in full detail.

The ordinances providing for the improvement and for collecting the assessments are attacked upon grounds similar to those already discussed, and upon 'others which have been examined and are held to be-insufficient, but which are thought not to require separate statement.

*698The final claim upon which a reversal is asked is that only property fronting upon a street to be opened can be charged with the cost thereof. It is true that in denying the right of the owner of property which does not abut upon a street to maintain a suit to enjoin its vacation or obstruction courts often say that such a person has no special or peculiar interest therein, but this is explained to mean that to gain a standing for that purpose he must show that he suffers an inconvenience different in kind from that caused to the public generally. (Billard v. Erhart, 35 Kan. 611, 12 Pac. 39.) And that situation can only arise when his direct access to his property is affected. But it is obvious that by the opening of a street tracts not abutting upon it may be actually benefited and become more valuable. The advantage thus afforded to owners may be said to be of the same kind as that derived by the public generally, or, at all events, of the same kind as that derived by many other individuals. But it obviously will vary in degree, depending upon distance, position and other local conditions, and in that sense is' special and peculiar as to each tract. Under the statute the location of the property is immaterial if it is in fact benefited (25 A. & E. Encycl. of L. 1189), and the question of fact is to be determined by the council and the appraisers. In Matter of Common Council of Amsterdam, 126 N. Y. 158, 27 N. E. 272, affirming on this point 62 N. Y. Supr. Ct. 270, 8 N. Y. Supp. 234, it was expressly held that the authority given to commissioners to assess the costs of the opening of a street to the property benefited thereby was not limited to an assessment upon lands bordering on the street. (See, also, In re Westlake Avenue, 40 Wash. 144, 82 Pac. 279.)

No jurisdictional defect in the proceedings having been pointed out, no ground for enjoining the enforcement of the assessment has been established, and the' judgment must therefore be reversed.