Ricker v. City of Helena

MR. JUSTICE STARK

delivered the opinion of the court.

On March 2, 1923, the city council of Helena duly passed a resolution of intention to create special improvement district No. 139, in < said city, for the paving of Neill Avenue, from Park Avenue to Main Street, and certain described portions of Main Street and Fuller and Sixth Avenues. In fixing the limits of the proposed district, the platted boundaries of the several parcels of land embraced therein were not followed, but a line was fixed at a distance of twenty-five feet from the front of the streets to be improved — that is, the district embraced a strip twenty-five feet wide along each side of the included streets. The total area of the district *356thus described was 172,285 square feet. Included in this area were two strips of land along the south side of Neill Avenue, containing a total area of 14,875 square feet belonging to the city, which it had theretofore dedicated to the public as a park, and also a strip along the northern side of the same street, containing an area of 19,250 square feet, belonging to the Great Northern Railway Company, with which company the city had theretofore entered into a contract to the effect that it should not be required to pay for special improvements along said strip, such as contemplated in the resolution, in consideration of the conveyance to the city of the lands contained in the park above mentioned. Main Street is the principal thoroughfare of the city, while the portions of Sixth Avenue and Neill Avenue included in the district are side streets leading into it, furnishing the principal means of approach thereto from the western portion of the city; the latter being so situated as to “be and become the principal traveled avenue between the east and west sides of the city.” The part of Fuller Avenue included in the district extends northerly from the included portion of Sixth Avenue for a distance of one block. The general character of the improvements contemplated in the resolution was the pavement of the streets with bituminous concrete. Main Street, Fuller Avenue and Sixth Avenue were already paved, and the existing pavement was to be used as a base for the new pavement, while Neill Avenue was unpaved, and pavement thereon was to have a crushed rock base.

Within the time designated in the resolution when objections and protests against the creation of the district could be made, the plaintiffs, and other property owners, representing 62,618 square feet of the land embraced therein, filed their protests. In due time the city council considered the protests filed, determined that they were insufficient in area to affect the proceeding, and thereupon finally passed the resolution of intention, and also a resolution creating the district. Thereafter a contract for the construction of the *357proposed improvements was awarded to the defendant F. B. Burch & Sons Construction Company.

On May 29, 1923, the plaintiffs commenced this suit, seeking to have the action of the city council in creating this special improvement district and in entering into the contract with the defendant construction company declared null and i void, and to enjoin the defendants from proceeding further thereon. Upon the filing of the complaint, an order was issued requiring the defendants to show cause why the prayer of the complaint should not be granted. To this complaint the defendants filed an answer on June 15. The order to show cause came on for hearing on the nineteenth day of June, whereupon the defendants filed a motion to quash the same, on the ground that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to warrant the issuance of an injunction. The matter was argued to the court and submitted under stipulation of counsel that final judgment might be entered upon the merits. On June 21 the court made an order sustaining the motion to quash the order to show cause, and directed judgment on the merits to be entered in favor of the defendants. In accordance with this order, judgment was entered on June 22, from which the plaintiffs have appealed.

The first contention of plaintiffs is that the city council did [1] not have the right, in determining the sufficiency of the protests filed by the plaintiffs and other property owners, to include in the area of the district to be assessed for the payment of the improvements either the area of the lots set aside by the city and dedicated to public use as a park, or the lots belonging to the Great Northern Railway Company, which they asserted the city had agreed should not be subject to assessment for special improvements of the character contemplated.

As to the area embraced in the lots set aside for park purposes: The power to determine whether or not the public interest or convenience requires the creation of a special improvement district is vested in the city council by section *3585226, Revised Codes of 1921. It was within the province of the legislature to determine what xiortion, if any, of the owners of property within a proposed district could by protest defer, or defeat, its creation. By the provisions of section 5229, as amended by Chapter 135, Session Laws 1923, the owners of forty per cent of the area of the property to be assessed for the improvements, by filing their protest against the creation of the district, can stay any further jiroceedings for a period of six months from the time when the protests are filed with the city clerk, but the final paragraph of this section declares that: “In determining whether or not sufficient protests have been filed on a proposed district to prevent further proceedings therein, property owned by a county, city, or town shall be considered, the same as other property in the district.”

'While counsel state in their brief that “this is but an arbitrary declaration of the legislature, attempting to confer upon the city council a power which it does not itself possess,” no authority is cited to sustain the statement, and we can perceive no reason to support it. If the city property is required to share its proportionate part of the expense of the improvement, there is no more reason why it should be excluded in determining whether sufficient protests have been filed than there would be if it was held in private ownership.

The legislature having declared that property owned by a county, city or town shall be considered the same as other property in determining whether sufficient protests against the creation of the district have been filed, it would seem to follow that it intended that such property should be assessed tbe same as other property to pay for the improvements; but, irrespective of such a legislative declaration, by the decision of this court in City of Kalispell v. School District No. 5, 45 Mont. 221, Ann. Cas. 1913D, 1101, 122 Pac. 742, this- state is committed to the doctrine that the property of a public corporation is subject to assessment for special improvements, *359the same as private property. It is our opinion that under this provision the city council was authorized to consider the area embraced within the lots set aside for park purposes in determining whether or not sufficient protests had been filed to prevent further proceedings in the creation of the district.

As to the strip of land owned by the Great Northern Rail-[2] way Company and lying along the north side of Neill avenue: The complaint alleges in paragraph 9 that: “By an agreement with the city of Helena, in exchange for the conveyance to the city of Helena by the Great Northern Railway Company of the lands hereinbefore described as set aside for public parks, the lands herein last described were agreed to be excluded from assessment by the city of Helena for the payment of the cost of special improvements, such as the improvements contemplated by the said resolution.”

The answer in paragraph 3 denies “That such strips or parcels of ground are excluded from assessment by the city of Helena, and denies that such strips or parcels are not liable for the payment of the cost of special improvements contemplated by said resolution.” And in paragraph 5 it alleges: “That in truth and in fact, and in legal effect, by virtue of the agreement between the city of Helena and the Great Northern Railway Company with reference to the parcels of land described in paragraph 9, the city of Helena itself * * * is liable for the payment of the tax or special improvement assessment for the special improvement district contemplated by said resolution against the said lots or parcels described in paragraph 9 as being the property of the Great Northern.” And in paragraph 8 of the answer it is alleged: “That said lots and parcels are to be and will be assessed, and said assessment will be paid by the city of Helena, in the same proportionate amounts as the assessment upon the other lots in said district are paid.”

The contract between the city and the Great Northern Railway Company is not made a part of the pleadings, and all that the record discloses concerning it is set forth in *360the above-quoted portions of the complaint and answer. Under these conditions, the court was justified in concluding that under this agreement the strips of land along the north side of Neill Avenue, property of the Great Northern Railway Company, are to be assessed for these improvements the same as other property, but that the city itself in pursuance of its contract will pay such assessment. Hence this strip of land was properly considered by the council as “property to be assessed” for the contemplated improvements, in determining whether or not sufficient protests had been filed to stay the proceedings.

Plaintiffs’ next contention is that the action of the city [3] council in fixing the boundaries' of the district at a distance of twenty-five feet from the front lines of the streets to be improved, thereby including only portions of the lots, instead of including the whole platted area of each lot, was arbitrary and unlawful. In this connection, counsel have cited the cases of Chicago v. Wells, 236 Ill. 129, 127 Am. St. Rep. 282, 23 L. R. A. (n. s.) 405, 86 N. E. 197; Iowa Pipe & Tile Co. v. Callanan, 125 Iowa, 358, 106 Am. St. Rep. 311, 3 Ann. Cas. 7, 67 L. R. A. 408, 101 N. W. 141; Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Barber Asphalt Paving Co., 197 U. S. 430, 49 L. Ed. 819, 25 Sup. Ct. Rep. 466; Martin v. District of Columbia, 205 U. S. 135, 51 L. Ed. 743, 27 Sup. Ct. Rep. 440 [see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes]. An examination of these cases discloses that the facts upon which the decisions were based are' so different from those involved in this case that they are not applicable here.

The city council is authorized by section 5227, Revised Codes of 1921, to fix the boundaries of the special improvement district to be created, and there is nothing in the statute which indicates that the size of the lot actually owned by the individual shall determine what portion thereof shall be included. Having the power to fix the boundaries of the district, the council must have the right to fix the same, independently of the ownership of the particular tracts or *361parcels abutting upon the improvement, otherwise, as will be directly shown, it might be obliged to fix the boundaries in such a manner that gross inequality of costs and benefit would result.

As to a great majority of the lots embraced in the district, the ratio between the frontage and area is substantially different; for instance, the block on the east side of Main Street, between Eighth Avenue and Sixth Avenue, is divided into fourteen lots or parcels of varying widths. The depth of the lot on the north end of the block, whose side extends along Eighth Avenue, is eighty-six feet, while the depth of the lot on the south end of the block, whose side extends along Sixth Avenue, is 123.1 feet. The increase in the depth of the lots from Eighth Avenue to Sixth Avenue is constant, so that in every instance the south line of a lot is longer than its north line.

The area of a lot with a twenty-five feet frontage on Main Street at the north end of this block would be approximately 1,914' square feet, while the area of a lot with similar frontage at the south end of the block would be approximately 2,462 square feet, or a little more than twenty-three per cent greater than the area of the lot at the north end. Yet it does not appear from the record but that the benefit to the two lots is equal. So that to have included the total area of each of these lots in the district would have made the lot at the south end of the block pay over twenty-three per cent more than the lot at the north end of the block for the same benefit; whereas, by including only the front twenty-five feet of each of these lots, the cost for equal benefit will be substantially identical. What is true of the lots in this block is likewise true of a large majority of the lots in the entire district, as shown by the map.

Under the facts of the case it cannot be successfully asserted that the council, in fixing the boundaries of the district as it did, abused its discretion or acted in an arbitrary manner.

*362Finally, it is contended on behalf of the plaintiffs that the [4] city council had no right to join in one district the property abutting on Main Street, Sixth Avenue, and Fuller Avenue, with the property abutting on Neill Avenue, because the character of the work to be done on the latter street was substantially different from the work to be done on the other streets, and for the further reason that the property on Main Street, Fuller Avenue, and Sixth Avenue will not be specially benefited by the improvement of Neill Avenue.

Section 5226, Revised Codes of 1921, provides: “The city council is hereby authorized and empowered to create special improvement districts, and order the whole, or any portion or portions, either in length or width, or any one or more of the streets, avenues, alleys * * * of any such city, * * * paved or repaved, * * * surfaced or resurfaced. # * * >> And section 5227, regarding the resolution of intention, provides: “The city council may include in one proceeding under one resolution of intention and in one contract any of the different kinds of work mentioned in this Act, and any number of streets and rights of way, or portions thereof. ’ ’

Whether the construction of the improvements in question would result in special benefit to the various' lots and parcels of land embraced in the district was primarily a question for determination by the city council “and its order for the construction of the improvements at the expense of the abutting property owners was a determination that plaintiffs’ property is specially benefited — a determination with which the courts will not interfere, except upon the ground of fraud or such manifest abuse of discretion as amounts to arbitrary action.” (Stettheimer v. City of Butte, 62 Mont. 297, 204 Pac. 1039.)

Since there is no element of fraud in the ease, it is only [5] necessary to search the complaint and answer to ascertain whether the proceedings of the council disclose “such a manifest abuse of discretion as amounts to arbitrary action,” *363It is admitted that each, lot or parcel of land described in the complaint and in the special improvement district fronts upon the district to be improved, and that the pavement contemplated in the entire district will front upon each and all of the parcels of land embraced therein, and that all of the lots will be benefited by such pavement equally and proportionately, and that the cost of construction in front of each lot is exactly the same as the cost of the pavement in front of the lots or parcels on Neill Avenue, and it is further admitted that such cost per lot is not greater than would be the cost for paving Main Street, Fuller Avenue, and Sixth Avenue, if Neill Avenue were not included in the district. It is also admitted that the cost of preparing the surface of the pavement on Main Street to receive the surfacing contemplated by the district is substantially the same as the cost of laying a suitable foundation for a similar surface on Neill Avenue.

It is a matter of common knowledge that the value and [6] benefit of pavement depend upon its extent. Pavement of the street in front of a single lot or parcel, with none in front of the adjoining lots, would be of comparatively little benefit; whereas, if the pavement extends for a considerable distance, so as to secure easy and convenient approach, the benefit to the single lot is correspondingly greater. Neill Avenue being a connecting street with Main Street, and being so situated as “to be and become the principal traveled avenue from one side of the city to the other,” as alleged in the complaint, it is easy to understand that the extension of the pavement along that street, so as to make a more easy and convenient approach to Main Street, might be of special benefit to the lots along the latter.

What is said of Neill Avenue is equally applicable to the portion of Sixth Avenue in question, which, according to the map, likewise connects Main Street with what appears to be the platted portion of the western part of the city of Helena. These and other proper considerations may have *364influenced the council in its determination of the necessity for the creation of this district and the extent of its boundaries.

The burden was upon plaintiffs to make a showing that [7] the city council, in creating this special improvement district and proceeding to have the contemplated work done, exceeded its authority or acted in an arbitrary manner. We are of opinion that they failed to do so, and that the trial court wa§ right in denying the application for an injunction.

The judgment of the district court of Lewis and Clark county is affirmed.

Affirmed.

M'r. Chief Justice Callaway and Associate Justices Cooper, Holloway and (Jalen concur.