Ankeny v. City of Spokane

159 P. 806, 92 Wash. 549, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 816
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 21, 1916
DocketNo. 13056
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 159 P. 806 (Ankeny v. City of Spokane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ankeny v. City of Spokane, 159 P. 806, 92 Wash. 549, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 816 (Wash. 1916).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

Section 6 of chapter 98 of the Laws of 1911, p. 442, relating to local improvements in cities and towns, as amended by chapter 131 of the Laws of 1913, p. 409 (omitting parts not essential to the questions in controversy here), reads as follows:

“Section 6. Whenever the public interest or convenience may require, the council, or other legislative authority of any such city or town, is hereby authorized to order the whole or any part of the streets . . . within any such city or town to be . . . improved, and to order . . . street lighting systems, together with the cost, and expense of furnishing electrical energy to said street lighting systems, . . . to be constructed, . . . therein; and to levy and collect special assessments to pay the whole or any part of the cost and expense of any such improvement. . . . Any local improvement payable, in whole or in part, by special assessments, which shall include a charge for the cost and expense of furnishing electrical energy to any system of street lighting shall be initiated only upon petition signed by the owners of two-thirds of the lineal frontage upon the improvement to be made and two-thirds of the area within the limits of the proposed improvement district.” 3 Rem. & Bal. Code, § 7892-6.

Acting under and in pursuance of this section of the statute, and in pursuance of a petition of the requisite number of property owners, the legislative authority of the city of Spokane passed an ordinance ordering the improvement of a part of the First avenue in that city, “by installing, operating, and maintaining for a period of ten years after installation, an ornamental street lighting system therein,” ac[551]*551cording to specifications adopted by the ordinance. The ordinance provided that the cost of installing, operating and maintaining the system for the time specified, including all the necessary and incidental expenses, should be borne by and assessed against the property included within the district therein created, except twenty-five per centum of the cost, which it was provided should be borne by the city from its general fund. Subsequently a contract was let for the construction and maintenance of the system. The contract price was for a lump sum of $66,429, payable in ten equal annual installments, without interest, save on deferred payments. While the contract covered three distinct and several items, namely, the construction of the lighting plant proper, the maintenance of the plant for a period of ten years, and the supplying of it with electrical energy for the same period, the cost of the individual items are not set forth therein. Their relative proportions to the whole can be gathered, however, from the preliminary estimates of the city engineer. That officer estimated the total cost of the three items mentioned at $63,624, allowing for the first item $17,600, for the second $10,824, and for the third $35,200; thus showing that the cost of furnishing the electrical energy for the ten-year period exceeds the cost of the plant plus the cost of its maintenance for a like period.

One W. M. Ridpath owned property situated in the improvement district, and on the initiation of the improvement proceedings, filed a protest against the same. Between the initiation of the proceedings and the return of the assessment roll, Ridpath died, and his daughter, the appellant in the present proceeding, was appointed administratrix of his estate. As such administratrix, she filed objections to the assessment roll, which were disallowed by the city and the roll confirmed. She appealed therefrom to the superior court of Spokane county, when again her objections were overruled and a judgment entered confirming the roll in all [552]*552respects. From the last mentioned judgment, she appeals to this court.

The appellant makes no question as to the regularity of the proceedings, nor does she question the sufficiency of the statutory grant of authority to the city to create the improvement, apart from the constitutional power in the legislature to make the grant. Her principal contention is that the statute itself is unconstitutional, because not within the grant of power conferred by § 9 of art. 7 of the constitution, which provides that, “The legislature may vest the corporate authorities of cities, towns, and villages with power to make local improvements by special assessments, or by special taxation of property benefited;” the precise contention being that the furnishing of electrical energy for street lighting purposes is not a “local improvement,” within the meaning of that term as used in the constitution. Certain minor contentions will be noted later.

'All of the authorities agree that a local improvement to be chargeable upon private property as such must possess at least two essential elements; (1) the improvement must be of a public nature, as contradistinguished from one purely private, that is, it must be an improvement of such a nature as the municipality would be justified in constructing and maintaining by general taxation; and (2) it must confer a special benefit on the property sought to be specially charged with its creation and maintenance, over and above that conferred generally upon property within the municipality. To these some of the courts have added a third element, namely, that of permanency; denying the power of local assessment in those instances where the improvement is of an evanescent nature or type. It is on this principle the appellant bases her contention that the statute authorizing a local assessment for the cost of furnishing electrical energy to a street lighting plant is unconstitutional. She argues that the phrase “local improvement” necessarily presupposes permanent physical additions to the streets, and that electrical energy [553]*553is not a permanent physical addition, but is of an evanescent nature, vanishing as soon as the mechanical operation which creates it ceases.

The idea that permanency of the improvement is an essential to the charging of the expense thereof as a local improvement to property benefited is peculiarly the doctrine of the courts of Illinois. A case frequently cited is Chicago v. Blair, 149 Ill. 310, 36 N. E. 829, 24 L. R. A. 412, where it was held that the sprinkling of streets is not a local improvement subject to be made a charge upon abutting or adjacent property. The power to sprinkle the street at the expense of the general taxpayer was not denied, but it was held that such work was not of a character that the cost of the same could be charged to the abutting property as a local improvement. In the course of the opinion it was said:

“A local improvement, within the meaning of the statute, is a public improvement which by reason of its being confined to a locality, enhances the value of adjacent property, as distinguished from benefits diffused by it throughout the municipality. The only basis upon which either special assessment or special taxation can be sustained is, that from the proposed local improvement the property subjected to the tax or assessment will be enhanced in value to the extent of the burthen imposed. ... If, therefore, from an inspection of the ordinance authorizing the making of the improvement, it appears from the nature of the work proposed that the market value of abutting or adjacent property would not be increased thereby, as a matter of law it would not be a local improvement, within the meaning of the statute, and no declaration of the corporate authorities could make it so.

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Bluebook (online)
159 P. 806, 92 Wash. 549, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ankeny-v-city-of-spokane-wash-1916.