Arnold v. City of Tulsa

1913 OK 301, 132 P. 669, 38 Okla. 129, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 319
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 13, 1913
Docket2525
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1913 OK 301 (Arnold v. City of Tulsa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arnold v. City of Tulsa, 1913 OK 301, 132 P. 669, 38 Okla. 129, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 319 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

TURNER, J.

From a judgment of the district court of Tulsa county rendered and entered March 25, 1911, sustaining a demurrer to their petition interposed by the defendants city of Tulsa and others and the intervenor, the Eureka Cqnstruction Company, and dissolving their temporary restraining order enjoining the city from collecting a special assessment sought to be imposed on certain lots belonging to them in said city, plaintiffs in error, plaintiffs below, bring the case here. They assign that the court erred in sustaining said demurrer. Plaintiffs, after alleging the corporate existence of the city and that certain persons, naming them, constitute the board of commissioners with power to legislate therefor under its charter, substantially state that the plaintiffs are the owners in fee of certain lots and parcels of ground in Lindsay’s addition to said city abutting upon South Guthrie avenue; that about August, 1909, the city entered into a contract with the Eureka Construction Company to pave said avenue, which has been done, and an estimate of the different items of cost therefor made to the city; that among these items is one “* * * for $537.14 for a drain which includes 496 feet 12-inch pipe, 40 cents • per foot, $198.40; 80 lineal feet 15-inch pipe, 56 cents per foot, $44.80; 325.6 cubic yards excavating dirt, 35 cents, $113.94; 6 catch-basins, $20 each, $120; 2 manholes, $30 each, $60 — total, $537.14; that said drain extends south on Guthrie avenue from Eleventh street to the south line of Twelfth stréet; that no resolution for said drain improvements was ever passed by the defendants, and no notice that such improvements would ever be made and charged to plaintiffs was ever given plaintiffs as .required by law; that *131 the plaintiffs had no knowledge or notice, either actual or ■constructive, that said improvements would be -made and taxed against the plaintiffs and their said property; that plaintiffs did not make any request of defendants for said improvements, and had no opportunity to be heard on said matter of improvements; that said improvements are not incident- or a necessary part of the improvement of street paving; that ■such drain improvements are a separate and distinct class of improvements from that of paving, and require a resolution of the legislative body of said defendant city, and due notice thereof to plaintiffs, and an opportunity given plaintiffs to be heard thereon before contracting for same; that by reason that no resolution having been passed for said drain as aforesaid, and no notice given plaintiffs as aforesaid, the said acts of the defendants were illegal, void, and wholly unauthorized, and said sum as aforesaid for said drain should not be made a tax and charged against the plaintiff’s .and a lien against plaintiffs’ property described herein.”

Apart from any question of -notice to assess the costs of proposed improvements, the petition, construed with a view to substantial justice, in effect charges that the resolution, while ■evidencing the necessity of paving and the intention of the city to pave, was silent as to the necessity of constructing this ■drain and the intention of the city so to do and, hence, plaintiffs are not liable for the cost of the drain, which is* included in the assessment about to be levied. As this demurrer admits the truth of the allegation, “that said improvements are not incident or a necessary part of the improvement of street paving, that such drain improvements is a separate and distinct class of improvements from that of paving * * *” and the city charter provides:

■“When the board of commissioners shall deem it necessary to grade, pave, macadamize, gutter, drain or otherwise' improve any street, avenue or alley or any part thereof, within the limits of the city for which a special tax is to be levied, as herein provided, said board shall by resolution declare such *132 work or improvement necessary to be done, . which resolution shall be adopted .by a majority vote of the board, and the passage of such resolution shall be conclusive of the public necessity therefor, and no notice of such action by the board shall be requisite to its validity. Such resolution shall, in general terms, set forth the nature and extent of the improvement or improvements to be made, the section or sections of any public street, avenue or alley to be improved, the material or materials with which the improvements are to be constructed and the method or methods under which the costs of such improvements are to be paid”

■ — -we are of opinion that, as this drainage work was not specified in the resolution for paving, the same cannot be collected .as a part of the assessment sought to be restrained. This for the reason stated in the first section of Patridge v. Lucas, 99 Cal. 519, 33 Pac. 1082, which reads:

“The passage and publication of a resolution of intention to do street work are acts by which the board acquires jurisdiction to make such improvements as they describe in the resolution, and they cannot lawfully cause work other than that which is so described to be performed, or enter into any valid contract therefor.”

In that case the court said:

“It is well settled that The passage and publication of the resolution of intention are acts by which the board acquires jurisdiction; and by those acts they acquire jurisdiction to make only such improvements as they described in the resolution, and they cannot, therefore, lawfully cause work other than that which is described to be performed.’ Beaudry v. Valdez, 32 Cal. 276; Himmelmann v. Satterlee, 50 Cal. 68. * * :It It is plain that the work described in the resolution of intention did not include the construction of rock gutterways in the streets to be macadamized, and therefore the board of trustees did not, under the rule above stated, acquire jurisdiction to contract for such gutterways, and the contract as to these is void.”

Mason v. City of Sioux Falls, 2 S. D. 640, 51 N. W. 770, 39 Am. St. Rep. 802, was an action to enjoin defendant from selling certain real estate of plaintiff charged with a special tax assessment for grading and curbing Prairie ave *133 míe in said city. There was judgment for plaintiff and defendant appealed. One of plaintiff’s grounds for annulling the-special assessment proceeding alleged in her complaint was that the cost of curbing said avenue was included in the assessment f-or which the property owners were not liable, as the curbing was not specified in the resolution for grading. The court said:

“We are of the opinion that the court properly sustained plaintiff’s objection to this evidence. The resolution under which the grading in this case was done is as follows: ‘Resolved, that it is necessary that Prairie avenue, between Fourth and Twelfth- streets, in said city of Sioux Falls, be graded and worked to the established grade of said avenue.’ It will be noticed that curbing is not mentioned in the resolution, and the city cannot, therefore, hold the property owners or the property liable for the cost of the curbing. To render property subject to the cost of street improvements, the requirements of the statute must be strictly complied with.”

The doctrine of this case is adhered to in Street & Improvement Co. v. Taylor, 138 Cal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 301, 132 P. 669, 38 Okla. 129, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-city-of-tulsa-okla-1913.