Bailey v. City of Zanesville

20 Ohio C.C. 236
CourtMuskingum Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Ohio C.C. 236 (Bailey v. City of Zanesville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Muskingum Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. City of Zanesville, 20 Ohio C.C. 236 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

Wilson, J.

The case of Willis Bailey against the city of Zanesville comes into this court on appeal. It was submitted upon an agreed statement of facts. The statement of facts, as it comes to us, is in the form of a finding of facts made by the judge who tried the case in the court below.

The plaintiff,in his petition, avers that he is the owner of lot No. 37 in the city of Zanesville, fronting on Maple Avenue 240 feet, being in depth 500 feet on one side and about 600 feet on the other, containing an area of about five acres of land; that this lot No, 37 is appraised for taxation, at the sum of $9200; that on March 14, 1892, the city council passed a resolution to improve Maple Avenue, and on August 12 following, it passed the improving ordinance, specifying the manner in which the avenue should be improved, On September 12 succeeding, it passed an assessing ordinance, assessing the cost of this improvement, except two per cent, thereof, and except the cost of paving between the railway tracks, and the cost of paving at the street intersections, upon the abutting property on the avenue, by the foot front, at the rate of $4.26 per foot; that under this ordinance, it assessed plaintiff’s property for $1001.37; thet this property was not subdivided into city lots, and that the average depth of city lots in the neighborhood was about 148 feet, and that the average assessed value thereof was about $9.36 per front foot. [238]*238He avers that he has paid $600.18 on this improvement, and that the city is still claiming $400. from him upon the improvement, under the assessment, and that unless restrained by the order of the court, the city clerk will certify, as he may under the ordinance, to the auditor of the county, the amount assessed and still unpaid, and it may be collected as other taxes against him, He avers that he has paid all that he can be legally assessed for on this improvement, and asks that the authorities may be restrained from collecting any further sum from him, as they threaten to do.

The city answers, denying that it has assessed the property beyond the limit allowed by law, and says that the property assessed is appraised at $9200, and the assessment does not exceed twenty-five per cent, of that value; they deny that this lot is not subdivided, and say that it is a lot numbered and platted according to the plats of the city, and that it has been appraised as such. They also plead, as a further defense, that on June 1, 1897, they passed a re-assessing ordinance, finding that the first assessment was not legal, and that they then appraised the property of the plaintiff at $17.04 per front foot, and assessed him the one fourth of that sum, for the payment of this improvement.

A motion was made and sustained in the court below, to strike out this last defense from the answer. That motion was not argued here, and this court has not found it necessary to pass upon the sufficiency of the defense as a pleading. We have, however, considered it as one of the facts admitted in the case, and have applied the law to such state of facts.

The question raised here involves the construction of sections 2269 and 2270 of the Revised Statutes Section 2269 reads,

“In making special assessments, according to valuation, the council shall be governed by the assessed value of the lots, if the land is subdivided and the lots are numbered and recorded; but if the lots are not assessed for taxation, or if there is land not subdivided into lots, the council shall fix the value of the lots or the value of the front of such land to the usual depth of lots, by the average of two [239]*239blocks, none of which shall be next adjoining on either side; and if there are no blocks so adjoining, the council shall fix the value of the lots or lands to be assessed so that it will be a fair average of the assessed value of other lots in the neighborhood, and if in making a special assessment by the foot front — 'by the abutting foot, there is land abounding or abutting upon the improvement not subdivided into lots, the council shall fix the depth-of such lands so that it will be a fair average depth of the lots in the neighborhood, which shall be subject to such assessment.”

Applying this statute to the facts in this case, the court below found that this lot was land in bulk. The parties here have agreed .to this as a fact in this case, notwith standing the contention of the answer that it is not land of that character, and if that fact'had not been conceded by the city, the law would so determine it under the authority of the case of Springer v. Avondale, 35 Ohio State, 625,

The doctrine of that case is, in determining whether a particular parcel of real estate was land in bulk, within the meaning of section 542 of the municipal code of 1869, which is section 2269 of the Revised Statutes, regard must be had not merely to the recorded plat of the town, but to the size of the lots generally in the municipal corporation; so that, as matter of law, it must be decided that this was land in bulk, and not land divided into lots, because the size of this lot is not the size of lots .generally in the city, or in the neighborhood.

The city, therefore, had in this case, land in bulk, upon which it was authorized and empowered to levy an assessment, and before it could do so, either according to the appraised value, according to the benefits, or according to the foot front, it must give to the land assessed, a lot depth, and that lot depth must be what the average lot depth is in the neighborhood. And after they have thus fixed the taxing district, and designated the land which may be assessed for the improvement, it never having bad an assessed value for taxation, it must give it a value for taxation. It is required to do that in order that the limitation of section 2270 may apply, for that section provides:

‘‘In municipal corporations other than cities of the first class, or in incorporated villages in counties containing a [240]*240city of the first or second grade of the first class, the tax or assessment specially levied and assessed on any lot or land, for any improvement, shall, in no case, amount to more than twenty-five per centum, of the value of the property, as assessed for taxation.”

The land must be assessed for taxation before it can determined whether or not the assessment exceeds the limit which is prescribed by this section. Therefore, it was the duty of the council, after it determined the depth of the lots in this neighborhood and the depth of the land which could be assessed' out of this.land in bulk, to then determine what its assessed value for taxation should be. The power to determine the assessed value is not arbitrary. It must in every instance, whatever the method of assessment may be, be uniform and equal; in other words, where the land is in bulk, it must be governed by the assessed value of the lots in the blocks on the sides, or if there are no blocks on the sides, then in accordance with the assessed value of the lots in the neighborhood. The council is not permitted to depart from this rule in determining the value of property for taxation.

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Bluebook (online)
20 Ohio C.C. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-city-of-zanesville-ohcirctmuskingu-1900.