Bayes v. Town of Paintsville

179 S.W. 623, 166 Ky. 679, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 758
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 12, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 179 S.W. 623 (Bayes v. Town of Paintsville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bayes v. Town of Paintsville, 179 S.W. 623, 166 Ky. 679, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 758 (Ky. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

[681]*681The town of Paintsville, through its board of trustees, and under certain ordinances duly passed, inaugurated and executed a plan of street paving and sewerage, extending practically over the whole town. The work was done under what is generally known as the “ten year bond plan,” authorized by the charter of towns of the sixth class, to which Paintsville belongs, such authority being found in section 3706, Kentucky Statutes. The cost of the street paving and sewerage construction done by the town of Paintsville aggregated, approximately, $80,000, and was all completed and paid for except what was assessed against the property of F. M. Bayes, his wife, Mary Bayes, and their daughter, Malta Bailey.

In making the improvements under the ten year bond plan mentioned the town of Paintsville let the contracts for the work and issued and sold bonds for the purpose of raising the money to pay for it. By the terms of the bonds the duty of collecting the assessments from the property owners is imposed upon the city, which pledges its faith and credit to exercise all legal means to enforce their collection. Its relation to the matter is, therefore, .analagous to that of a trustee, the bondholders being the cestuis gui trustent.

It appears that the appellant, F. M. Bayes, owns three parcels of real estate in the town of Paintsville .abutting streets paved and in which sewers were constructed, the first parcel lying on Court street, the second on Second street, and the third on Second and Court •.streets; and that each parcel was liable to an assessment tax for the paving of the street it abuts and construction of the sewer therein, and was assessed its proportionate part of such cost according to value; the amount assessed against the first parcel of real estate being $152.42, the amount assessed against the second parcel, $118.03, and the amount against the third parcel, .$26.66.

Appellants having refused to pay these assessments, br any part thereof, this action was instituted by the appellees, Town of Paintsville and its board of trustees, for the recovery thereof and to enforce against the lots, respectively, liable therefor the liens allowed by statute .as security for such assessments. Prior to the institution of this action there had been instituted in the same court by the appellants an action in which it was sought do enjoin the town of Paintsville and its. board of trus[682]*682tees from selling the bonds which had been issued for the purpose of obtaining the money with which to pay the cost of the improvements in question. The two actions were consolidated and heard together, the questions at issue between the parties being practically the same in each case.

By the petition in the action brought by appellants and their answer to the petition in the instant case, the validity of the assessments in question was attacked and the right of the appellee to subject the property, or any part of it, to the payment thereof denied. The attack upon the validity of the assessments also put in issue the validity of the several ordinances under which the work of improvement was done, the manner of their passage,, the letting of the contracts for the work and the manner in which the work was performed; but by the production of copies of all the ordinances, contracts, and writings, showing the proceedings Thereunder, and other evidence found in the record, the performance of the work and the manner in which it was done, we are convinced that the whole proceedings, both as regards the validity of the ordinances, contracts, improvements, and the character of the work done in making the same, were planned and executed with unusual care. This conclusion enables-us to waive consideration of the immaterial matters appearing in the voluminous record, and brings us to the consideration of the questions necessary to be determined.

First, it is insisted for appellants that the second parcel of real estate, mentioned as lying on Second street,, is not subject to assessment for the improvement of that, street because it does not abut the street. The basis, for this contention is that Mary Bayes, wife of the appellant, F. M. Bayes, owns a strip of ground eight feet-in width, extending along Second street, which abuts the-street and lies between it and the remainder of the lot' yet owned by F. M. Bayes. The facts shown by the evidence are that when the purpose of the appellee city to make the improvements in question became known, but before the work on the improvements began, the appellant, F. M. Bayes, by deed conveyed to his wife the eight-foot strip of ground in question, reserving in the deed the use of it as a means of ingress and egress to and from the remainder of the lot, upon which he then had and now has his residence, and providing that no fencing or side[683]*683walk should be constructed thereon. In other words, under the provisions of the deed, the wife took nothing but the naked title to the ground, the full possession and right to the use thereof remain in the husband, and may be passed to his vendees, immediate and remote, in all respects as if the deed had not been executed. The circumstances attending the conveyance, together with the .admissions contained in the testimony of the appellant, E. M. Bayes, convince us that the conveyance was made with the intent' on the part of the grantor to avoid the .assessment that was subsequently made upon the property for the improvement of the street in front of it.

The assessment cannot be defeated by such a scheme. If allowed, it would, in effect, nullify the act of the legislature giving municipalities authority to make such improvements at the cost of abutting property owners and place an undue burden upon those who had not resorted to such a scheme for a like purpose. The question, in. the aspect here presented, has never been passed on in this jurisdiction, but in 28 Cyc., 1133, we find a statement of the law which we think applicable:

“Conveyances to Evade Assessments. Liability of land for an assessment attaches from the passage of an •ordinance ordering an improvement, and will not be affected by a subsequent conveyance; and a colorable sale •of the portion of a lot abutting an improvement, with intent to avoid an assessment, will not operate to exempt the part retained.”

We, therefore, concur in the conclusion reached by the circuit court, that the lot in question, exclusive of the strip conveyed the wife, is, notwithstanding such conveyance, subject to the assessment.

Another ground of defense relied on by appellants is that the assessment of abutting property for the .construction of a sewer is unauthorized and that the sewer •on Second street, where abutted by their lot, is larger than that connecting with it. As to the first contention it is only necessary to- say that section 3706, Kentucky Statutes, confers upon the board of trustees of a town •of the sixth class power to construct sewers as well as .streets, and also provides that the expense incurred in] •doing so may be paid by a local assessment upon abutting, -property, not exceeding fifty per cent, of the value of the ground, after such improvement is made, excluding the. value of the buildings and other improvements-upon [684]*684the property so improved. It is not claimed by appellants that the assessment, both for the cost of constructing the street and sewer, exceeds fifty per cent, of the value of the ground assessed, after the exclusion of the buildings and other improvements upon the property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 S.W. 623, 166 Ky. 679, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bayes-v-town-of-paintsville-kyctapp-1915.