Bitter v. City of Lincoln

85 N.W.2d 302, 165 Neb. 201, 1957 Neb. LEXIS 18
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 1957
Docket34195
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 85 N.W.2d 302 (Bitter v. City of Lincoln) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bitter v. City of Lincoln, 85 N.W.2d 302, 165 Neb. 201, 1957 Neb. LEXIS 18 (Neb. 1957).

Opinion

Boslaugh, J.

The city of Lincoln, a city of the primary class with a home rule charter, created an alley paving district consisting of the part of the east-and-west alley north of and adjacent to Lot 15 in Block 1, Cahn, Metcalf, and Farwell’s Subdivision between the east curb line of Twelfth Street and the east line of Eva Place extended south and including Lots 1, 2, and 3 in Block 18, Riverside Addition, and the west 210 feet of Lot 15, Block 1, Cahn, Metcalf, and Farwell’s Subdivision in said city. The work contemplated to be and which was accomplished in the district was the grading, curbing, guttering, and paving of a 16-foot roadway in the alley.

The north 45 feet of Lot 1, Block 18, Riverside Addition, was owned by John Koehler, subject to an executory contract for the sale of the west half thereof. The south 5 feet of Lot 1 and :thei north half of Lot 2 in said *203 Block 18, adjoining and south of the John Koehler property, was owned by Peter Bitter and Amalia Bitter. Between that property and the north line of the alley which was paved was the south half of Lot 2 and all of Lot 3 in Block 18 of Riverside Addition.

Appellants filed with the city objections to any special assessments against the property within the district on account of the construction made in the alley. A hearing was held by the city council. The objections were overruled. Assessment was made against the real estate in the district benefited on account of the cost of the paving and thereafter the board of equalization of the city equalized the assessment and distributed the tax upon the several tracts of property within the paving district. A petition in error was filed by appellants in the district court to test the validity of the special ■assessments made on their real estate by the city of Lincoln on account of the paving of the alley. The district court heard the matters presented by the petition in error, concluded that there was no error in the proceedings had by the city council, and dismissed the petition in error. This appeal is from the action of the district court dismissing the error proceedings and denying a new trial.

Appellants challenge the legality of the special assessments made on their real estate by the assertion that it is an established principle that a blanket formula for the imposition of special assessments upon an area, zone, or frontage basis is illegal and cannot be sustained without a previous finding by the municipal authorities that the property within the area or zone is equally and uniformly benefited.

An engineer of the city, who was familiar with matters concerning the district and who had performed the engineering work in reference to the improvement made, supervised the computation of proposed assessments on account of the cost thereof. A report of proposed assessments was prepared and submitted to'the city council *204 by him. The cost of the paving was divided over all the property in the district. The property was divided into six zones with a decrease of percentage of the cost assigned to each of the zones as the distance increased away from the improvement. The zone nearest ■the improvement was assigned 33% percent of the total amount assessed, the second zone 20 percent, the third zone 16% percent, and the last three zones 10 percent each. This is the formula used by engineers generally and used by the city of Lincoln in distributing the benefits to property from an improvement made in such a district as the one concerned in this case. The engineer knew the facts important to the matter. He knew that the amount assessed to any property should not exceed the benefit accruing to the property by virtue of the improvement made in the district. He acted to comply with that limitation. It was his judgment that the assessments proposed by him and set out in his report against any tract of the property did not exceed the benefit to the property by reason of the improvement made. The resolution of the city council assessing the cost of the improvement on the property in the district contains the following: “That the cost of the improvements in Alley Paving District No. 252 * * * be and the same is hereby assessed upon the property in said district described in the proposed distribution of Assessment attached to this resolution * * *; that each piece and parcel of property described is specially benefited in the amount set forth therein, and no property is taxed more than the special benefits accruing thereto by reason of said improvements; * *

The resolution of the board of equalization recites in part: “* * * that said Board of Equalization, after reviewing said assessments and after hearing evidence with respect thereto found and determined that each separate piece of property in said district was specially benefited on account of said alley paving to the extent and in the amount of the assessment therefor so made *205 by the Council * * *; that said assessment and schedule so made by the Council were approved and adopted by the Board of Equalization as the equalized assessments in said district; * * An appropriate report of the conclusions and actions of the board of equalization was made to and it was approved and adopted by the city council.

Appellants confidently rely, to sustain their contention that the special assessments made on their property are illegal because appellee did not find that the benefits were equal and uniform, upon Morse v. City of Omaha, 67 Neb. 426, 93 N. W. 734. Appellants have misconceived the purport of that decision. The opinion in that case shows that all the property in the improvement district involved in that case was assessed a uniform rate per front-foot. There was nothing to show any finding by the city that the benefits accruing to the abutting property were equal and uniform throughout the district. The statute applicable in that instance, referred to in the opinion, contained a provision that “in cases where the council sitting as a board of equalization, shall find such benefits to be equal and uniform, such assessment may be according to the foot-frontage.” The opinion contains the following: “That property shall be assessed according to the benefits specially accruing is mandatory. * * * But absolute accuracy, of course, can not be expected, and the determination of the extent of the benefits must therefore be left to some tribunal, and the statute plainly says that it shall be lodged in the council sitting as a board of equalization, after due notice to the owners. * * * There is no reason for holding that the finding contemplated by the statute as the basis for an assessment according to the foot-frontage shall be in the exact language of the statute. We are certain that the council, in the ordinance referred to, after due notice, specifically found as a fact that the property abutting on the district was specially benefited to the full amount assessed against each *206 tract of land. It is certain that the question of the extent of the benefits was determined by the board after deliberation and a hearing.

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Bluebook (online)
85 N.W.2d 302, 165 Neb. 201, 1957 Neb. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bitter-v-city-of-lincoln-neb-1957.