Board of Improvement of Paving District No. 7 v. Brun

150 S.W. 154, 105 Ark. 65, 1912 Ark. LEXIS 383
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 7, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 150 S.W. 154 (Board of Improvement of Paving District No. 7 v. Brun) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Improvement of Paving District No. 7 v. Brun, 150 S.W. 154, 105 Ark. 65, 1912 Ark. LEXIS 383 (Ark. 1912).

Opinion

Frauenthal, J.

This is an action to enjoin the board of improvement of a paving district organized in the city of Fort Smith from expending the money of said district in constructing a system of underground drainage or storm sewers therein. The plaintiff is an owner of real property situated in the improvement district, and in his complaint it is alleged that, in pursuance of the petition of a requisite number of owners of real property to be affected thereby, the city council had regularly passed an ordinance creating and establishing an improvement district known as Paving District No. 7 in the city of Fort Smith. According to the said petition and ordinance, said improvement district was organized for the purpose of “paving Garrison Avenue from the northwest side of First Street to the southeast side of Thirteenth’ Street from curb to curb on said avenue, and to the inside of the sidewalk on all cross streets and alleys between said First Street and Thirteenth Street, save and except that part of the said street to be paved by the Fort Smith Light & Traction Company.”

The complaint further alleged “that the water falling on said Garrison Avenue has in the past been drained into gutters and carried along the length of said Garrison Avenue in said gutters on the surface from Sixth Street; that in the repaving of said Garrison Avenue the Board of Improvement, Paving District No. 7, above ref erred to, has planned, and is now constructing, a system of underground drainage or storm sewer under the proposed paving of Garrison Avenue to take care of and carry off this surface water which falls on Garrison Avenue; that this contemplated storm sewer or system of underdrainage on Garrison Avenue will have a catch basin at the comer of each block, and water will be immediately taken into this storm sewer or system of underdrainage and carried along under said pavement to points on or near to Garrison Avenue, where it will flow into other storm sewers of the city of Fort Smith, thence into the Arkansas River.”

It is alleged in the complaint that the power to take care of surface water is not incident to the power given to said board of improvement to pave said street. The complaint concludes with a prayer that the board of improvement “be perpetually enjoined and restrained from using the money raised by taxation to repave Garrison Avenue in building and establishing the above referred to system of, underdrainage.”

To this complaint the defendants interposed a general demurrer, which was overruled, and, the defendants refusing to plead further, a decree was entered in accordance with the prayer of said complaint. From this decree the board of improvement has appealed to this court.

It thus appears from the allegations of the complaint that the improvement district was organized and created in due compliance with all the statutory requirements. , No claim is made that the board of improvement of said district did not have full power to undertake and make the improvement asked for in the petition and named in the ordinance creating the district. The improvement asked for was to pave Gar-son Avenue from curb to curb; and the sole question for our determination is whether the board of improvement, in forming the plans for making said improvement, had the power to undertake and construct a system of underground drainage or storm sewers for the purpose of taking care of the surface water thereon and draining said street.

The statutes of this State provide a procedure for the formation of improvement districts in cities and towns, and prescribe that the petition of the property owners shall “designate the nature of the improvement to be undertaken” (Kirby’s Digest § 5667). Thereafter, a board of improvement, consisting of three persons, is appointed by the municipal council, which “is required to form plans for the improvement within their district as prayed in the petition” (Kirby’s Digest § 5672). The nature of the improvement to be undertaken is fixed, therefore, by the petition and the ordinance, and the board of improvement derives its powers solely therefrom. It has the power to do all those things necessary to carry out the purposes of the organization of the improvement district, as set forth in the petition and ordinance.

In the case of McDonnell v. Improvement District, 97 Ark. 334, it was held that the statute does not require the petition to make particular specifications of the things to be done in order to make the improvement. In that case it is said that “all that is required is that the nature of the improvement be specified in general terms, so that the purpose of the organization may be set forth in the proceedings. Much must, of course, be left to the discretion of the commissioners in forming the plans for the improvement and making the estimate of the cost thereof.” The board of improvement can not, however, substitute for the improvement named in and authorized by the petition and ordinance an entirely different and more expensive improvement. The nature and character of the improvement which it is authorized to form plans for and to make is prescribed by the petition and the ordinance passed in pursuance thereof. Watkins v. Griffith, 59 Ark. 345.

The board, however, has full power and authority to form the plans for making the improvement and to do everything that is necessary and incident thereto. The nature and purpose of the organization is fixed by the petition and ordinance, and, when the power of the board is not therein specifically limited, it may exercise its own discretion in doing those things which are necessarily incident to the construction of the improvement asked for. But it has not the power to form plans for constructing an improvement which varies materially from that asked for in the petition and authorized by the ordinance.

In the case' of Kraft v. Smothers, 103 Ark. 269, the power of the board of an improvement district to construct a certain improvement was attacked upon the ground that the improvement planned by the board varied materially from that asked for in the petition. In the petition the property owners asked for an improvement “for the purpose of building a sewer system therein and making proper connection of the same into a system of septic tanks.” The plans for the improvement adopted by the board under the ordinance establishing- the district provided for constructing a sewer system, for making connection into a system of septic tanks and conducting the effluent through standard sewer pipes into the Fourche River. In that case the court held that the improvement planned varied materially from that asked for because it would greatly enlarge the cost of construction, as well as change the character and extent of said improvement. The court said: “It would impose upon the property owners of the proposed district an enlarged burden which was not contemplated by the petitioners, and which could not have been reasonably anticipated by the property owners from the language of the petition.” On this account it was held that the board did not have the power to make the improvement as planned by it.

The cost of the improvement is assessed and charged upon the real property situated in the district; and when the property owners by petition ask for the formation of a district and designate the nature of the improvement, it will be presumed that they understand its probable cost and contemplate that the burdens of such cost only will be imposed upon them.

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Bluebook (online)
150 S.W. 154, 105 Ark. 65, 1912 Ark. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-improvement-of-paving-district-no-7-v-brun-ark-1912.