Bowling v. City of Bluefield

140 S.E. 685, 104 W. Va. 589, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 246
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1927
Docket6027
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 140 S.E. 685 (Bowling v. City of Bluefield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowling v. City of Bluefield, 140 S.E. 685, 104 W. Va. 589, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 246 (W. Va. 1927).

Opinion

Woods, Judge:

This case concerns the validity of a certain paving assessment made against property owners on East Princeton Avenue in the= City of Bluefield.

*591 Section 50 of the Charter of the City of Blnefield places authority in the hoard of directors of said city to cause any street or alley to be paved, and to assess the cost of such paving in equal proportions against the owners of the lots abutting or bounding thereon in proportion to the distance of frontage owned by each. Acts of the Legislature (Municipal Charters) 1921. This section also requires that notice be published after the paving is completed, setting out the amount assessed against each lot or fractional part, etc.; and provides for a hearing of grievances of abutting property owners upon petition by the board of directors in regard to said assessments, and that such findings shall be subject to correction by the circuit court on appeal, etc.

On March 25, 1925, the board of directors, by a duly enacted ordinance, in addition to other paving, provided for the paving of Princeton Avenue from Lee Street to east city limits. The validity of its enactment is not raised here. Section 4 of the ordinance provides the kind of pavement for the portion of Princeton Avenue above indicated; and section 5, that ‘1 The cost of said paving, curbing and guttering shall be paid by the property owners abutting upon said streets, one-half (%) thereof to be paid by the abutting property owners on the other side of each of said streets, except on those streets whereon a street railway occupies a portion of the street, on which street it is hereby provided that the said street railway company shall pay for the paving between the rails and a foot outside of the rails and a space between its tracks where more than one track is on the street. The cost of paving on such streets to be borne in equal proportions by the owners of the abutting property on both sides of said streets on which said street railway is being operated, as provided by Section 50 of the City Charter; and the cost of such paving, curbing and guttering on all of said streets shall be assessed against the lots or fractional parts of lots and the owners thereof abutting or abounding that portion of the said streets to be paved, curbed and guttered, in proportion to the length of frontage owned by each, and shaU be assessed against the owners of any street railway occupying any of the said streets to the extent as provided herein”. Other *592 sections provide the method and terms of payment for such pavement. The last paragraph of the ordinance is as follows: “Upon the completion and acceptance of said paving, curbing and guttering on any or all of the streets enumerated herein, assessments shall be made for the cost thereof chargeable to the persons, firms, or corporation that may be liable therefor, as provided for herein, and said assessments shall become a lien upon and against the property made liable and chargeable with the payment of said assessments; and the City Clerk shall certify to the Clerk of the County Court of Mercer County the said assessments, and the same shall be recorded in said Clerk’s office as notices of said liens against the properties made liable for the payment of said paving, curbing and guttering assessments, as provided by the City Charter, -and shall remain a lien until the same is paid off and discharged.”

Pursuant to said ordinance, contracts were let by the city of Bluefield for the paving of the avenue in question and said paving was laid under said contracts. On its completion the city by ordinance, after reciting that such paving was accepted, ordered that the collection of the costs be made, agreeable to Section 50 of the Charter, and the clerk instructed to cause to be published once a week for two consecutive weeks in a newspaper of general circulation, a notice to the effect that such paving had been accepted, and that a part of the costs had been assessed against abutting property owners. The names of the property owners so affected, with the lot number, section number, frontage, and amount of assessments, were set out in the notice, with the general notice to them that if any one desired to' complain of such assessment, they were notified to appear before the board of directors of the city at a regular meeting thereof within thirty days, and show cause, if any they could, why the said assessments should not become final. Within the thirty days S. A. Bowling and seventy-four other property owners appeared before the board of directors of said city, and filed a petition protesting against the confirmation of the paving assessments. The complaining abutting property owners allege, in substance, that the property to be affected by the proposed *593 assessment is located in a poor section of tbe city; that the several owners are of limited means; that a good asphalt pavement traversed Bast Princeton Avenue prior to the widening and improvement of the same; that said pavement was torn up and destroyed and the avenue widened and repaved; that the benefit derived therefrom, if any, has inured to the City of Bluefield, rather than the petitioners; that the latter have beep materially hurt thereby; that some months prior to the acts aforesaid a bond issue, duly proposed and submitted to the voters by proper ordinance, was carried, authorizing the city to issue bonds for certain proposed improvements to the amount of $850,000.00; that by virtue of a proclamation, printed and distributed on the authority of: the board of directors prior to the election, an item of $60,000.00 was included for the widening and improvement of said East Princeton Avenue, which item petitioners believed at the time was inténded to cover any and all improvements proposed to be made to said avenue; that the proposed assessment amounts to the tailing of property without due process of law; and then comes the prayer that the city refrain from collecting the amounts set out in the proposed assessment statement; that the said $60,000.00 be .first credited to-the extinguishment of the debt; that the same should not be made final at that time; and for -general relief.

Under the provision of the City Charter hereinbefore quoted, an appeal was taken from the action of said board of directors, to the circuit court of Mercer county. Upon this hearing the circuit court approved and confirmed the assessments complained of and found them to be correct and valid assessments, and liens against the property of the plaintiffs. It is to this judgment that a writ of error to this Court was awarded.

We are met at the threshold with a motion to dismiss the writ of error as improvidently awarded. No appeal to this Court is allowed by the Charter. It is true that -this Court has held that a city’s action in making and confirming assessments against property is purely administrative and legislative, and not reviewable by the court, unless it be upon a showing that the legislative power conferred upon the govern *594 ing power of the municipality was fraudulently or corruptly exercised. Damron v. City of Huntington, 82 W. Va. 401. But an appeal has been entertained where taxibility or judicial questions relating to the ascertainment of valuation were raised. Bank v. Spencer, 71 W. Va. 678.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 S.E. 685, 104 W. Va. 589, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowling-v-city-of-bluefield-wva-1927.