Burgess-Nash Building Co. v. City of Omaha

219 N.W. 394, 116 Neb. 862, 1928 Neb. LEXIS 202
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1928
DocketNo. 25281
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 219 N.W. 394 (Burgess-Nash Building Co. v. City of Omaha) 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
Burgess-Nash Building Co. v. City of Omaha, 219 N.W. 394, 116 Neb. 862, 1928 Neb. LEXIS 202 (Neb. 1928).

Opinion

Good, J.

This is an action to have special taxes, levied against plaintiff’s real estate, adjudged void and to enjoin their collection. A general demurrer to plaintiff’s petition was sustained. Plaintiff elected not to further plead. Its action was dismissed, and it has appealed.

The taxes in question were levied for special benefits accruing to plaintiff's real estate by reason of the widening of Harney street between Twentieth and Twenty-fourth streets, in the city of Omaha. In its petition plaintiff set out in detail the proceedings by which the defendant city condemned and appropriated private property for widening of the street and levying of the special taxes, and alleged that the taxes are void for many reasons. We shall consider only those which are necessary to a proper determination of the case.

The condemnation proceedings were begun in 1919 under the law as it then existed. This law was amended in 1921, and the proceedings completed under the later law. Plaintiff alleged that section 57, art. Ill, ch. 116, Laws 1921, being section 8610, Comp. St. 1922, applicable to the proceedings, is “unconstitutional and void for that the same does not provide a lawful and constitutional method for the payment of property appropriated or attempted to be appropriated by the defendant city under the provisions of this section.”

[865]*865In 1919, section 4330, Rev. St. 1913, regulated condemnation proceedings of the character here involved. Said section provided that whenever it became necessary to appropriate private property for the use of the city for streets, or for other purposes authorized by section 4329, Rev. St. 1913, such appropriation should be declared necessary by ordinance, and the mayor, with the approval of the council, was required to appoint three disinterested freeholders of the city who, after notice to the owners of, and parties interested in, .the property to be taken, should assess the damages to the owners of the property and the persons interested therein; that such assessments should be reported to the city council for confirmation, and if the report should be confirmed the damages so 'assessed should be paid to the property owners, and with a further proviso that, in all cases involving an amount of $50,000 or more,, there should be appointed five appraisers, and the assessment, if recommended for approval by the city council and confirmed by the mayor and city council, must be submitted, to the electors at a general or special election. In the in-, stant case, the ordinance was passed declaring the necessity for appropriating the property for the purpose of widening Harney street between Twentieth and Twenty-fourth streets, in Omaha. Thereafter the mayor, with the approval of the city council, appointed -five disinterested freeholders of the city .of Omaha to assess the damages to the owners, respectively, of the property taken by the appropriation declared necessary by the ordinance. The freeholders so appointed made their appraisement and awarded to the owners of the property taken a sum amounting, in. the aggregate, to $187,465.16, which was reported to the council. At a later date the city council approved and adopted the report of the appraisers. At this point the matter seems to have been referred to the legal department of the city for examination and report, and. thereafter and in October, 1920, the city council rescinded its former apr. proval of the áppraisement, and the matter thus stood until after the statute had been changed by the enactment of a [866]*866new charter for the city of Omaha, which became effective on the 20th of April, 1921, known as chapter 116, Laws 1921. The council then reapproved the report of the appraisers.

Section 57, art. Ill, ch. 116, Laws 1921, now appearing as section 8610, Comp. St. 1922, relating to the subject of eminent domain, among other things provides that the city council may acquire, by the exercise of the powers of eminent domain, private property for streets and for the purpose of widening or extending the same; that, whenever it becomes necessary to appropriate property for the purposes provided by the act, the purpose of and necessity for such appropriation shall be declared by ordinance, and thereupon the council shall appoint three disinterested freeholders of the city who, after giving notice to the owners of, or parties interested in, the property to be appropriated, shall appraise and assess the damages occasioned by the taking of such property; that, whenever the purpose of the proceedings is to acquire property for streets or adding to or enlarging, widening or extending them, and the amount of the appraisal does not exceed $100,000, the council may thereupon confirm or reject the same. If the report be confirmed, then provision is made for the payment of the awards by the assessment of special benefits, and for the issuance by the council of bonds for any excess of the appraisement over special benefits. The section further provides:

“If the amount of the appraisal as reported by the appraisers exceeds $100,000, the council shall thereupon approve or reject said report within 120 days after the same is filed, and if said report be approved the council will thereupon appoint a committee of not less than three of its members who shall carefully examine and investigate the proposed improvement for the purpose of determining as nearly as possible the amount of special benefits which would result from the proposed improvement, if carried forward. The committee may procure assistance in such work when deemed necessary to a proper performance [867]*867thereof. Immediately upon completion of its duties, the committee shall file its report with the city council stating the total amount in dollars and cents, which in its judgment and within its finding may be assessed as special benefits against the property which would be especially benefited. The city council shall thereupon examine such report, it may approve it as reported, or it may increase or reduce the amount of such report or otherwise alter or modify it, and approve it as so altered, or it may reject such report. If rejected, a new or further report may be called for or the proceedings may be abandoned. If the amount so determined and found and finally approved does not equal or exceed 90 per cent, of the amount of the appraisal as reported and tentatively approved by the council, then such proceedings shall be abandoned, unless and until authority has been obtained from the electors to issue bonds to pay the excess of the costs of the improvements, as determined by the appraisal, over the amount which may be assessed as special benefits against the property specially benefited, as determined by the approved report of the committee.”

Then follows provision for submitting the proposition to the electors. The section further provides:

“Whenever the approved appraisal in such proceedings exceeds the sum of $100,000 and the approved amount which may be assessed as special benefits reported by the committee exceeds 90 per cent, of the amount of the appraisal, then the council is authorized to issue bonds without a vote of the electors for the purpose of paying the difference between the amount of the approved report of the appraisers and the amount which may be taken care of by special assessment, and it is authorized and required to levy special taxes upon the property specially benefited and to the extent of special benefits for the purpose of paying the remaining balance of the appraisal of damages.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
219 N.W. 394, 116 Neb. 862, 1928 Neb. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burgess-nash-building-co-v-city-of-omaha-neb-1928.