Chamberlain v. City of Evansville

77 Ind. 542
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1881
DocketNo. 8330
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 77 Ind. 542 (Chamberlain v. City of Evansville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chamberlain v. City of Evansville, 77 Ind. 542 (Ind. 1881).

Opinion

Franklin, C.

Appellee sued appellant to recover assessments for street improvements made in front of appellant’s property, and to have them declared a lien upon said property, in the city of Evansville. The complaint was in two paragraphs; appellant demurred to each separately; demurrers overruled, and appellant answered in two paragraphs; [543]*543demurrer sustained to the second, the first being a denial; trial by court and finding for appellee; motion for a new trial overruled, and judgment on' the finding; exceptions were properly reserved to each of these rulings.

The errors assigned in this court are, overruling the demurrers to the complaint, and each paragraph thereof; the sustaining of the demurrer to the second paragraph of the answer; the overruling of the motion for a new trial.

Twelve of the reasons assigned for a new trial were based upon the admission of alleged irrelevant, immaterial and incompetent testimony, and consisted in objections to the introduction of the different parts of the record of the proceedings of the city council in relation to the street improvements. Under this assignment. of errors, counsel have raised and discussed the following questions: Was there any ordinance in existence authorizing the city to make the improvements? If so, was it valid? Had the city council authority to make a mine pro tunc order charging the assessments upon the property?

The city government of Evansville is under a special charter, and not under the general law of the Stale for the government of cities. This special charter was passed by the Legislature in 1847. See Local Laws of that year. Under the 58th section thereof, the common council, in 1859, passed an ordinance which in detail points out the method of procedure whereby improvements shall be made, the mode of assessing the same upon adjoining property, and for the enforcement of the payment thereof. In 1875 the Legislature passed an amendatory act amending the 58th section of the original charter, extending the remedy for the collection of assessments by authorizing suit to be brought to enforce and foreclose the lien of the assessments upon the property, as well as to sell by advertisement, without any judicial proceedings, as provided for in the original section.

[544]*544Under this amendment, no new and general ordinance was passed upon this subject. The improvements were' made in the fall of 1876, under the amended charter, and appellant’s counsel insist that the amendment of the 58th section of the charter annulled the original section ; that the amended section alone was in force, and became a part of the original charter, and thereby rendered nugatory the ordinances which had been passed under the original section.

While it is a correct proposition, that the amendment of a section of a charter annuls the section amended, does it necessarily follow that, in municipal corporations, an ordinance passed under the original section is thereby also rendered nugatory? This is somewhat similar to the adoption of a new constitution, and can it be seriously contended that, by the adoption of a new constitution, all the laws passed in pursuance of the old are thereby abrogated and rendered null and void ? It would doubtless repeal by implication any law that was inconsistent with oi; in conflict with its provisions ; but laws passed under the old, which were in harmony with the provisions of the new, would remain in force the same as though no new constitution had been adopted.

In the case of Cass v. Dillon, 2 Ohio St. 607, Justice Thurman uses the following language in reference to the effect of the adoption of new constitutions: “It follows, that all laws in force when the latter took effect, and which were not inconsistent with it, would have remained in force, without an express provision to that effect; and all inconsistent laws fell, simply because they were inconsistent; in other words, all repugnant laws were repealed by implication.”

In the case of The State ex rel. Evans, v. Dudley, 1 Ohio St. 437, it was held that, “As repeals by implication. are not favored, the repugnancy between the provisions of two statutes must be clear, and so contrary to each other that they can not be reconciled, in order to make the latter operate a repeal of the former. This rule is the result of [545]*545a long course of decisions, and we know of no reason why it does not equally apply, when the repugnancy is alleged to exist, between a constitutional provision and a legislative enactment.”

The charter of a city assimilates itself to the constitution of a State, and the ordinances under the charter, to the legislative enactments under the constitution. And if the change of a constitution does not thereby change the existing laws that are in harmony with it, the change of a city charter does not. thereby change the existing ordinances that are in-harmony with the changed charter. Dillon on Municipal Corporations, secs. 52 and 53; City of Olney v. Harvey, 50 Ill. 453; The City of Maysville v. Shultz, 3 Dana, 10; People v. San Francisco, 21 Cal. 668.

It is not insisted that this ordinance was inconsistent with or repugnant to the amended charter. And therefore under the foregoing authorities this ordinance remained in force, ■under the amended charter.

But it is insisted by appellant’s counsel that under the original charter the common council had no power to pass the ordinance; that the original section 58 of the charter only authorized ordinances for the enforcement of the collection of the expenses of the improvements, and that it did not confer upon the council any power to pass an ordinance pointing out the method of making the assessment. And therefore such ordinance was not authorized or even justified ; and such ordinance passed before the passage of the amendment under which the action is brought was nugatory and void, and there was no foundation for the action.

The original 58th section contained thé following clause: “It shall be the duty of the common council to cause such improvements or repairs to be made in the best and most economical manner, and the expenses thereof shall be assessed and charged against all the lots and parts of lots fronting on or adjoining the street or part of street, alley or part of [546]*546alley so improved or repaired as aforesaid. ’ ’ And, after providing for the petitioning and the ordering of the improvements to be made, it contains the further clause : “And the common council may provide by general ordinance for the collection of the costs and expenses of any such repairs and improvements.” And it provided also that the common council might order and require any and all such improvements and repairs of streets and alleys to be made without petition, and either charge and cause all or any part of the expenses thereof to be collected as above in this section provided, or cause such expense or part thereof to be paid out of the general revenue of the city. And that the word “street” or “streets” should include sidewalks.

And this original charter contained other provisions on this question as well as those contained in the 58th section. See Local Acts of 1846-7, p. 10j sec. 30.

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77 Ind. 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chamberlain-v-city-of-evansville-ind-1881.