Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. v. City of Davenport

211 N.W. 375, 203 Iowa 298
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 14, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 211 N.W. 375 (Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. v. City of Davenport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. v. City of Davenport, 211 N.W. 375, 203 Iowa 298 (iowa 1926).

Opinion

Vermilion, J.

This appeal involves special assessments levied on real estate of the appellant, the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company, for two separate street improvements in the city of Davenport. One, the paving or repaving of Iowa Street, involves assessments against ten lots or parts of lots, ranging from $63.28 to $1,633.06. The other, the resurfacing of Fourth Street with asphalt, involves assessments against twenty lots or parts of lots and a tract of unplatted ground, ranging from $9.22 to $2,204.67. Some of the lots were- subject to assessment for both improvements. On appeal to the district court, the assessments were confirmed, and from such decrees this appeal is taken.

■ ‘ Looking to .appellant’s assignment of errors, we find the following propositions presented: That the court erred (1) in holding that appellant’s property received special benefits from the improvement; (2) in holding that the assessments were in proportion and according to the benefits; (3) in holding that the assessments did not deprive appellant of property without due process of law, and did not constitute the tailing of private property for public use without just compensation, in violation of constitutional provisions; (4) in holding thafi the assessments did not violate constitutional provisions, in that property was assessed to a greater depth on one side of the street than on the other.

Counsel for appellant in argument say they “do not contend that any of the Iowa statutes aré unconstitutional in and of themselves,” and “do not contend that there should be no assessment against the property of the appellant,” nor deny that there is á presumption in favor of an assessment duly levied by a legislative tribunal. They insist that the presumption has been overcome; that the acts of the city council in levying the assessments were contrary to the express provisions of the statute, and were an unauthorized and unconstitutional exercise of the powers delegated to the council; that the assessments are violative of the statutes and Constitution of the state and the Constitution of *300 the United States. ' It was conceded on-the trial that each of the several tracts involved was worth four times the amount of the assessments levied against it.

Under the concession that the property in question was subject to assessment in some amount,,the only questions presented to us are the validity of the assessments,. as related to the manner .of their making, and whether they are in excess of the benefits conferred.

I. No question is made in this court as to the regularity of. the proceedings of the city council, save as to the manner of arriving at the amount of the several assessments and the amount of the assessments so fixed. The city engineer, in preparing the plat and schedule, used a so-called “curve” which took into consideration only the area of the property and its distance from the improvement. The statute, Section 792-a, Code Supplement, 1913 (Section 6021, Code of 1924), requires the assessment to be in proportion .to, and not in excess of, the special benefits conferred, and (Section 792-g, Supplemental Supplement, 1915 [Section 6012, Code of 1924]) to be according to area, and to include certain property not necessarily abutting on the,improvement, and within a certain distance from it. Assessment according to area is not invalid., Mattingly v. District of Columbia, 97 U. S. 687 (24 L. Ed. 1098); French v. Barber Asph. Pav. Co., 181 U. S. 324 (45 L. Ed. 879); Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Barber Asphalt Pav. Co., 197 U. S. 430 (49 L. Ed. 819); Kansas City S. R. Co. v. Road Improvement Dist., 256 U. S. 658 (65 L. Ed. 1151).

Under the statute, both the area of the property and its distance from the improvement were proper elements. The evidence showed that the curve used by the city engineer was merely a method adopted by him to determine tentatively the benefits, as affected by these two elements, to .the property liable to assessment, in preparing the plat and schedule for the action of the city council. It was not used where, in the opinion of the engineer, outstanding features of the property required its abandonment, in order to make an assessment in proportion to benefits. It was not a rule made by the city council at all. The fact, that the city council confirmed the assessment so arrived at by the engineer is no ground for setting an assessment aside if it was not shown to be in excess of the benefits conferred, or in *301 equitable as'compared to the- assessments on other property. The mental or mathematical processes of the city engineer in preparing the plat and schedule for the action of the city council in •levying the assessments -are immaterial. • The. question at this point is whether there -is an equitable distribution of the burden, and whether the several assessments as made by the council are in proportion to, and not in excess of, the special benefits conferred.. In Early v. City of Ft. Dodge, 136 Iowa 187, we said:

“It makes little difference -what fanciful theories or arbitrary rules the city-council or the court may employ in discussing the question, the final and decisive inquiry is whether the assessment, when made, is -just and equitable, and bears some reasonable proportion to the benefits which the property derives from the improvements for which payment is to be made. ” •

See, also, Illinois Cent. R. Co. v. Incorporated Town of Pomeroy, 196 Iowa 504.

“The legislature may create taxing districts to meet the expense of local improvements and may fix the basis of taxation without encountering the - Fourteenth Amendment unless its action is palpably arbitrary or a plain abuse. * * '* The law .does not attempt an imaginary exactness or go beyond the reason.able probabilities. * * * But * * * -if the law is of such a character that there is no- reasonable presumption that substantial justice generally will be done, but the probability is ■that the parties will be taxed disproportionately to each other and to the ^benefit-conferred, the law-cannot stand against the complaint of one so taxed in fact.” Gast Realty & Inv. Co. v. Schneider Granite Co., 240 U. S. 55 (60 L. Ed. 523).

We apprehend-that no plat and schedule of special- assessments could, ás a matter of practical exercise of the function, be prepared without-the use of some more or less arbitrary rule for thispreliminary and tentative distribution of the cost of the improvement- upon the property liable to assessment. It is not the mere inadequacy of such method, but the inequity or invalidity,-, under-the statute, of the final result — the assessment as made by the. city council — that entitles the property owner to relief.

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Bluebook (online)
211 N.W. 375, 203 Iowa 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-rock-island-pacific-railway-co-v-city-of-davenport-iowa-1926.