City of Atchison v. Friend

96 P. 348, 78 Kan. 30, 1908 Kan. LEXIS 3
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 9, 1908
DocketNo. 15,064
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 96 P. 348 (City of Atchison v. Friend) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Atchison v. Friend, 96 P. 348, 78 Kan. 30, 1908 Kan. LEXIS 3 (kan 1908).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnston, C. J.:

This was an action by L. Friend against the city of Atchison to recover the amount due. on special-assessment bonds issued by the city in compensation for the improvement of a certain city street. In October, 1885, John Early entered into a contract with the city of Atchison to macadamize a part of Commercial street, and in consideration for the improvement the city agreed to, and did, issue a series of special-assessment bonds. The improvement was satisfactorily made by the contractor and the city issued two bonds against each abutting lot, each bond being for one-half [32]*32of the amount charged against the lot. The following is a copy of the assessment bonds which were issued:

“$17.72 No. 2664.
SPECIAL-ASSESSMENT BOND.
The City of Atchison, State of Kansas.
August 30, a. d. 1886.
“To the Treasurer of the City of Atchison:
“Pay to John Early, or bearer, the sum of seventeen and 7t1oo dollars, only out of money in the treasury collected for assessments made in the year 188— on lot 20, in block 21, C. A., for macadam Com’l street from Ninth to Tenth Sts.
“By order of the city council.
(Signed) S. H. Kelsey, Mayor.
Attest:
[SEAL] T. B. Gerow, City Clerk.”

The bonds were duly transferred by the contractor to the plaintiff, and in December, 1891, the latter brought an action against the city to recover the amount of the assessments due on 115 pieces of property because of the alleged failure and neglect of the city to levy and collect the special assessments. Subsequently, and during the pendency of the action, a large number of the special-assessment bonds were paid, but payment was not made on a number of them, and the action as to these was continued from term to term. Taxes continued to accumulate on the lots liable for the unpaid bonds until the passage, in 1901, of the act authorizing the collection of delinquent taxes upon real estate by judicial proceedings. (Laws 1901, ch. 392; Gen. Stat. 1901, §§ 7718-7724.) In foreclosure proceedings in 1902 the lots in question, excepting five in number, were sold at a tax sale, and the city received from the proceeds of the sale an amount representing the proportion which the special assessments bore to the whole taxes against the properties. The plaintiff amended his petition and asked for the recovery of the amount received by the city as the result of the foreclosure sale of the lots subject to the special assessment. For this [33]*33amount the court awarded judgment on what has been designated as the first class of assessment bonds. '

An assessment had been made for what is called the second class of bonds chargeable against three other lots. As to these it appears that in 1900 the mayor and council of the city adopted a. resolution requesting the county commissioners to permit the redemption of the lots upon the payment of one dollar and the completion of a one-story brick structure thereon, as an inducement to the improvement of the property and to make it thereafter productive of a tax revenue. In compliance with the request of the city council the county commissioners ordered the redemption on the terms named, and the county clerk notified the county treasurer of the order of the board permitting a redemption, and in September, 1900, the lots were redeemed and the entry of the redemption placed on the tax-sale record.

A distinct claim is made as to what is designated as the third class of special-assessment bonds upon two other lots, which were acquired by the city from the owner of the fee title in 1902 for the purpose of locating thereon a branch of the city fire department. The city, through its mayor and council, by resolution notified the board of county commissioners that the lots had become the property of the city, and requested that board to remit all taxes against the lots and to instruct the county clerk not to place them on the tax-rolls. In compliance with this request the board of county commissioners remitted all unpaid taxes and directed the county clerk to strike the property from the assessment rolls, for the reason that the property belonged to the city and was not taxable. The county treasurer entered upon the record of tax sales opposite these lots the notation: “Canceled by order of the county board, June, 1902.”

As to the liability of the city for the money paid upon the bonds of the first class there is little room for controversy. The improvements were made under a [34]*34contract with the city. The contractor performed the work- and made the improvements to the satisfaction of the city. Under statutory authority the city issued special-assessment bonds to the contractor. (Laws 1881, ch. 37, §.38; Gen. Stat. 1901, § 762; Laws 1885, ch. 95, § 3;- Gen. Stat. 1901, § 765.) These bonds became a charge upon the lots and pieces of ground abutting upon the improved street, and upon this property assessments were made by the city to pay the bonds. The obligations arising on the bonds and assessments are to the city, and not to the contractor who made the improvement. The lot-owners are never primarily or directly liable to the contractor. He has- no right to interpose in the tax proceedings by which assessments are levied and collected. If the city neglects or refuses to make the assessments and to perform the duties devolving upon it in levying and collecting these special taxes the contractor has no means of obtaining compensation from that source, and his remedy is a direct action against the city for the amount of the indebtedness. (City of Leavenworth v. Mills, et al., 6 Kan. 288; City of Wyandotte v. Zeitz, 21 Kan. 649; City of Atchison v. Byrnes, 22 Kan. 65; City of Atchison v. Leu, 48 Kan. 138, 29 Pac. 467; Heller v. City of Garden City, 58 Kan. 263, 48 Pac. 841.) By the process of taxation, including the foreclosure, portions of the assessments made for the payment of the bonds in question were collected and paid over to the city treasurer, but the city refused to pay that money to the plaintiff. Funds obtained upon assessments, whether paid in the ordinary way or through judicial proceedings to enforce tax liens, go into the treasury of the city and not into the hands of the contractor or his assignee. As was said in. City of Atchison v. Leu, supra:

“The contractor is no better off after the city has made the assessment and the tax is paid over to the county treasurer than before -this is done, if he can not look to the city for his pay, because he has no means by which he can get the money collected to pay his claim out of the county treasury.” (Page 140.)

[35]*35So it was held in that case that the law required the city to collect the tax and when collected to pay it to.the contractor. The statute authorizing the foreclosure proceeding requires that the proceeds of the sale shall be applied to the payment of the tax liens charged against each piece of the lands sold. (Laws 1901, ch. 392, § 3; Gen. Stat. 1901, § 7720.) When the city refused payment of the funds derived from that source it made itself liable to the plaintiff, at least to the extent of the money received.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 P. 348, 78 Kan. 30, 1908 Kan. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-atchison-v-friend-kan-1908.