City of Auburn v. Paul

85 A. 571, 110 Me. 192, 1912 Me. LEXIS 30
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 30, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 85 A. 571 (City of Auburn v. Paul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Auburn v. Paul, 85 A. 571, 110 Me. 192, 1912 Me. LEXIS 30 (Me. 1912).

Opinion

Haley, J.

This is an action of debt brought by the city of Auburn under the provisions of Chapter 21, Section 10, of the Revised Statutes of Maine, to recover the sum, of $1680, .the amount of an assessment levied upon the defendant’s land on Lake and Shepley streets and Gamage avenue, in said city, for the benefits received by said land by the construction of a sewer through said streets. The assessment in question was levied by the Board of Public Works of the city of Auburn, which consisted of the mayor, a member ex-officio, and- five citizens of Auburn, chosen by the city [194]*194council under the provisions of the Private and Special Laws of 1903, Chapter 137, as amended 'by the Private and Special Laws of 1905, Chapter 109.

October 2, 1909, the Board of Public Works voted to petition the city council to locate and accept a street from Lake street to Gamage avenue, to be on the line between the land of the defendant and the Davis estate; the signers of this petition included five of the six members of the Board of Public Works, who later made the assessment in question.

July 11, 1910, the city council authorized and directed the Board of Public Works to construct the sewer in question, and made the necessary appropriation therefor. The Board of Public Works received the order from the city council, accepted the same, and authorized the mayor to contract for the building of the sewer, and the mayor, in behalf of the city, executed a contract and the sewer was constructed. On December 10, 1910, the Board of Public Works took a view of the streets in which the sewer was located, for the purpose of making the assessments upon the property benefited by the said sewer. January 4, 1911, the question of the assessments for the sewer was taken up by the Board, and it was voted to make an assessment of $35 for each fifty foot lot, and the assessments were made and filed in the city clerk’s office that day, and on the same day a hearing was ordered by said Board upon the subject matter of the assessments, to be held on February 13th, and due notice thereof was given.

On February 13, 1911, the hearing was had ¡before the Board of Public Works, and it was voted to abate of the defendant’s assessment the sum of $210, leaving the assessment at $1680, and the defendant was duly notified of the above action. February 21, 191T, the defendant notified the Board that he desired the assessment to be determined by arbitration. On February 25th the Board named six citizens of Auburn, from which 'two members of arbitrators were to be selected by the defendant under the provisions of Chapter 21, Section 6, R. S. March 3, 1911, the defendant notified the city dlerk of his selection of two of the names submitted, and March 10, 1911, the city clerk notified the defendant that one of the parties selected by him refused to serve, and the defendant [195]*195afterwards declined to make a further choice, although the city clerk offered, in behalf of the Board of Public Works, to furnish another list of names for the defendant to select from.

The defendant questions the validity of the statute governing and regulating assessments for the construction of sewers, as provided by Chapter zi, R. S.

Section 5 of Chapter 21, R. S., provides that the municipal officers, after constructing a sewer, shall determine what lots or parcels of land are benefitted by such drain or- sewer, and shall estimate and assess upon such lots and parcels of land, and against the owners thereof, or the person in possession or against whom the taxes thereon shall be assessed, . . . such sum not exceeding such benefit as they deem just and equitable toward defraying the expense of constructing and completing such drain or sewer, not to exceed one-half of the cost of such drain or sewer, and also provides for the filing by them with the clerk of the town a location of such drain or sewer with a profile description of the same, and the amount assessed upon each lot or parcel, and that the clerk shall record' the same, and within ten days shall notify each person so assessed, with an order of notice by the clerk, stating the time and place for hearing upon the subject matter of such assessment, and upon such hearing, said officers shall have power to revise, increase or diminish any such assessment.

Section 6 provides:

“Any person not satisfied with the amount for which he is assessed, may, within ten days after such hearing, by request in writing given to such clerk, have the assessment upon his lot or parcel of land determined by arbitration. The municipal officers shall nominate six persons who are residents of said town, two of whom selected by the applicant, with a third resident person selected by said two persons, shall fix the sum to' be paid by him, and the report of such referees made to the clerk of said town, and recorded by him, shall be final and binding upon all parties. . . ."

It was the evident intent of the Legislature, by Section 6, to provide a tribunal, before which a party assessed for the construction of a sewer might have determined, by proceedings in the nature [196]*196of an appeal, the amount that he should be assessed for the expense of the construction of the sewer, by reason of the benefit received by his land; which tribunal should act judicially in determining the amount of his assessment.

The power of the Legislature to authorize the assessment of a tax upon the owners of land whose property is benefited by a sewer, according to the benefit received, as in this case, is not questioned, the statute authorizing such assessment having been before this court in a suit between the same parties to recover an assessment for the construction of a sewer, Auburn v. Paul, 84 Maine, 212, in which that question was raised and decided, and the same principle as applied to the, widening of a street was sustained in Bangor v. Pierce, 106 Maine, 527; but the position now urged by the defendant against the validity of the assessment was not presented to the court, nor passed upon, in Auburn v. Paul, supra.

The assessment having been made, under the taxing power of the Legislature, by the Board of Public Works, who, if they were authorized to make it, were, in the assessment thereof, acting as agents of the State, and having complied with the statute by fixing a time and place for a hearing before the Board of Public Works, when the parties assessed to pay a part of the cost of the construction of the sewer could be heard upon the assessment made, due notice thereof having been given, that 'hearing had, and its doings recorded, the proceedings were according to the statute, R. S., Chapter 21, Section 5, and the validity of the assessment must be judged and determined by the same rules of law as those by which other assessments are judged arid determined.

It is objected that Section 6 of Chapter 21, R. S., providing for arbitration to fix the amount of the assessments, is invalid, as, by Section 6, the owner of the land is not given the right of appeal that he is entitled to by law, but in Auburn v. Paul, supra, the court said: “And when the statute merely imposes a tax for benefits, like the act now considered; involving no question arising under the exercise of eminent domain, no appeal to a jury need be provided,” citing Howe v. Cambridge, 114 Mass., 388; Chapin v. Worcester, 124 Mass., 464.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 A. 571, 110 Me. 192, 1912 Me. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-auburn-v-paul-me-1912.