City of Bartlesville v. Keeler

1924 OK 767, 229 P. 450, 107 Okla. 14, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 593
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 23, 1924
Docket13432
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1924 OK 767 (City of Bartlesville v. Keeler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Bartlesville v. Keeler, 1924 OK 767, 229 P. 450, 107 Okla. 14, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 593 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

BRANSON, J.

This action grows out of a sewer contract made by the city officials of rhe city of Bartlesville, Okla., in January, 1921. The questions of law urged as growing out of the record, both by the plaintiffs and the defendants, are not without difficulty, but we think that most of the questions raised by the pleadings, and presented by Ihe record, are solved by rules established by this court.

The city of Bartlesville prosecutes this appeal. The city is joined, however, in the appeal by the contractors who built the sewer in sewer district No. 13 of said city, and whose contract compensation therefor is materially affected by the judgment of the trial court. The plaintiffs in the lower court, who are the defendants in error here, file a cross-petition in error. We think that it is unnecessary to separately discuss the questions piesented by the cross-petition in error and *16 the petition in error. There is little dispute about the facts as disclosed by the record.

The plaintiffs, as property owners and taxpayers in sewer district No. 13 of the city of Bartlesville, brought this action to have vacated and set aside an ordinance levying an assessment according to the area of the lots located in said sewer district, and to enjoin an assessment as against the property. The suit was instituted sometime after the work was completed.

The plaintiffs contend that the ordinance of necessity, being ordinance - No. 978, passed November 18, 1920, did not give the city officers any power to make the contract here in question. No authority is cited in support of this contention. The, said ordinance creates sewer district 'No. 13, prescribes the bounds thereof, by reciting the streets surrounding the same. Section 2 of the ordinance directs* the engineer to prepare plans, specifications, and .estimates of cost of this work, based on the materials specified, and the . denominations, character, material, etc., of the. sewer line to Caney river, it also provides the cost shall be assessed against the district. Sections 465, 408, and -469, Bev. Laws 1910, provide for creating sewer districts. The ordinance, w.e think, is sufficiently broad and definite to comply with the provisions of the statute authorizing creation of sewer districts, and authorizing the approval of the estimate, plans, and specifications and advertisement for bids, and making contract for the construction thereof.

We hold that where the ordinance as passed by the legislative body of the munici-pálity shows on its face the ■ plain intention to carry out the provisions of the statute relative to the construction of a sewer system, for a particular district, although the ordinance is defective in detail, if the same is published as provided by the statute, and is sufficient to give the property owners notice that improvements are about to be constructed, and will be constructed unless the property owners protest against the same, and no protests are filed, but the property owners permit the work to proceed,, that such ordinance is sufficient to give the city authorities jurisdiction to make the contract, and the property owners cannot attack the assessment to pay for such improvements on such alleged defect or irregularity.

This court, speaking through Mr. Justice Williams, in the case of Kerker et al. v. Bocher et al., 20 Okla. 729, 95 Pac. 981, among other things, said:

“Where the city council shall deem it necessary to pave any street or any part thereof within the limits of the city, for which a special tax is to be levied, and such council by resolution duly passed, declares such improvements necessary, and causes the publication of same for four consecutive weeks in a- proper newspaper, the owners of the majority of the lots or parts of lots liable to taxation therefor, failing within 20 days thereafter to file with the clerk of said city, protest against such improvements, and proceeds to cause such improvements to be done without the adoption of an ordinance to that end, but by adopting plans and specifications, including an estimate of the cost of such improvements, and authorizing the clerk to advertise for bids therefor, the contract being accordingly let under competitive bidding, * * * under such circumstances can be estop-ped from questioning the validity of such assessment. * * * Every person, as a member of a municipal community, thereby enjoying the incident benefits, takes notice of the accompanying obligations. Streets are to be laid o-ut, graded, paved and lighted. The constabulary must be maintained to enforce peace and preserve order. Sewerage systems and water supplies must be provided. No one is entitled to enjoy these advantages’ and to be permitted to successfully contend that the laws, ordinances, and resolutions under which such benefits and big advantages are created, regulated, and controlled, are invalid, and thereby escape the resultant burdens. * * * No man can expect to have property in cities abutting on public thoroughfares and streets, without bearing the burdens of special taxation to maintain grades, build sidewalks, and macadamize and pave the streets; and he acquires his property with the full knowledge of the fact that the legislative power of the state can be exercised to levy and provide for an assessment or special tax for such improvements. The legislative authority of the state, or when properly authorized to be exercised, the municipality, may determine over what territory to apportion the burdens, and the whole subject of taxing districts belongs to the Legislature, and the authority may be left to local boards, or bodies. County of Mobile v. Kimball (U. S.) 26 L. Ed. 238: Bauman v. Ross, 42 L. Ed. 270: Schumaker v. U. S. (U. S.) 37 L. Ed. 170.” Orr v. City of Cushing, 66 Okla. 153, 168 Pac. 223; City of Muskogee v. Rambo, 40 Okla. 672, 138 Pac. 567; City of Perry v. Davis et al., 18 Okla. 427, 90 Pac. 865; Pryor v. Western Paving Co. 74 Okla. 308, 184 Pac. 88.

Another contention is district No. 13 cannot be charged with the outlet to Caney river.

The record discloses in this case that the topography of the district known as sewer district No. 13, as laid off by the legislative determination of the city council, could have an outlet only by going from the edge of the district a distance of approximately one mile to Caney river, and that under the ordi *17 nance resolutions, etc., of the council, which authorized the construction of the outlet to Caney riyer, to be charged against the property owners in sewer district No. 13, plaintiffs contend, rendered the whole proceedings void.

The authority of municipalities to construct improvements such as here, is purely statutory, and it would doubtless be accepted without controversy that unless the statute authorized the construction of the outlet, the property could not be charged with this expense. The statute seems to have recognized a truth commonly known to all, that a proper sewer system in a city is necessary, not only for the convenience, but for the health and safety of the public. It would be no system at all without proper outlet. The sewer in question is what is known to the statute as a “district sewer,” and is authorized by sections 465, 468, and 469, Rev. Laws 1910. Among other things, section 465 provides that:

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Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 767, 229 P. 450, 107 Okla. 14, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-bartlesville-v-keeler-okla-1924.