City of Dawson Springs v. Hamby

117 S.W.2d 204, 273 Ky. 523, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 675
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 13, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 117 S.W.2d 204 (City of Dawson Springs v. Hamby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Dawson Springs v. Hamby, 117 S.W.2d 204, 273 Ky. 523, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 675 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

*524 Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas —

Reversing.

In March, 1923, the city of Dawson Springs, Ky.— one of the fifth class — through its council enacted an ordinance for the improvement of Main street in the city, abutting upon which the appellees and defendants below, H. Gr. Hamby and others, owned property. The work was completed and assessments were duly made against the abutting property for its proportionate part ' of the cost of the improvement — all of which was made and done in strict compliance with the then statute relating to the subject, and which was a part of the charter of cities of the fifth class. The cost allotted against the property of defendants amounted to $424.00, which was $42.40 per annum for ten years. The allotment was made by the council on October 4, 1923, followed by the issuing of bonds extending over a period of ten years, with annual maturing assessments with a lien upon the property, which was done pursuant to the provisions of the then section 3643-7 of 'Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes, which was at that time also a pait of the charter of cities of the fifth class.

Defendants made no cash payment for the first year’s assessment, nor did they ever pay any part of any subsequent annual assessment. The ordinance under which the improvement was made contained provisions wholly outside of and beyond the pówe'r and authority of the city council to enact, in that it proceeded to prescribe for the exercise of an option of the abutting property owner as to whether or not the improvement should be made on the ten year plan, and to declare that if such option on the part of the property holder was not exercised within the time prescribed in the ordinance, then the whole cost of the improvement should become due and collectible, and the lien therefor enforced against the property. There were other provisions in the ordinance, some if not all of which are contained in corresponding charter provisions of cities of other classes, and particularly those of the second, third, and fourth classes, but none of which are found or were contained in charters of fifth-class cities at the time the improvement here involved was made. On the contrary, such charters (those of fifth-class cities) absolutely required that street improvements of cities of the fifth class should be made and the cost paid in the manner provided by the ordinance ordering the im *525 provement, i. e., the city could pay it all, or it could specify in the ordinance the part of the cost that should be paid by the city and the other part by the abutting property owners; but whensoever payment by the property owners was prescribed or specified, it was mandatorily required to be done, and their part of the cost discharged, under the ten year plan. However, at that time the same charter (fifth class) provided in section 3643-10 that the owners of the property might at any time thereafter, before all of the assessments were due and payable, pay the entire amount then unpaid and have their property released from the lien. Such provisional requirements of charters of cities of the fifth class at that time radically differentiated them from charters of cities of other classes; they (other charters) in most, if not in all of them, prescribing that the cost of the improvement was primarily due when the work was completed and the assessment was made, but provided that the property holder might within thirty days thereafter request that payment be made on the ten year plan, and which, if done by him, then the directions of the statute to carry out that plan should be taken.

But no such optional privilege on the part of the property owner was then contained in charters, of the fifth class. Therefore, all of such provisions above referred to (conforming to requirements of charters of other class cities) that the ordinance of the city of Dawson Springs contained in ordering the instant improvement of defendants’ property were pure surplus-age and of no legal effect, since it requires no argument to prove that a city council possesses no authority to take any step contrary to the express provisions of statutes conferring upon it the only authority that it possesses — some of which is express authority, and some of which is that which is necessarily inferable from what is expressly given by statute. No authority was possessed by the city council of Dawson Springs to prescribe any other method of payment by abutting property owners for cost of street improvements, except upon the ten-year plan.

The last paragraph in section 3643-7, supra, at the time of the improvement here involved, said: “The assessments may be collected like other taxes, or the city may at any time after the installment remains delinquent for thirty days by suit in equity, enforce its lien *526 with all the unpaid installments, with interest at the said rate thereon to date of satisfaction thereof and its costs expended.” (Our emphasis.) It will be perceived that its language was and is directed exclusively to the method of collecting the annual’ assessments against property for its proportion of the cost of improving streets in front of it, and the inserted paragraph contained the only provision applicable thereto at that time. Since then, and in 1928, the section was amended and it (amendment) contained, inter alia, this language: “And all unpaid installments of the tax assessed against such property so in default shall, at the option of the city or of any bondholder whose bond or bonds or interest thereon are in default, forthwith become due and payable. Any such action shall be prosecuted in the name of the city for the benefit of any and all bondholders,” etc. The bonds issued against the Hamby property were taken by the contractor in payment of the cost of the work, and this action by the city of Dawson Springs, for itself and for the use and benefit of the contractor, and by the contractor; was filed in the Hopkins circuit court against defendants on July 10, 1935, to collect all of the assessments made against the Hamby property — there having been none of them as we have seen, paid in any manner.

The chief defense — and the only one of any materiality — was a plea of limitations, based upon the contention that the improvement ordinance (not the statute) in this case prescribed as a condition precedent to the adoption of the ten-year plan that the property owner (Hambys in this case) should, within thirty days after the assessment was made, so exercise their option, as therein prescribed, but which they did not do. But, as we have seen, that option, created only by ordinance, was wholly unauthorized, since the statute itself prescribed for no other payment than by the ten-year plan, when the improvement was made at the cost of the abutting property owners. Defendants, therefore, contended that inasmuch as they did not exercise the option the entire amount of the improvement became due instanter thirty days after the making of the assessment, and that more than five years (section 2515 of our Statutes) had elapsed since the cause of action accrued for the entire assessment, and the action was, therefore, barred. They furthermore pleaded in a separate paragraph that the excerpt supra from section *527

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291 S.W.2d 816 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1956)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 S.W.2d 204, 273 Ky. 523, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-dawson-springs-v-hamby-kyctapphigh-1938.