City of Denver v. Londoner

33 Colo. 104
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 15, 1905
DocketNo. 4488
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 33 Colo. 104 (City of Denver v. Londoner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Denver v. Londoner, 33 Colo. 104 (Colo. 1905).

Opinions

Chiee Justice Gabbert

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellees, as plaintiffs, brought an action in the court below, the purpose of which was to annul assessments levied upon their property to pay the expense of paving certain streets in what is known as the Eighth Avenue paving district, in the city of Denver. From a judgment in their favor the defendants appeal. The questions presented for consideration and determination are substantially as follows:

1. ' The sufficiency of the petitions by the property owners.

2. The legality of the publication of the ordinance creating the district.

3. The sufficiency of the notice to owners published by the board of public works.

4. That the charter provisions do not provide for due process of law.

5. That specific tracts were not benefited, or the assessments thereon were excessive.

6. The validity of the law creating the board of public works.

1. By the pleadings filed on behalf of the plaintiffs in the court below, the sufficiency of the petitions by the property owners was questioned as a fact, in that it was pleaded that a majority of such owners had not signed the petitions requesting the paving of Eighth Avenue. The charter provides that the board of public works may order the grading, curbing and paving of any street; provided, however, that the owners of a majority of the frontage to be assessed shall petition therefor. — Subdiv. 3, Sec. 3, Art. 7 (Sec. 160), Charter. It is no doubt true, [108]*108that conditions precedent which the law points ont shall be observed by city anthorities in ordering improvements, must be complied with, and that, as a general rule, their failure to do so does not give them jurisdiction to proceed. This general proposition, however, is not applicable in this case. The proceedings to pave the streets in a given district are to be initiated by the board in the manner indicated, but it is left with the city council to finally pass the ordinance creating the paving district. In performing this function it is left to that body to determine whether or not certain preliminary steps which the law requires to be taken by the board of public works have been complied with. The law further provides that the finding of the city council by ordinance that a petition was or was not filed, or was or was not subscribed by the required number of owners, shall be conclusive in every court or other tribunal. In the ordinance creating the paving district the city council did find, as a fact, that petitions for paving the street subscribed by the owners of a majority of the frontage to be assessed for paving the street in the paving district, were presented to the board of public works. It is only because of the provisions of the charter that a petition by the owners of property must be addressed to the board of public works before the latter are authorized to take the preliminary steps to pave the streets. The owners are not entitled to so petition by the fundamental law. The legislature might have dispensed with this prerequisite. The board of public works, it is true, would be without jurisdiction to take the preliminary steps in the absence of such 'petition, and no doubt, in such case, up to the time when the city council acts upon their recommendation as to the creation of a paving district and determines that the necessary petition subscribed by the owners has been presented to the board of pub-[109]*109•lie works, the latter conld be enjoined from presenting any recommendation to the city council; but there is a stage in the proceedings when the question of the sufficiency of the petition and the number of .owners subscribing it is no longer open, if the city council, in passing the ordinance creating the district, has found the facts from which it can be inferred that the law in this respect has been complied with. This is a matter which the legislature, in its discretion, has the authority to commit to the ■finding and determination of the city authorities. Such a law is not unconstitutional because it does not deprive property owners of any rights which they are entitled to assert under the fundamental law of the state, and hence, the legislature has the authority to say at what time and by what body the findings of fact as to certain preliminary steps of the nature under consideration shall become final and conclusive. — Dumars v. City, supra; 2 Dillon, 4th ed., § 800; Dennison v. City of Kansas City, 95 Mo. 416.

In brief, the findings of fact by the city authorities as to those matters which are not inherently jurisdictional are conclusive when the law authorizes them to determine such facts, and provides that their findings thereon shall be conclusive.

In Dennison v. City, supra, the charter provisions of the city under consideration provided that notice to owners should be given before findings of fact with respect to certain matters could be made. ..It was held that a hearing .under these provisions .must be afforded the owners, but the opinion distinctly holds that the legislature could have conferred upon the city authorities the power to improve the streets of the city at the cost of the property owners without requiring the preliminary steps referred to. It further recognizes that the findings [110]*110•of'fact by the city-council as to those matters committed to that body by law, are conclusive.

The many authorities cited by counsel for appellees to the effect that a failure upon the part of the city authorities to comply with prescribed preliminary steps, renders the proceedings void, are not in point. They are based upon the • proposition that ■the steps prescribed must be observed, otherwise jurisdiction does not attach. Unlike the case at bar, however, they were- decided in states where there was no provision of law whereby the findings of the city authorities ■ that the preliminary • steps had been taken, were conclusive.

2. The ordinance creating -the. district was published on Sunday. -This publication was not illegal, for the reasons given in deciding this same question in Dumars v. City, supra.

3. Subsection 2, Sec. 3, Art. 7 (Sec. 160), Charter, requires the board of public works to give a specified notice before ordering improvements. This notice must be published for twenty days, notifying the owners that any complaints or objections relating to the matters contained in the notice that may be made in writing by the owners and filed with the board within thirty days from the first publication of such notice, will be heard and determined by the board. In the case at bar, the thirty days expired on Sunday, and by the terms of the notice, the compláints and objections contemplated were to be considered and determined by the board on' Monday following. The time fixed under the" notice for the hearing and determination of the complaints and objections which might be presented to the board, was not premature. ' The charter requires, when the notice so specifies, that the owners must lodge their objections with' the’ board within thirty days from the date of the 'first publication,' - There is no provision [111]*111excluding any Sunday of such period. Where a statute declares that an act shall be .done within a certain number of days, Sunday must be reckoned as one, though it happens to be the last, unless expressly or impliedly excluded. — Vailes v. Brown, 16 Colo. 562; Ex parte Dodge, 7 Cowan 147.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 Colo. 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-denver-v-londoner-colo-1905.