City of Eureka Springs v. Banks

174 S.W.2d 947, 206 Ark. 289, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 146
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 8, 1943
Docket4-7142
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 174 S.W.2d 947 (City of Eureka Springs v. Banks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Eureka Springs v. Banks, 174 S.W.2d 947, 206 Ark. 289, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 146 (Ark. 1943).

Opinion

McFaddin, J.

This appeal involves a municipal improvement district. R. H. Huntington was the owner of a certain lot, with a three-story building thereon, located in Paving District No. 1 in the city of Eureka Springs, Arkansas, which is a city operating under the commission form of government with the mayor and city commissioners likewise the commissioners of each improvement district. Paving District No. 1 was organized in 1929 under the general statute for municipal improvement districts, and issued bonds in excess of $200,000, with maturities to 1954, and with $69,000 unpaid at the time of the trial of this case in the chancery court. The benefits assessed against the Huntington property were $2,000. The assessments were unpaid from 1937 to 1942, inclusive, and the delinquencies for the six years amounted to a total of $214, exclusive of interest and penalty.

On December 4,1942, Huntington 'sold his three-storv building (but not the lot) to F. H. Banks, who began to raze and remove the building from the lot. On December 8, the city of Eureka Springs, 'by its mayor and chief of police, served a notice on Banks forbidding him razing and removing the building. The asserted authority for this notice was that Paving District No. 1 had a lien, against the lot and building thereon for the delinquent assessments. On the same day Banks filed his complaint in the chancery court against the city, the mayor and the chief of police, alleging purchase of the building from Huntington, the attempted razing and removing and the notice of which Banks said: “A notice and an order commanding him forthwith to cease and refrain from further razing of the said structure, under a pretense or claim that a certain improvement district in said city, or certain improvement districts therein had a claim-or lien on and against the said real estate for certain claimed delinquent assessments for improvement, in the. sum of $194; and notifying plaintiff further that unless and until the said sum so claimed was paid, said city would not permit plaintiff further to proceed with the said razing.”

The complaint prayed an injunction, which was granted on December 9, when Banks made bond for $200, with appellees, R. H. Huntington, J. K. Butt and F. 0. Butt, as sureties thereon, and the bond was conditioned as follows: “If upon final hearing therein it be declared that the said assessments or any of them be valid and legal and enforceable against the said personalty and structure on said realty, then we bind ourselves, jointly and severally to pay and discharge the said assessments, or so much thereof as shall be validated by such order and found legal and enforceable as against said structure and personalty, or said structure or personalty therein, in the sum of two hundred dollars or so much thereof as shall be necessary. ”

Banks then proceeded, in seventeen days, to remove the building from Eureka Springs; and on December 12, 1942, an answer and cross-complaint were filed in the cause. The answer set up Ordinance No. 679 of the city (forbidding removal of buildings); denied Banks’ right to remove the building from the lot when the improvement assessments were delinquent; and alleged that the lot, with the building removed, would not sell for sufficient to pay the delinquent assessments. The answer also embraced a .cross-complaint, which said: “Further answering by way of cross-complaint, the city commissioners of Eureka Springs, acting as commissioners of Paving District No. 1 of Eureka Springs, Arkansas, move that It. H. Huntington, F. 0. Butt and John K. Butt, the former being the owner and all three being bondsmen herein, be made parties defendants in this action.”

After alleging the delinquencies against the lot involved from 1937 to 1942 as $214 principal, $19.20 penalty, and $32.87 interest, the cross-complaint contained the allegation: “That the value of the lot is not sufficient to pay the entire amount due said paving district and the costs of this action and that the defendants herein should be held on their bond for the same. ’ ’

A general demurrer and a general denial were filed by Banks and the three sureties; and the cause was heard before a special chancellor on an agreed record, substantially as above set forth, and with other facts which we will mention. Decree was entered: (1) making the temporary injunction permanent; (2) declaring the municipal ordinance No. 679 to be void; (3) foreclosing the improvement district assessment lien for the delinquencies of $214 and for $32.87 interest, and adjudging the same a lien on the vacant lot only, and ordering the vacant lot sold; (4) adjudging that there was no lien on the building; and (5) releasing the bond and the three sureties from all liability. Both sides have appealed.

Opinion.

I. Validity of the Assessment. In the original complaint Banks made a plea of limitations against the delinquent assessments; but it is clear that the assessments were not barred by limitations. See Martin v. Board, 190 Ark. 747, 81 S. W. 2d 414.

II. Extent of the Lien of the Assessment. Section 7285 of Pope’s Digest is the concluding sentence of § 4 of Act 84 of the Acts of 1881, which (according to § 35 of Sloan on Improvement Districts) was the basic statute in Arkansas on municipal improvement districts. This act of 1881 is entitled: “An Act to regulate the manner of assessing real property for local improvements in cities of the first class.” In § 4 of this act appears the sentence that is'now § 7285 of Pope’s Digest, which provides: “The words ‘real property,’ whenever used in this act, shall have the same-meaning and significance as are attached to said words in the act providing for the collection of state, county and city revenue.” So we look to the law in effect in 1881 providing for the collection of state, county and city revenue to see what meaning and significance the words “real property” possessed in that act. The revenue law in effect in 1881 is found in Chapter 116 of Gantts’ Digest of 1874 (with amendments from 1874 to 1881, which do not change the point here); and the first section of Chapter 116 of Gantts’ Digest is § 5047, which reads: “The terms ‘real property’ and ‘land’ wherever used in this act shall be held to mean and include not only the land itself, whether laid out in town lots or otherwise, with all things contained therein, but also all buildings, structures, and improvements, and other fixtures, of whatever kind, thereon, with all rights and privileges belonging or anywise. appertaining thereto. ’ ’ This definition was from the act of 1873, and the earlier acts (No. 68 of 1868 and No. 35 of 1871); and this definition was carried in almost the same words in Act 104 of 1883 and is now § 13358 of Pope’s Digest. So, the definition of real property in effect when Act 84 of 1881 was passed is still the same definition; and the words “real property” in the municipal improvement district law 7285, Pope’s Digest) mean not only the lot, but also all the buildings, structures, improvements and other fixtures thereon.

'Section 7306 of Pope’s Digest provides that the assessment “shall be a charge and a lien against all the real property in said district from the date of said ordinance . . . and shall continue until . . . paid.” Thus, since the assessment was a lien on the real property until paid, and since real property included the buildings thereon, it follows that Paving District No. 1 of Eureka Springs had a lien on the building, certainly as long as it remained on the lot.

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Whitaker & Co. v. Sewer Improvement District No. 1
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Bluebook (online)
174 S.W.2d 947, 206 Ark. 289, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-eureka-springs-v-banks-ark-1943.