City of Galveston v. Heard

54 Tex. 420, 1881 Tex. LEXIS 44
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1881
DocketCase No. 1302
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 54 Tex. 420 (City of Galveston v. Heard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Galveston v. Heard, 54 Tex. 420, 1881 Tex. LEXIS 44 (Tex. 1881).

Opinions

Gould, Associate Justice.

The city of Galveston [427]*427brought this suit to recover of T. J. Heard an alleged assessment for a sidewalk alleged to have been completed by the city in front of his lot No. 1, in block 203, in said city, December 31, 1874, claiming both a hen on the lot and a personal judgment. The assessment was made March 1, 1875, amounted to $169.43, and was claimed to be due in ten annual installments, commencing December 31, 1874, and bearing interest at ten percent, per annum, and the suit was to recover or enforce those installments due at the institution of the suit, November 6, 1879. The pleadings of defendant were sufficient to present the questions ruled upon by the court below, trying the case without a jury, which rulings or conclusions, both of law and fact, and the reasons therefor, constitute part of the record, and have greatly aided this court in examining and disposing of the case.

Limitation was sustained against the installment due more than four years before suit was brought; no interest was allowed; and judgment was rendered for eighty per cent, of the other installments due, the court finding the value of the bonds in which the work was paid for, and the assessment made at the time, to be eighty per cent.

Both parties appeal and assign error — the city bringing up the record.

We propose to consider first the rulings of the court on various propositions presented to the court by counsel for defendant, embracing the principal questions in the case.

“ First proposition:

“The ordinance, proved and relied on by plaintiff, provided for assessments for sidewalk improvements, without notice of any kind to property owners of the front or abutting lots, or the opportunity to be heard in regard to said assessments—wholly ex parte — and such assessments have no validity, and cannot be enforced.

“ Statement.— The city charter authorizes the city council ‘to establish, erect, construct, regulate and keep [428]*428in repair culverts and sewers, sidewalks and crossways, and to regulate the construction and use of the same, and to abate and punish any obstruction thereon; and the cost of the construction of sidewalks shall be defrayed by the owners of the lot or part of lot or block fronting on the sidewalk, and the cost of any sidewalk constructed by the city shall be collected, if necessary, by the sale of the lot or part of lot or block on which it fronts, together with the cost of collection, in such a manner as the city council may, by ordinance, provide; and a sale of any lot or part of lot or block to enforce collection of cost of sidewalk shall convey a good title to the purchaser, and the balance of the proceeds of sale, after paying the amount due the city and cost of sale, shall be paid by the city to the owner.’ Charter 1871, title IV, art. 3, § 8; Special Laws, 1st Sess., 1811, 355-6.

“The ordinance under which the assessment was made is the 4th section, Ordinance to provide for the filling up, grading, curbing and paving of certain sidewalks,’ approved February 3, 1814, as follows:

“§4. That the cost of filling, raising, curbing and paving each separate sidewalk as soon as the same shall be finished and completed, shall be a charge against the property fronting and abutting thereon; and shall be assessed against the same in the following manner, to wit: As soon as each sidewalk in each separate block is finished and completed, the city engineer shall make out in a book regularly prepared for the purpose, a full list of all lots or fractional lots fronting or abutting on the same, giving the number of each and the frontage of each on the sidewalk, the number of the block in which situated, and the names of the owners thereof, if known, and if not known, then the said lots or fractional lots shall be entered upon the said book as unknown. The said officer shall then enter or place in the said book, opposite each lot or fractional lot, its proper or pro rata portion of the cost of the [429]*429filling, raising, curbing and paving, and shall- exhibit his said fist, so made out and signed by him, to the city council at its next regular meeting after the said list is made out and finished, and upon the approval and acceptance of the same by the city council, the amount placed on the said list opposite each lot or fractional lot, shall be an assessment against the same, and each assessment so made shall date back to the time or date upon which the improvement of its respective sidewalk was finished and completed, and the same shall be, until paid, a lien upon the property against which it is levied. After the approval and acceptance of the said list by the city council, it shall be signed by the mayor and countersigned by the city clerk, and placed in the hands of the city collector for collection; provided, however, that the city engineer shall not charge for making surveys of sidewalks under this ordinance.”

From the opinion of the district court on this proposition we extract and adopt the following:

“Where neither the charter nor any legislative act requires notice to the abutter or lot owner in order to make him hable to pay the cost of sidewalk improvements,' then it is not essential that notice be given, either actual or constructive.” Dil., § 642; 10 O. S., 405.

“ It was not made a prerequisite by the charter to the passage of an ordinance for paving, that it should be on a petition of the citizens or abutting owners, or that the citizens or abutting owners should be either actually or constructively notified of the intention of the city council to pass' an ordinance for the construction of sidewalks to be charged to abutting owners. The city had the authority to pass an ordinance for the construction of sidewalks, to be a charge upon the abutting owners, without any published notice inviting bids for the work, but giving authority to the mayor or other city officials to enter into private contracts for the work, if the contract was fair and reason[430]*430able and untainted by fraud or unnecessary oppression. In the case at bar, however, the sidewalk ordinance required notice to be published in the daily papers of the city, inviting bids of contractors for the sidewalks, and notice was published in all three of the daily city newspapers, inviting sealed proposals for the work. The passage of the sidewalk ordinance was per se notice to all the citizens, the law presuming that all the citizens of the municipality know her laws. After the work was done the assessment was simply a matter of measurement to ascertain the cost, and report of the same to the council under the prescribed form, which did not require any other notice to the abutter, than such as every lot owner is supposed to take of what is being done upon his sidewalk. And the proof is that defendant, before the laying down of the pavement, was called on to make his selection of what kind of pavement he desired to have laid. The charter prohibited any sale of land for taxes except by decree of the district court, and upon the bringing of this suit the defendant- was served with notice, and afforded an opportunity of showing the invalidity of the assessment or any defense he might have in law or equity.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Tex. 420, 1881 Tex. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-galveston-v-heard-tex-1881.