City of Little Rock v. Board of Improvements

42 Ark. 152
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 42 Ark. 152 (City of Little Rock v. Board of Improvements) 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 Little Rock v. Board of Improvements, 42 Ark. 152 (Ark. 1883).

Opinion

EaiíIN, J.

The appellees were organized as a board of improvements for the city of Little Rock, under an act of the General Assembly, approved twenty-second of March, 1881, for regulating the manner of assessiug real property for local improvements of the first class.

By petition to the Circuit Court on the eighth of October, 1883, they represented that, under the provisions of the act, the city council had levied a tax on certain sewer districts of the city, numbered 2, 3 and 4; upon which the board had proceeded to construct sewers, and had exhausted the levy, leaving a deficiency; the amount of which they had certified to the council, and had demanded a levy to cover, together with an amount sufficient to complete the sewers; indicating the rate of taxation which would be required for said districts, severally. This having been refused, the petitioners prayed a mandamus to compel it.

The city demurred; and also responded, setting up in the response that the said act was unconstitutional, in so far as it required the city to make an additional levy upon the real property in the districts for any amount which the board might report to be necessary to complete the improvements. That the council had already made a levy for an amount sufficient to pay the costs of the construction of sewers, according to the first estimates made by the board; and that the board had furnished no proper vouchers for the expenditure of the large amount of money which had come into their hands; but, being called upon, had refused to do so.

Further, that the board had mismanaged and misappropriated a large portion of the fund, and that the amount of the levy demanded was far in excess of what would be really necessary, upon a due and proper account of what had airead}7 come to their hands.

Further, that the power of the council to make such levies could only be exercised by the “ consent of a majority in value of the property holders owning property adjoining the locality to be affected; ” and that the petitions from such owners, in said districts, had only authorized a levy of the actual amount required to pay the costs of constructing sewers therein ; from which it followed that the council could not make the additional levy for said deficiency, inasmuch as it had no means of testing the accuracy of the statements sent in by the board regarding-the deficiency ; and that the council had, therefore, declined to comply with the demand until the board should-produce, before a committee appointed by the council, proper evidences of the correctness of their report. They pray that the mandamus be denied, and the petition dismissed. To this response there was a demurrer.

Upon the pleadings, the court directed, an alternative-mandamus, ordering the council, upon the production before its committee of the vouchers and accounts of the board concerning said districts, to examine the same, and, if found correct, to proceed on the thirteenth of November, 1883, to make the levy required, or show cause on the sixteenth of November why it had not been done.

It seems that the vouchers and accounts were produced before a committee. On the fourteenth of November the-city appeared and responded that the committee had not had time to make a full investigation, and requested time till the twenty-seventh of November. By approval of the court the time was granted, and the response of the council was filed on the twenty-eighth, to this effect:

That the council, through its committee, had found the vouchers and accounts of the board correct, as to the fact of the expenditure of the fund raised by taxes; but that it could not indorse the manner of the expenditure already made, or that proposed to be made of the supplemental, fund, if the tax should be levied. Whereupon it had, by resolution, instructed its attorney to test the constitutionality of the law under which the board was organized. Thereupon it asked to renew the demurrer to the original petition for mandamus, which had been passed without action. The causes of the new demurrer being:

1. Want of sufficient facts for relief.
2. That the law was unconstitutional.

Upon the twelfth of December the cause was heard on. both demurrers — that of the petitioners to the response of the city, and that of- the city to the original petition.

The former was sustained and the latter overruled. The ■city rested and the mandamus was made peremptory to make the levy on the eighteenth of that month. The city -appeals.

The record presents for our consideration no other question than the constitutionality of the law. If it be valid, no reason appears why the mandamus should not have ;gone. The material provisions of the law, as found in the pamphlet acts of 1881, p. 161, are as follows:

Section 1 generally confers on city councils of the first -class the power to assess all real property within the city, or any district of it, for the purpose, amongst other things, •of “ constructing sewers, or making any improvements of •a local nature.”

The second and third sections provide that, upon petition ■of ten resident owners, the council shall lay off the city or any portions of it, into “ improvement districts ” for local improvements, to be designated by numbers ; and make .publication of the order. It is provided that if, within three months after the publication, a majority in value of the owners of real property within such district adjoining the locality to be affected shall present a petition for the •contemplated local improvement, the cost to be assessed upon the real property within the district, the council shall appoint three residents of the district as a board of improvement, to act without compensation. Provisions •are made for qualification of the members, filling the vacancies, etc.

By sections four and five it is made the duty of the board to form plans for the improvement designated in the petition, and procure estimates of the cost, employing necessary engineers and agents, and report to the council which is then to assess the cost on the real property of the district, according to its value as shown by the county assessment on file in the clerk’s office, with the proviso that no single improvement shall cost more than 20 per cent, of the value of real property in the district. Provision is made for the collection of the assessment by installments, so that no more than one per cent, of the value per annum shall be collected ; and the form for a proper ordinance is given. By section 6 the ordinance is required to be published, and twenty days are given any one aggrieved to-commence proceedings to test its validity.

.By section 7 the city clerk is required to procure a copy of so much of the county assessment as contains the property affected, and to extend against each parcel the assessment so made, and deliver it to the district collector with a warrant for collection ; who, by section 8, is required to give notice by publication. Then follow other sections providing in detail the modes of enforcing payment of the levy, and the disposition of the fund upon the order of the board.

Then follows section 15, as follows:

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Related

Brown v. Cheney
350 S.W.2d 184 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1961)
Palmer v. Town of Farmington
179 P. 227 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1919)
Craig v. Russellville Waterworks Improvement District
105 S.W. 867 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1907)
Texarkana v. Friedell
102 S.W. 374 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1907)
Carson v. St. Francis Levee District
27 S.W. 590 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1894)

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Bluebook (online)
42 Ark. 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-little-rock-v-board-of-improvements-ark-1883.