City of Malvern v. Cooper

156 S.W. 845, 108 Ark. 24, 1913 Ark. LEXIS 17
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 21, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 156 S.W. 845 (City of Malvern v. Cooper) 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 Malvern v. Cooper, 156 S.W. 845, 108 Ark. 24, 1913 Ark. LEXIS 17 (Ark. 1913).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This is a suit by the city of Malvern, a city of the second class, against W. H. Cooper and A. I. Roland to recover the sum paid by the city for the construction of a concrete walk, built by this city, abutting the property of appellees. The proof on the part of the city tended to show that the council passed an ordinance on the 5th day of August, 1909, requiring all owners of real property abutting on Main street in said city, between South First and South Fourth streets, or Page avenue, to construct sidewalks as provided for in said ordinance. That on and prior to the 7th day of November, 1910, the appelee, W. H. Cooper, was the owner of certain lots on Main street, between First and Fourth streets, but had failed to construct the walks in accordance with the provisions of said ordinance, and that a written notice to construct the walks within twenty days had been given him, and upon his continued failure and refusal to build the walks and after the lapse of more than thirty days after the service of the notice to construct them, the city, through its street committee, contracted with one Charles Bryant to construct said sidewalk in the manner provided for in said ordinance, which contract was ratified and confirmed by the city council and in accordance with said contract, the said Bryant built the walk at a cost of $69.25, which sum was paid to the said Bryant by the city of Malvern. That subsequently Cooper sold to A. I. Roland a part of one of said lots.

The city prayed judgment for this sum and for a penalty of six per cent and interest at the rate of 6 per cent, and that the whole amount thereof be declared a lien on said property and that the same be sold to satisfy said lien.

The answer denied the material allegations of the complaint and raised the following issues:

(a) That there was no ordinance; (b) nor any grade established; (c) nor any notice given the abutting property owners; (d) that section 5542 of Kirby’s Digest, which it was claimed, gave the city the authority to pass the ordinance under which it had proceeded in the construction of the walk, applied only where no original sidewalk existed, but did not apply where the property owner already had a sidewalk, and that a property owner who had a sidewalk equal to the one which the city proposed to require (which appellee had) was entitled to a day in court, before determining whether his walk should be torn np and destroyed and the property owner required to build another.

Under its police power, thé Legislature of the State has the authority to pass laws permitting its cities to pass ordinances for the construction of walks and to prescribe the kind which the property owners therein shall build, and when the cities have exercised this power by the passage of by-laws and ordinances, property owners therein are under the duty of complying therewith, and the failure to obey can not be excused by such a showing as is here attempted to be made, that the property owner had a good and sufficient walk. The provisions of section 5542 of Kirby’s Digest, so far as they relate to the authority of a city to pass an ordinance similar to the one under consideration, is as follows :

“In order to better provide for the public welfare, safety, comfort and convenience of the inhabitants of cities of the first and second class, the following enlarged and additional powers are hereby conferred upon said cities, viz:' The council of any such city, by ordinance, resolution or order shall have the power to compel the' owners of any property abutting on its streets or public squares to build, rebuild, maintain and repair foot pavements or sidewalks, improvements and curbing there along, and to designate the kind of sidewalk and curbing improvements to be made, the kind of material to be used, the specifications to be followed, and the time within which such improvement is required to be completed. ’ ’

Thus it is seen that the power is conferred not only to require walks to be built, but also to be rebuilt and to be maintained and repaired according to prescribed specifications.

The ordinance passed pursuant to the above section will not be set out in full because of its length, but it may be said in answer to appellee’s objection (b) that no grade was established; that the ordinance provides with great particularity and certainty how the walk may be constructed and to what grade and of what composition.

Upon the question of the sufficiency of the notice, it may be said that the deputy marshal, who was also the street commissioner, testified that he served a notice upon appellee, Cooper, notifying him to build the walk and that Cooper declined to do so upon the ground that he had a better walk than the one which the city proposed to build, and that he would take the case to the highest courts in resistance to the city’s demands. Appellee, as a witness, did not deny the service of the notice, but upon the contrary there was offered in evidence a notice, dated April 10, 1911, which he gave the street commissioner, forbidding him interfering with his walk, and he alleged in his answer that he gave this notice not to tear up his walk before it was torn up.

The remaining and real question in the case is whether the city had a valid ordinance which authorized the action taken by it. It is contended by appellee that the records of the proceedings had by the city council as shown by its minute book, recites that the council held its regular session on August 6, 1909, instead of August 5, 1909, the date of the ordinance in question and that said records import absolute verity and can not be contradicted by parol testimony, and that as the recorder’s record of the meetings of the council shows the meeting to have been on the 6th and not on the 5th, that no valid ordinance could have been passed on the 5th. This minute book does recite that the council met on the 6th, but that it is not the only recital it contains, as it appears from the minute book that the meeting was a regular one held on the 6th day of August. Now the proof is undisputed that the time for regular meetings of the council was on the first Thursday of each month, and the first Thursday of August was the 5th and not the 6th. Moreover, the said ordinance had been recorded in the book which section 5473 of Kirby’s Digest required should be kept for that purpose, and was authenticated by the signature of the mayor and recorder, and as authenticated by them, showed its passage on August 5, 1909.

The section last mentioned provides that “all bylaws or ordinances shall as soon as may be after their passage be recorded in a book kept for that purpose, and be authenticated by the signature of the presiding officer of the council and the clerk.” This is the permanent record, which the law intends shall perpetuate the evidence of the ordinances passed by the city’s council, and the ordinances and by-laws as they there appear are not only presumed to be correct, but printed copies of them published by the city’s authority, or transcripts therefrom, certified by the city’s clerk, are received in evidence for any purpose for which the original ordinance would be received. Kirby’s Digest, § 5471.

The burden was not therefore upon the city to establish the validity of its ordinance as that presumption in its favor is indulged when the record is produced, containing the ordinances which the law requires to be kept for that purpose. Heno v. Fayetteville, 90 Ark. 292; Van Buren v. Wells, 53 Ark. 368; Kirby’s Digest, § 3066.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 S.W. 845, 108 Ark. 24, 1913 Ark. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-malvern-v-cooper-ark-1913.