City of Seattle v. Kelleher

195 U.S. 351, 25 S. Ct. 44, 49 L. Ed. 232, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 724
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 28, 1904
Docket29
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 195 U.S. 351 (City of Seattle v. Kelleher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Seattle v. Kelleher, 195 U.S. 351, 25 S. Ct. 44, 49 L. Ed. 232, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 724 (1904).

Opinion

Me. Justice Holmes

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court declaring an assessment upon the plaintiff’s land void under the Fourteenth Amendment, and enjoining the city against enforcing..the'same. The facts are these: Weller Street, in Seattle, runs east from Elliott Bay, and formerly stopped at the east line of Maynard’s Donation Claim. The land now belonging to the appellee, the plaintiff below, is a hundred acres lying on the east of that line, extending to the line of the Jackson Strqet Addition. Weller Street, if extended eastward, would run through the middle of this land for twenty-five hundred feet. While this land belonged to one Hill, in 1889, he petitioned that Weller Street be extended and graded to the Jackson Street Addition line, and he submitted to the City Council and circulated, although he did not record, plans *356 showing the extension, with his land on the two sides of it divided into lots and blocks. The plan was approved, and in 1890 the city passed an ordinance that Weller Street be graded from the beginning to Jackson Street Addition, and that sidewalks be constructed on both sides of it coextensive with the grade. • Ordinance No. 1285. The street was graded, and, according to the testimony, had to be cut and filled almost continuously. It also was planked for some distance, but. the planking stopped about a thousand feet before reaching Hill’s tract. Then an assessment was levied, but this was held void. The next things that happened were a sale of Hill’s land and a mortgage of it in January, 1892, to the appellee, which later was foreclosed. The appellee, who lived out'’of the State, alleges that he was ignorant of the submission of the plan by Hill.

On March 9, 1893, an act was approved .authorizing a new assessment, when the old one had been declared void, upon the jands benefited, to the extent of their proportionate part of the expense of the improvement, based upon its actual value at the time of its completion, and having reference to the' benefits received. Notice by publication of a time for hearing objections was provided' for, with an appeal to the courts. Laws of 1893, c. 95. When the improvement in question was ordered, by the charter of Seattle the planking was to be paid for out of the general taxes. Laws of 1885, 1886, pp. 238, 241, § 7. The special assessment for the other elements, according to the assessed value of the land, could be imposed upon the abutting property to one hundred and twenty-eight feet back from the street. This was modified by a new charter adopted later in 1890, and still in force. Under the latter the assessment was to be by the front foot, with different percentages for four parallel subdivisions at successive distances from the street up to one hundred and twenty feet. It.ivas to be for the cost of the improvement. To carry out the plan, local improvement districts were to be established, including all the property within the termini of the improvement, and *357 not more than one hundred and twenty feet on each side of the margin. Reassessments were authorized. In pursuance of the charter an ordinance was adopted by the city providing the manner in which the local assessments should be made. Ordinance No. 2085.

In this state of the ordinances and law's a reassessment of the whole cost of the improvement was ordered in January, 1894, in conformity with the act of 1893, the new charter and the Ordinance No. 2085. Ordinance No. 3199. The proper steps were taken and the assessment was confirmed on March 5, 1894. Ordinance No. 3267. By this assessment the whole cost of the improvement, $35,620.60, was levied on.the abutting land, and $14,262.68 was fixed as the plaintiff’s share. It is alleged that he thus is charged forty-four per cent under the present plan, whereas under the one in force when the improvement was made he would have' been charged only thirty-two per cent. It also is alleged that, being absent from the State, he did not know of the reassessment -proceedings until they were concluded.

The bill disputed, among other things, that the prolongation of Weller Street through the plaintiff’s land, ever had been dedicated as a street. But in view of the assumption by the Circuit Court that the dedication was made out and the statement by it that the point had been, decided by the Supreme Court of the State, this objection, if open, very properly was not pressed before us. See Seattle v. Hill, 23 Washington, 92. Therefore we have not gone into details upon that part of the case. We see no cause to doubt that the Circuit Court was right. The main ground of argument is that the planking could not be included in the assessment. The reasons, as summed up by the Circuit Court, are that the law in force at the time of doing the work did not authorize a charge for planking upon the abutting property, that the Ordinance No. 1285 ordering the improvement did not authorize any planking, that the city could assess only the land abutting on the improvement and the plaintiff’s land was far away from *358 the planking, and that such an assessment of the whole cost, including the planking, on the property on Weller' Street, is absolutely unfair as to the plaintiff’s land.

A general attack upon the statute of 1893 is not attempted. It was within the power of the legislature to create, or to authorize the creation, of special taxing districts, and to charge the cost of a local improvement upon the property in such a district by frontage. Webster v. Fargo, 181 U. S. 394; French v. Barber Asphalt Paving Co., 181 U. S. 324; McNamee v. Tacoma, 24 Washington, 591, 595; Cooley, Const. Lim., 7th ed., 729. The only question of principle, therefore, raised by the inclusion of the planking in the sum of which the plaintiff was to pay his share is whether it was manifestly unfair in this particular case. Taken by itself it looks like an unwarrantable attempt to make one man pay for another man’s convenience.

On the other hand, so far as the work was similar in character, throughout the street, we are of opinion that the improvement might be regarded as one. Webster v. Fargo, 181 U. S. 394. See Lincoln v. Street Commissioners, 176 Massachusetts, 210, 212. And if this be admitted we cannot say that the assessing board might not have been warranted in thinking that substantial justice was done. There were many cuts and fills made in grading the road. So far as appears, the heaviest work may have been done on the plaintiff’s land, which seems to have been the summit of an ascent. Improvement of one sort may have been the greatest there, while that of a different kind, needed where the travel was, was at the other end of the street.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Davis v. Marion County
93 So. 3d 1173 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2012)
Guilford County v. Boyan
272 S.E.2d 1 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1980)
Board of Education v. Crawford
395 A.2d 835 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1979)
Japan Line, Ltd. v. McCaffree
558 P.2d 211 (Washington Supreme Court, 1977)
Drum v. City of Seattle
545 P.2d 1235 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1976)
MATTER OF CHRYSLER PROPS. v. Morris
245 N.E.2d 395 (New York Court of Appeals, 1969)
General Expressways, Inc. v. Iowa Reciprocity Board
163 N.W.2d 413 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1968)
Comptroller of the Treasury v. Glenn L. Martin Co.
140 A.2d 288 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1958)
State v. Industrial Tool & Die Works, Inc.
21 N.W.2d 31 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1945)
Merchants National Bank v. Merchants National Bank
318 Mass. 563 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1945)
Garrett Freight Lines, Inc. v. State Tax Commission
135 P.2d 523 (Utah Supreme Court, 1943)
Bates v. McLeod
120 P.2d 472 (Washington Supreme Court, 1941)
Llinois Central Railroad v. Minnesota
309 U.S. 157 (Supreme Court, 1940)
Puerto Rico v. Federal Land Bank
108 F.2d 275 (First Circuit, 1939)
Welch v. Henry
305 U.S. 134 (Supreme Court, 1938)
Diamond Match Co. v. State Tax Commission
200 A. 365 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1938)
Gray v. Dingman
271 N.W. 552 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1937)
City of Lexington v. Wilson's Estate
151 So. 164 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1933)
Cox v. Reichelderfer
1 D.C. 55 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1933)
Cowart v. Union Paving Co.
14 P.2d 764 (California Supreme Court, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 U.S. 351, 25 S. Ct. 44, 49 L. Ed. 232, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-seattle-v-kelleher-scotus-1904.