City of Seattle v. Puget Sound Traction, Light & Power Co.

158 P. 252, 91 Wash. 567, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1103
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1916
DocketNo. 12912
StatusPublished

This text of 158 P. 252 (City of Seattle v. Puget Sound Traction, Light & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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 Seattle v. Puget Sound Traction, Light & Power Co., 158 P. 252, 91 Wash. 567, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1103 (Wash. 1916).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

The respondent city condemned a strip of land through the property of the Puget Sound Traction, Light & Power Company (which for brevity we shall call the Traction Company), 54 feet wide and about 1,200 feet long, extending from Woodland Park avenue to the intersection of Green Lake boulevard and Ashworth avenue. The strip was to constitute an extension of North Seventy-seventh street. A jury in the condemnation proceeding found the value of the land appropriated to be $8,250, for which sum a verdict was awarded. The matter was then referred by the court to the board of eminent domain commissioners of the city, for the purpose of levying assessments upon the property specially benefited by the opening of the street to satisfy the award and the costs of the proceeding. Appellants were the only parties named in the condemnation proceeding. The eminent domain commissioners returned an assessment roll on which an assessment of $8,979.70 for special benefits was levied upon two strips of land, belonging to the Traction Company and incumbered by the other appellants, lying on each side of and adjacent to the condemned strip. The land so assessed is a part of the remainder of a tract of about thirty-five acres of unplatted land from which the [569]*569condemned strip is taken, lying on the northwesterly side of Green Lake, which is bounded on the west by Woodland Park avenue, east and south by Green Lake boulevard and Ashworth avenue, and north by North Dayton street. No other land was assessed for benefits. The net result of the proceeding was that appellants were allowed $8,250 as compensation for the land appropriated, which was assessed back to it with an addition of $729.70, the last mentioned sum being the costs of the proceeding, and $538.54 accrued interest on the award.

Appellants objected and excepted to the assessment roll, on the ground that the assessment was arbitrary, inequitable, in excess of benefits to appellants, and based upon a fundamentally wrong basis.

The matter came on for hearing before Smith, J., who, after hearing all the evidence offered by the city and the appellants, directed and adjudged that the assessment against the property of the appellants be reduced by the sum of $2,-000, and that such sum be spread upon the real estate to the west of Woodland Park avenue to Dayton street and from the alley next north of Seventy-fifth street to the alley next north of Seventy-eighth street, and that the roll be re-referred to the commissioners to be recast.

An amended roll was thereafter prepared and returned, on which the assessment against the property of appellants first included in the original district was reduced by the sum of $1,700, but some other property of appellants was included which was not included in the original district and assessed at a small sum. The new roll included the real estate directed to be included in the order re-referring the roll.

About ninety-four owners of the property so included in the new roll objected thereto and to the assessment, and filed an affidavit of prejudice against Smith, J., hearing the matter of the amended roll, and it was assigned by the presiding judge to Tallman, J., before whom it was heard.

[570]*570After hearing the evidence offered by the city, the new parties, and the appellants, Tallman, J., directed the cancellation of the assessments against the new property named in the amended roll, and that the entire amount of the original assessment be levied back upon the two 100-foot strips of the Traction Company. From this judgment, comes this appeal.

Respondent moves that so much of the abstract of record as pertains to the hearing of the original roll and the order thereon before Judge Smith be stricken. This cannot be done. From the institution of the proceedings under the statutes relating thereto, the superior court is given jurisdiction of the entire matter until final judgment. Seattle v. Sylvester-Cowen Inv. Co., 55 Wash. 659, 104 Pac. 1121. The superior court of King county is one court although there are nine judges thereof. The proceeding to acquire the land for the extension of the street and to assess the property specially benefited for the cost of the improvement was one proceeding. The statement of facts necessary to be certified on appeal should contain all matters material to the cause not already made a part of the record thereof. It was necessary also to abstract the same. The proceedings before Judge Smith were properly included in the statement of facts and in the abstract. The motion is denied.

We do not think that the court had power under the statute to direct the exact limits of territory that should be included in any assessment district. This is a legislative power.

“The statute expressly enjoins upon the commissioners the duty of apportioning the total cost between the city and the district specially benefited in such proportion as shall be relatively equitable. If, however, they fail to do this, the power of the court to review their action is restricted.” In re Westlake Avenue, 40 Wash. 144, 82 Pac. 279.
“In this class of cases, opinions will differ widely as to the proper boundaries for an assessment district, and as to the benefits to accrue to the different properties within the district; but this court cannot substitute its judgment for the judgment of those whom the law has charged with the duty [571]*571of establishing the district and apportioning the cost, whenever such difference of opinion may arise.” In re Seattle, 50 Wash. 402, 97 Pac. 444.

The superior court can review, revise, modify, set aside, or confirm an assessment roll in this sort of proceeding. In so doing the court can assuredly order to be included property arbitrarily omitted from assessment which is manifestly within the area of benefits, and it can order that property which is manifestly and arbitrarily included within the district, which is not and cannot be specially benefited, omitted and excluded therefrom. This is the exercise of the power of the court to “revise, alter, or modify” the assessment. It is not the substitution by thé court of an entirely new district or area of benefits. The court may, in refusing to approve and confirm the assessment roll, indicate the judicial reason therefor, that it is apparent that an entire area is either included or excluded unjustly and arbitrarily. To readjust an assessment district very generally and comprehensively, under these statutes, the court must follow the statutes and refer the entire matter back to the eminent domain commissioners, or appoint new commissioners and order the benefits assessed anew.

Judge Smith proceeded from the premise that, “It is neither usual nor fair to confine an assessment district between the termini of the piece that has been condemned. The condemnation was not for the benefit of the tract of the respondent wholly. If that was the intention of it, no doubt the respondent itself would have dedicated the street before this.” This premise may not be correct as a general rule, but we think it is certainly correct as applied to the conditions here, shown. This case is almost exactly parallel with the case of Spokane v. Kraft, 67 Wash. 245, 121 Pac. 830, and Id., 82 Wash. 238, 144 Pac. 286. As was said in Spokane v. Miles, 72 Wash. 571, 131 Pac. 206:

“Assessment districts must have a point of beginning and a point of termination. The fixing of these extremes often [572]

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Related

Norwood v. Baker
172 U.S. 269 (Supreme Court, 1898)
In re Westlake Avenue
82 P. 279 (Washington Supreme Court, 1905)
Seattle v. Meteor Land Co.
97 P. 444 (Washington Supreme Court, 1908)
City of Seattle v. Sylvester-Cowen Investment Co.
104 P. 1121 (Washington Supreme Court, 1909)
City of Spokane v. Kraft
121 P. 830 (Washington Supreme Court, 1912)
City of Spokane v. Miles
131 P. 206 (Washington Supreme Court, 1913)
City of Seattle v. Gatton
136 P. 488 (Washington Supreme Court, 1913)
In re Eighth Avenue Northwest
138 P. 10 (Washington Supreme Court, 1914)
City of Spokane v. Kraft
144 P. 286 (Washington Supreme Court, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
158 P. 252, 91 Wash. 567, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-seattle-v-puget-sound-traction-light-power-co-wash-1916.