City of South Fulton v. Parker

65 S.W.2d 853, 17 Tenn. App. 15, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 43
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 2, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 65 S.W.2d 853 (City of South Fulton v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of South Fulton v. Parker, 65 S.W.2d 853, 17 Tenn. App. 15, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 43 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

The original bill was filed in this cause seeking to enforce the collection of certain front foot assessments from the abutting property owners on two street improvement districts in the city of South Fulton, Tennessee.

There was a demurrer filed by the defendant property owners, by which the constitutionality of the enabling act, under which the streets in question were improved, being chapter 768 of the Private Acts of 1927, amending chapter 401 of the Private Acts of 1909, incorporating the city of South Fulton, was attacked, and other grounds for the demurrer set forth, that there was no provision in the enabling act for enforcing the collection of the assessments against abutting property owners; and no provision in the enabling act fixing a lien on the property for the amount of the assessment which the *16 original bill sought to have declared; and no provision in the enabling act for the collection of penalties for failure to pay the assessments, and other grounds. The chancellor overruled the demurrer and granted an appeal from his action to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court, while modifying and-sustaining the decree of the chancellor in overruling and disallowing the demurrer, held that there was no provision in the enabling act or in the original charter of the town of South Fulton authorizing the creation of a lien for assessments for paving and improving the streets of the city. The court further held that, where taxes are assessed, it becomes a personal debt, and the government is entitled to all the remedies for their collection, including an ordinary suit at law if it chooses to resort to that remedy. The court, further held that special assessments for street improvements are in the nature of taxes, and the power to impose them is sustained as an exercise of the taxing power. The court further held that there is an implied obligation to pay a tax lawfully imposed, and, if no specific mode of collection has been provided by the statute imposing the tax, it may be recovered by the assessing authority in an action of debt. The court further held that there is an obligation to pay special assessments when no mode of collection is provided, and in the fifth headnote states: “The principle that there is an implied obligation to pay a tax lawfully imposed applies to a special or local assessment which the Legislature has expressly authorized, but for the collection of which it has failed to provide a mode of procedure, because the courts will not impute to the Legislature the intent to confer a right and at the same time to deny a remedy.”

Under the sixth headnote the court said: “A statute authorizing special or local assessments for paving streets and failing to provide a mode of collection does not contemplate that such assessments will be a general personal liability of the property owner, only the property against which the assessment is made being liable for its payment; hence, the assessing body is entitled to a judgment for the amount of the assessment against the owner of the property assessed, the judgment to be satisfied only by levy on the property assessed.”

Under the seventh headnote it is stated: “Where the statute authorizing assessments against abutting property for street improvements by necessary implication authorizes a judgment for the amount of the assessment against the owner, such judgment to be satisfied only by levy upon the property assessed, and where the owners of the property at the time of the assessment were also the owners at the time of the filing of a bill to collect the assessments, full relief may be awarded without deciding whether the assessments constitute a lien upon the property assessed.”

The court further held that, where the statute authorizing local assessments does not authorize the addition of a penalty for nonpay *17 ment, a penalty cannot be • sustained; the power of the city to add a penalty being entirely dependent upon legislative authority. City of South Fulton v. Parker, 160 Tenn. 634, 28 S. W. (2d), 639.

Upon a remand of the cause to the chancery court of Obion county, the defendants filed answers denying the material allegations of the bill with reference to the liability of the abutting property owners for the assessments made for the street improvements in question. Numerous defenses were set up in the answers attacking the regularity of the proceedings by the board of mayor and aldermen of the city of South Fulton in making these street improvements, and charging especially a failure upon the part of the board of mayor and aider-men to comply with the provisions of the enabling act, chapter 768 of the Private Acts of 1927. Among the defenses charging irregularity was that the act requires that, before any streets may be improved under the provisions of said enabling act, at least 75' per cent of the property owners owning property abutting the proposed improvement must sign a petition and file same with the board of aldermen of the city requesting the improvement to be made, and that 75 per cent of the property owners did not file such a petition, and that said street improvements were made without first having petitions filed containing the signatures of at least 75 per cent of the abutting property owners.

At the hearing of the cause, the learned chancellor found, and so held, that. 75 per cent of the abutting property owners had not filed a petition with the board of mayor and aldermen requesting the improvements, and failed to comply with the provisions of the enabling act in that respect, and that the failure of the board of mayor and aldermen to procure 75 per cent of the abutting property owners to sign petitions requesting the creation of' the- -two street improvement districts, and the improvement thereof, rendered void the assessments subsequently made against the abutting property owners and the abutting property, and upon this theory the chancellor dismissed the original bill at the cost of the complainant.

From this decree of the chancellor complainant has perfected an appeal to this coiirt and has assigned this action of the chancellor as error, by several assignments of error.

By. the first assignment it is said that the court erred in holding that there was not 75 per cent of the property owners fronting or abutting on Church street that signed the petition. By the second assignment it is said that the court was in error in failing to hold that 75 per cent of the property owners abutting on Church street, or substantially 75 per cent, signed the petition. By the third assignment it is said that the court was in error in dismissing complainant’s bill and in failing to hold that complainant was entitled to a lien upon the property described in the bill belonging to the respective owners. By the fourth assignment it ie *18 said that the court erred in holding that 75 per cent of the property owners was required to sign the petition in order to make a valid assessment.

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Bluebook (online)
65 S.W.2d 853, 17 Tenn. App. 15, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-south-fulton-v-parker-tennctapp-1932.