City of Spokane v. Ridpath

132 P. 638, 74 Wash. 4, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1988
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1913
DocketNo. 10890
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 132 P. 638 (City of Spokane v. Ridpath) 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 Spokane v. Ridpath, 132 P. 638, 74 Wash. 4, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1988 (Wash. 1913).

Opinion

Parker, J.

— This is an action to foreclose liens for special assessments, levied upon abutting property to pay the cost of improving, “by regrading, curbing and sidewalking,” a portion of Sixth avenue in the city of Spokane. A decree being rendered by the trial court in favor of the city, as prayed for, certain of the defendants have appealed. We think the record [5]*5warrants us in proceeding upon the theory that the controlling facts involved are not subject to controversy.

About the year 1888, the city having established the grade of Sixth avenue in front of appellants’ property, graded the a\enue accordingly, but evidently did not then lay ■ sidewalks thereon. Thereafter appellants improved their property by grading their lawns with reference- to the grade then established. Thereafter, in the fall of 1904, a petition was filed with the city authorities asking for the parking and sidewalking of Sixth avenue, including the portion -thereof in front of appellants’- property. This petition was signed by certain owners of property fronting upon the avenue, but such owners were the owners of less than “one-half of the property subject to contribute to such improvement.” In this respect the petition was insufficient as an initiatory step in the making of the proposed improvement, as will appear by reference to certain charter provisions to be hereafter noticed. Thereafter, on December 27, 1904, the board of public works of the city submitted this petition to the city council, together with plans and specifications for “regrading, curbing and side-walking” the portion of the avenue asked to be improved, and recommended that the improvement be made. At the same time, the board of public works submitted to the city council an ordinance to reestablish the grade of Sixth avenue, including the portion thereof proposed to be improved, 'and recommended its passage. Thereafter, on January 10, 1905, the city-council passed-the ordinance reestablishing the grade of Sixth avenue, the grade thus established being from six to twenty inches lower than the previously established grade. Thereafter, on February 28, 1905, the city council instructed the board of- public works “to prepare new plans and specifications for ■ the sidewalking and curbing” of the portion of Sixth avenue proposed to be improved. Thereafter, on March 28, the board of public works made its report to the city council and'submitted new plans and specifications which were then approved by the city council.- Thereafter, on April 5, [6]*61905, an ordinance was passed by the city council providing for the construction of the improvement according to the plans and specifications which had been approved by the council on March 28, 1905, and also providing for the creation of a local improvement district and the levying of special assessments upon the property therein, including the property of appellants, to pay the cost of the improvement. This ordinance was passed by the unanimous vote of the city council. Thereafter the improvement was constructed, and an assessment roll made and filed in the usual manner, apportioning and charging the cost of the improvement to the several lots and parcels of land within the improvement district, and upon due notice given to the property owners as the law directs, there being no protest or objection made to any of the assessments, the same were duly confirmed by the council by ordinance passed on September 6, 1905. It is to foreclose the liens of certain unpaid assessments so made, that this action is prosecuted.

The argument of counsel for the appellants proceeds upon the theory that the city council never acquired jurisdiction to construct this improvement and pay for it by local assessments levied upon the property of appellants and others. To support this theory, two principal contentions are advanced: first, that the making of the improvement upon the local assessment plan was not initiated in the manner provided by the charter so as to give the council jurisdiction to proceed therewith; and second, that the making of the improvement upon the regrade of the avenue, claimed to be materially different from the previously established grade, without first acquiring the right by eminent domain proceedings as against appellant and other property owners to construct the improvement upon the new grade, was an omission of a prerequisite jurisdictional step to the making of the improvement and levying of the assessment.

The first of these contentions is rested upon the following provisions of the then existing charter of the city of Spokane:

[7]*7“Sec. 61. .... No improvement, where the whole or any portion of the cost and expense thereof is to be defrayed by the collection of special assessments upon the property specially benefited thereby, shall be ordered unless the owners of at least one-half of the property subject to contribute to such improvement, shall file a petition therefor; provided, that the legal representatives of such owners may sign such petition for and on behalf of the owners; provided further, that such improvement may be ordered without petition by an ordinance which shall have passed by a vote of at least two-thirds of the whole council.”

“Sec. 62. . . . Whenever, in the absence of any petition, the council shall deem it advisable to order such improvement, it shall by resolution direct the board of public works to prepare and transmit a report of such work; and said board shall thereupon prepare and file such report in the same manner as if there had been a petition therefor and favorable report by the board.”

It is insisted that, because the petition for the improvement which was filed in the fall of 1904 was insufficient as an initiatory step, in view of its want of sufficient number of signatures of the owners, all subsequent proceedings looking to the making of the improvement and levying of the assessment must fall. Admitting, for argument’s sake only, that a petition with a sufficient number of signatures might become a necessary jurisdictional step in the absence of the improvement being ordered by ordinance passed by at least a two-thirds vote of the whole council, it seems to us that, in view of the fact that the council did eventually order this improvement by an ordinance passed by its unanimous vote, it thereafter became immaterial that the petition filed some months previous asking for the improvement happens to be defective. We are quite unable to see how what may have been previously done by the property owners in the way of attempting to properly petition for this improvement can in any degree lessen the power of the council to order the improvement by an ordinance passed by a unanimous vote, as [8]*8they are clearly authorized to do by the provisions of § 61 of the charter above quoted.

It is also insisted that, viewed as an improvement ordered by the council without petition from the property owners, the council did not “by resolution direct the board of public works to prepare and transmit a report of such work,” as provided by § 62 of the charter above quoted. Even admitting that this provision of the charter is more than merely directory in its force, we have noticed that, on February 28, 1905, before the ordering of the improvement by the ordinance passed by unanimous vote, the council instructed the board of public works to prepare new plans and specifications for the improvement, the board having previously recommended the making of the improvement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 P. 638, 74 Wash. 4, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-spokane-v-ridpath-wash-1913.