Continental Sales & Equipment Co. v. Town of Stuntz

257 N.W.2d 546, 1977 Minn. LEXIS 1441
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 15, 1977
Docket46783
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 257 N.W.2d 546 (Continental Sales & Equipment Co. v. Town of Stuntz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Sales & Equipment Co. v. Town of Stuntz, 257 N.W.2d 546, 1977 Minn. LEXIS 1441 (Mich. 1977).

Opinion

SCOTT, Justice.

This is an appeal from a summary judgment involving a special assessment. Respondents, Continental Sales & Equipment Company and other companies, brought this action in the district court of St. Louis County to invalidate a special assessment levied upon them by appellant, the town of Stuntz. On October 24, 1973, the board of supervisors for the town passed a resolution establishing a special assessment for funding a sanitary sewer project. The assessment took the following form:

(a) $4.00 per front foot for benefiting properties;
(b) $950.00 per residential dwelling;
(c) $2,000.00 per commercial building; and
(d) $5,000.00 per industrial building.

After receiving their first tax bill in May 1974, which included amounts attributable to the special assessment, Continental Sales and other industrial companies affected by the assessment filed petitions to invalidate the assessment as it applied to them. Both the complaining -companies and the town moved for summary judgment. The court found that the town’s method of assessment was contrary to law and a denial of equal protection. The court also ruled that the companies could appeal the assessment under Minn.St. 278.01 and had not lost their right to challenge the assessment by failing to bring a timely action under Minn.St. 429.081. We affirm.

The following issues are presented for our consideration by this appeal:

(1) May a taxpayer specially assessed by a municipality challenge the assessment under Minn.St. 278.01, notwithstanding the fact that the time for appeal under Minn.St. 429.081 has expired?

(2) Was the special assessment herein void as a matter of law as it applied to the companies?

(3) Was summary judgment appropriate in this case?

1. Minn.St. 278.01 provides as follows:

“Any person having any estate, right, title, or interest in or lien upon any parcel of land, who claims that such property has been partially, unfairly, or unequally assessed, or that such parcel has been assessed at a valuation greater than its real or actual value, or that the tax levied against the same is illegal, in whole or in part, or has been paid, or that the property is exempt from the tax so levied, may have the validity of his claim, defense, or objection determined by the district court of the county in which the tax is levied by serving copies of a petition for such determination upon the county auditor, county treasurer, and the county attorney and filing the same, with proof of such service, in the office of the clerk of the district court on or before the first day of *548 June of the year in which such tax becomes payable,”

Minn.St. 429.081 provides:

“Within 20 days after the adoption of the assessment, any person aggrieved may appeal to the district court by serving a notice upon the mayor or clerk of the municipality. The notice shall be filed with the clerk of the district court within ten days after its service. The municipal clerk shall furnish appellant a certified copy of objections filed in the assessment proceedings, the assessment roll or part complained of, and all papers necessary to present the appeal. The appeal shall be placed upon the calendar of the next general term commencing more than five days after the date of serving the notice and shall be tried as other appeals in such cases. The court shall either affirm the assessment or set it aside and order a reassessment as provided in section 429.071, subdivision 2. If appellant does not prevail upon the appeal, the costs incurred shall be taxed by the court and judgment entered therefor. All objections to the assessment shall be deemed waived unless presented on such appeal.”

Chapter 278 deals with objections and defenses to the payment of real estate taxes. Chapter 429 establishes procedures for the approval and funding of local improvements by special assessments. No contention is made herein that the town did not follow the procedures specified by c. 429. The town argues, however, that since the companies did not bring an appeal to the district court within 20 days after the adoption of the assessment, they have no right of appeal under c. 429. The companies concede that they have no right of appeal under c.429.

The town argues further that the appeal remedy of § 429.081 is exclusive with regard to special assessments, i. e., that the word “assessment” therein should be distinguished from the word “assessed” in § 278.-01, and hence the companies have no alternative remedy under § 278.01. Prior decisions of this court have long resolved this issue contrary to the town’s argument.

In Rosso v. Village of Brooklyn Center, 214 Minn. 364, 8 N.W.2d 219 (1943), taxpayers objecting to a special assessment for a local improvement project brought a suit in equity for an injunction. The court upheld the district court’s sustaining of the village’s demurrer on the following grounds:

“In the instant case there was available to plaintiffs a simple and direct remedy in the assessment proceedings, under Minn.St. 1941, § 429.16 * * * above cited, whereby they could have appealed directly to the district court and attacked the assessments or the proceedings in connection therewith.
“In addition, they had the right to contest the tax under Minn.St. 1941, §§ 278.-01 to 278.05 * * *.
“This section applies to special assessments as well as general taxes.” 214 Minn. 368, 8 N.W.2d 221. (Italics supplied.)

The court explained the overall purpose of § 278.01 in Land O’Lakes Dairy Co. v. Village of Sebeka, 225 Minn. 540, 548, 31 N.W.2d 660, 665, certiorari denied, 334 U.S. 844, 68 S.Ct. 1513, 92 L.Ed. 1768 (1948), a case in which a declaratory judgment was sought as an alternative remedy:

“In order that there shall be no future confusion on this particular point of the law, we hold that in enacting M.S.A. c. 278 it was the intention of the legislature to provide an adequate, speedy, and simple remedy for any taxpayer to have the validity of his claim, defense, or objections determined by the district court in matters where the taxpayer claims that his real estate has been partially, unfairly, or unequally assessed, or that it has been assessed at a value greater than its real or actual value, or that the tax levied against the property is illegal in whole or in part, or has been paid, or that the property is exempt from the tax so levied. We believe that when the legislature enacted L.1935, c. 300 (M.S.A. c. 278), it did so for the purpose of providing a rather simple remedy for the taxpayer to have his real estate tax grievances determined, and that it was never the intention that the aggrieved taxpayer could first proceed under this statute and, if his *549

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Bluebook (online)
257 N.W.2d 546, 1977 Minn. LEXIS 1441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-sales-equipment-co-v-town-of-stuntz-minn-1977.