Cook v. Slocum

8 N.W. 755, 27 Minn. 509, 1881 Minn. LEXIS 39
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 27, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 8 N.W. 755 (Cook v. Slocum) 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
Cook v. Slocum, 8 N.W. 755, 27 Minn. 509, 1881 Minn. LEXIS 39 (Mich. 1881).

Opinion

Cornell, J.

By article 9, section 1, of the constitution, it is provided “that the legislature may, by general law or ■special act, authorize municipal corporations to levy assessments for local improvements upon the property fronting upon such improvements, or upon the property to be benefited by such improvements, without regard to a cash valuation, and in such manner as the legislature may prescribe. ” Within the meaning of this clause of the constitution, widening and- straightening part of a public street in a particular locality in- a city is a local improvement, and, under the [511]*511authority thus expressly reserved to the legislature, it is competent for it to confer upon a municipal corporation the requisite power to make any such improvement, to take and appropriate whatever land may be necessary therefor, to ascertain the damages occasioned thereby, to assess and apportion the amount thereof upon such land in the- vicinity as may be benefited by it, and to prescribe the manner in which it shall be done. In prescribing the manner, it may authorize the common council of a city to create a special tribunal or commission to ascertain, upon a view of the premises and other evidence, the amount of damages caused by the improvement for land taken or injured, and also to determine what land in the vicinity will be benefited, and to assess and apportion the amount of such damages upon the property so to be benefited proportionately in accordance with the benefits received. It is also competent' for it to provide that the judgment of the tribunal so created shall be final, in the absence of any fraud or mistake, in.respect to all questions as to what property will be benefited by the improvement, and as to the benefits received by each parcel. Rogers v. City of St. Paul, 22 Minn. 494; Carpenter v. City of St. Paul, 23 Minn. 232; Cooley on Taxation, c. 20, pp. 416, 417, 420, 421, and 448 to 451.

The charter of the city of Minneapolis, under which the proceedings herein were had, (Sp. Laws 1878, c. 25, sube. 10, § 9,) among other things, authorizes the common council, (page 227,). “in its discretion, to lay out and open new streets, lanes and alleys in said city, and to widen, straighten, or extend any street now existing or which may hereafter exist, and to purchase or condemn for such purposes any real estate or interest therein which is private property; * * * to provide for the payment of the value of such property as may be taken, and damages done to private property by means of any such improvements, * * * by assessing, levying and collecting the expense of the same by special assessment upon the property to be benefited by such improvements, in [512]*512each, case in proportion to benefits, and without regard to a. cash valuation.”

The mode of exercising this authority, and the various steps to be taken in exercising it, are particularly specified in section 10, which provides for a vote of the council directing the improvement, a plat and survey of the same by the city engineer, filing it with the city clerk after its approval and adoption by the council, so as to show correctly the character, course and extent of the improvement agreed upon and ordered, together with the property necessary to be taken or interfered with, and the names of the owners,. so far as known, and for the appointment of five commissioners “to> view the premises, and to ascertain and award the amount of damages and compensation to be paid to the owners of property which is to be taken or injured by the improvement, and to assess the amount of such damages and compensation * * * upon the lands and property to be benefited by such improvement, in proportion to the benefits to be received by each parcel, and without regard to a cash valuation.” These commissioners, after qualifying in the manner provided, and giving the requisite notices as prescribed, are to' meet at a time and place designated, for the purpose of giving interested parties an opportunity to be heard and to give evidence ; and they are required to “view the property proposed to be taken or interfered with for the purpose of such improvement, and ascertain and award therefor compensation and damages, and view the premises to be benefited by such improvement, and assess thereon, in proportion to benefits, the amount necessary to pay such compensation and damages,” and, upon such view being had and evidence given, they are to.. make “a true and impartial appraisement and award of the compensation and damages to be paid to each person whose property is to be taken or injured. * * * The said commissioners shall then assess the amount of such compensation and damages so awarded upon such land and property benefited by such proposed improvement; * * * as[513]*513sessing the same upon the several parcels, in proportion to the benefit which each parcel will receive from such improvement, and deducting therefrom any damages or injury to the same parcels which is less than the benefits, and assessing only the excess.” Upon the making of this award and assessment, the same is to be reported to the common council, who may, upon a notice of at least two weeks, annul or confirm the same. In ease it is confirmed, the award and assessment are declared to be final and conclusive upon all parties interested, except as otherwise provided in the charter, and the council thereupon proceeds to levy the assessments in accordance with the confirmation, and in the manner therein directed.

Upon the undisputed facts disclosed by the pleadings herein, the proceedings that resulted in the assessments complained of were not only in substantial, but in strict compliance with the provisions of the charter, and if the assessments are invalid at all, it is clearly owing to some defect in the charter, and not to any defect or irregularity in the proceedings under it. It is objected that the statute in this case contains no provision for a finding, by any one, that lands can be found which will be benefited by any improvement of this character to the amount of damages that may be awarded for it, and that the report of the commissioners in this case shows no finding that the lands which were assessed were benefited to the amount of the assessment, or that they embraced all the lands benefited by the improvement, and, therefore, the assessment is void because not shown to rest upon the principle which underlies all special assessments, and which supposes that the property so assessed will be enhanced in value on account of the improvement to an amount equal to the burden imposed. These objections are not, in our opinion, sustained by any fair and reasonable construction of the statute, or of the report of the commissioners. The delegation to the common council, in cases of [514]*514this hind, of an authority to condemn property necessary to be taken for the improvement, and to assess, through a tribunal of its appointment, the damages therefor upon property specially benefited thereby, is a distinct legislative declaration of the local character of the improvement, and that the lands in the locality thus specially affected by it may be sufficiently enhanced in value to compensate for the burden of sustaining the whole expense. Whether, in point of fact, this is actually true in every or any particular case, is not a question for the judiciary to determine, it being conceded that the improvement is one of a character contemplated by the legislature. Cooley on Taxation, 428, 429.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 N.W. 755, 27 Minn. 509, 1881 Minn. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-slocum-minn-1881.