Cox v. City of Bristol

191 S.W.2d 160, 183 Tenn. 82, 19 Beeler 82, 1945 Tenn. LEXIS 275
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 191 S.W.2d 160 (Cox v. City of Bristol) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cox v. City of Bristol, 191 S.W.2d 160, 183 Tenn. 82, 19 Beeler 82, 1945 Tenn. LEXIS 275 (Tenn. 1945).

Opinion

Mr. Justice G-ailor

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On December 8, 1931, John I. Cox filed the original bill in this cause to enjoin the City of Bristol from collecting certain paving assessments on certain suburban property in which he owned a one-half undivided interest. The city filed an answer and cross-bill seeking a judgment for $5,006.57, representing one-half of the original assessment against the whole property, and by the cross-bill it also sought recovery of certain ad valorem taxes assessed against the property for the years 1933-1940. No further steps were taken in the cause until July 1935, when the city filed an amended cross-bill, making additional parties, Lorena B. Cox, wife of complainant, and the Missionary Emergency Fund, Inc., the owner of the other one-half interest in the property. This amended cross-bill contained a detailed description of the property, and an attachment on the property was then sought for the first time to fix a lien for the satisfaction of the taxes assessed against it.

The attachment as prayed was issued and levied in connection with the amended cross-bill. As the courts below seem to have overlooked, the complainant in an- *85 severing this amended cross-bill, admits the levy of the attachment but denies the right of the city to levy it, or that it was seasonably levied. The city, in July 1985, filed a further amended ánswer to the original bill, in which for the first time it raised the defense that Code, sec. 3474 provided an exclusive remedy under' the facts' stated in the original bill, and that; injunctive relief was not proper nor permissible. A pro confesso was taken against the codefendant Missionary Emergency Fund, but service upon said corporation to support such pro confesso has disappeared. Apparently the pro confesso is regularly taken upon the docket but there is no paper to show that service was ever had on said corporation.

Finally, after the pleadings had been aihended variously, as we shall note hereafter, under an agreed order of reference on April 12, 1943, a special master was appointed to take and hear proof and report, (1) the amount of state, county and city taxes for the collection of which valid and enforceable tax liens exist upon the property in question; (2) the amount of street assessments owing the city, supported by valid and enforceable liens upon the property or any part of it; (3) the exact description of the property upon which the street assessment liens were fixed; (4) all taxes barred by the'statute of limitation, and (5) all other matters germane which might arise during the conduct of the master’s investigation.

The special master, who was a practicing attorney, filed a careful detailed report on May 28, 1943. He held that $1,070.95 was due the City .of Bristol in ad valorem taxes, that the amount of street assessments should be limited to $2,000 with interest from May 1, 1931, plus intersection charges of $242.75 with interest from the same date. He disallowed recovery on city taxes on the tract from 1933 to 1940, inclusive, because assessments *86 for these years had been made by lot and block number when no plan for a subdivision of that part of the property had been approved by the city to justify an assessment otherwise than by acreage.

Both the city and. John I. Cox excepted to this report of the special master. Then prior to the hearing on these exceptions to the report, John I. Cox acquired the interest of his codefendant, the Missionary Emergency Fund, Inc., and filed an answer, by which he undertook to have set aside the pro confesso theretofore taken against said codefendant, and to adopt for defense to the city’s claim against this other half interest in the property, all the defenses which he, John I. Cox, had made as original complainant and cross-defendant in the cause. No order setting aside the pro confesso appears in the record.

Upon the hearing, on the report of the special master and the exceptions thereto, the chancellor sustained the exception taken by John I. Cox, and held that no street assessments were collectible on the ground that the city had failed to show that it had taken the necessary steps for the creation of a special improvement district under the statute. He held that the approval of a definite map and the passage of an appropriate ordinance were essential and jurisdictional under the law. Code, sec. 3409 et seq. He voided the attachment on the ground that the return was incomplete, and he concurred with the master in denying complainant’s liability on the city taxes for the years 1933 through 1940, inclusive. He approved the Master’s allowance of the recovery by the city of certain other taxes on the property.

After the decree the city filed petition to rehear, seeking opportunity to introduce proof of the passage of the ordinance and the taking of other steps to create the improvement district. The chancellor denied the petition *87 to rehear and both parties prayed an appeal to the Court of Appeals, hut the city alone perfected its appeal by filing bond and making assignments of error.

The Court of Appeals has filed two .opinions, one on July 15, 1944, and the second after petition to rehear on January 3, 1945. In its first opinion, the Court of Appeals sustained the seventh assignment of error made by the city, which was that the chancellor erred in overruling its petition to rehear, and pretermitted other questions in remanding the cause. After the city filed petition to rehear in the Court of Appeals, the court rendered a second opinion in which it ^sustained other assignments by the city and again remanded the cause.

Petitions for certiorari have been filed here by both parties. We granted both petitions, have heard argument and the case is before us for disposition.

Obviously, much of the confusion and difficulty in this record are attributable to the many years during which the case has lain dormant in court. The parties and their counsel have fought a while and then rested a while, until one or other has secured reinforcement by way of new counsel or new ideas. The grounds of attack and defense have shifted. The consequence is that as an exhibit of legal strategy, the record is remarkable for its variety rather than its consistency.

We consider first the first assignment made by both .petitioners in their petitions for certiorari. They both involve, from opposing points of view, the same part of the second opinion of the Court of Appeals. It is: “Our previous opinion disposes of assignments I, II, V, and VII. The la'st mentioned was the only one sustained. The other tico (three) are so closely interlocked with the one sustained that we cannot rule on them separately. In other words we practically sustained all three (four) *88 in onr previous opinion.” (Italics and numbers in parenthesis our interpolation.)

These assignments were that the chancellor erred:

I. In denying the city recovery for its special improvement taxes.

II.

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Bluebook (online)
191 S.W.2d 160, 183 Tenn. 82, 19 Beeler 82, 1945 Tenn. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-city-of-bristol-tenn-1945.