Crabtree v. Ayer

118 A. 790, 122 Me. 18, 1922 Me. LEXIS 168
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 17, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 118 A. 790 (Crabtree v. Ayer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crabtree v. Ayer, 118 A. 790, 122 Me. 18, 1922 Me. LEXIS 168 (Me. 1922).

Opinion

Spear, J.

This is a bill in equity brought by fifteen taxable inhabitants of the towns composing the so-called Hancock-Sullivan Bridge District and other towns in the County of Hancock, against the members of the State Highway Commission individually and as members thereof, and the Comity Commissioners of the County of Hancock, individually and as County Commissioners, and the Trustees of the so-called Hancock-Sullivan Bridge District, praying for an injunction both temporary and permanent, enjoining said defendants from directly or indirectly attempting to do any acts toward the construction or contracting for construction of any bridge between the towns of Hancock and Sullivan, in said county, and from borrowing money and issuing negotiable notes and bonds of said District, or otherwise directly or indirectly pledging or attempting to pledge the credit of the people or territory within the limits of the towns of Hancock, Sullivan, Sorrento, Gouldsboro and Winter Harbor, and from obtaining any loan or loans of money or in any manner pledging the credit of the County of Hancock to pay said county’s proportion of the cost or estimated cost of said bridge.

Upon hearing the bill was dismissed with costs and an appeal taken to the Law Court. The cause was fully heard in Chambers by Mr. Justice Deasy and his carefully drawn opinion, upon the law and the facts involved, so fully covers all the issues raised that wq substantially adopt it as the opinion of the court,

[20]*20With the expediency, wisdom or popularity of the proposed public work the court is not concerned. These are matters solely for the legislative branch of the government. The only questions to be considered are whether the act of Legislature violates the Constitution and whether the proceedings of the Board are, or are not in accordance with the act. If the legislative enactment is unconstitutional or if the Board in any vital matter has failed to follow its requirements an injunction should issue. Otherwise, not.

By Chapter 120 of the Special Laws of 1921 the Legislature incorporated the Hancock-Sullivan Bridge District. By this act it has declared that the District should be entitled to the benefits of the provisions of the General Law relating to bridges. Public Laws of 1915, Chapter 319 and amendments.' A Bridge Board was created consisting of ten trustees elected by the towns composing the District, the County Commissioners and the Highway Commissioners, each subordinate board having one vote. The Bridge Board was given the right and charged with the duty of determining whether public convenience and necessity require the bridge, and in the event of an affirmative decision, to approve plans. Thereupon the bridge is to be built and paid for twenty per cent, by the District, thirty per cent, by the County and fifty per cent, by the State. The board has decided the bridge to be necessary.

The petitioners are admittedly taxpayers of the County and District and interested as such.

It is contended, that the act of the Bridge Board in determining that public convenience and necessity require the building of the proposed bridge is void for the reason that no public notice was given of the meeting held for the purpose.

It is admitted that notice was given to all members of the Bridge Board. This is the only notice required by the express terms of the act.

The legislative enactment provides that “The State Highway Commission shall appoint times and places for meetings of said Board and give such reasonable notice thereof as they shall see fit.” This requires some notice, but it does not contemplate public notice.

If public notice had been intended it would seem that the Board (not the Highway Commissioners) would have been charged with the duty of giving it. If the Legislature had contemplated public notice it could have easily, and would have undoubtedly provided for “such reasonable public notice thereof as they shall see fit.”

[21]*21But it is claimed that without apparent legislative intendment the word “public” should be read into the act. This may be true when necessary to save a legislative act from vitiation by reason of unconstitutionalty. In this case it is we think not necessary for reasons hereinafter set forth.

No question is raised that the Legislature could have authorized the building of the bridge wholly at the expense of the State. It must also be agreed that the Legislature may create taxing districts and make the cost of any public work wholly or in part a charge upon the same, provided that the district receive special benefit from such public work.

This doctrine (recognized in all jurisdictions) is established in Maine in the case of the Forestry District (109 Maine, 476). The Rumford & Mexico Bridge District, (115 Maine, 157) and the Portland Pier Site District, (120 Maine, 15.) Numerous cases might be mentioned upon which the court has not been called upon to pass. Indeed every town is an example. A town is but an administrative and taxing district created by the State. The Legislature has the same right to create districts that it has to organize towns and counties.

But this power of the Legislature is not unlimited. The district must receive some special benefit from the public work to be paid for by it other than the benefits that it enjoys in common with the rest of the State. There must be some sort of proportion between the benefit and the burden.

Different courts agreeing as to the correctness of the above-stated principle have prescribed different tests to determine whether it is violated.

Is the statute “palpably arbitrary and a plain abuse?” (Houck v. Drainage District U. S. Supreme Court, 60 L. Ed., 273). “Indefensibly unfair?” (Cleveland v. Tripp, 13 R. I., 62) “a flagrant misuse of legislative power?” (234 Mass., 621). “Unreasonably disproportionate?” (Hamilton v. Portland Pier Site District, 120 Maine, 15). These differing phrases are identical in meaning.

Although it is well settled that the powers of the Legislature are absolute except as limited by the constitution either expressly or by necessary implication (Laughlin v. Portland, 111 Maine, 489) it would too greatly prolong this opinion to discuss in detail the article or articles of the constitution that such unreasonable disproportion would violate. It would contravene the spirit of fairness and equality that throughout pervades our fundamental law.

[22]*22• See Maine Constitution Art. 1, Secs. 6 and 21. Art. 9, Sec. 8 and the 14th Amendment to the Federal Constitution.

Suffice it to say that a law imposing upon a taxing district a burden of taxation “indefensibly unfair,” “a plain abuse,” “a flagrant misuse of legislative power” or to use the milder but substantially equivalent language of the Maine Court “unreasonably disproportionate to benefits” would be held unconstitutional and acts under, it enjoined. Otherwise, not.

The constitution, of course, does not require taxation to be exactly proportionate to benefits. Such a requirement would paralyze the taxing power.

Turning to the case at bar and applying the above principles, no plain abuse or flagrant misuse of legislative power appears.

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Bluebook (online)
118 A. 790, 122 Me. 18, 1922 Me. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crabtree-v-ayer-me-1922.