Duke v. City of Anniston

60 So. 447, 5 Ala. App. 348, 1912 Ala. App. LEXIS 188
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 12, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 60 So. 447 (Duke v. City of Anniston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duke v. City of Anniston, 60 So. 447, 5 Ala. App. 348, 1912 Ala. App. LEXIS 188 (Ala. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinions

PER CURIAM. —

1. Section 223 of the present Constitution provides that “no city, toAvn or other municipality shall make any assessment for the cost of sideAvalks or street paving, or for the cost of the construction of any seAvers against property abutting on said street or sidewalk so paved, or drained by such sewers, in excess of the increased value of such property by reason of the special benefits derived from such improvements.” The above italics are ours and are made by us because the italicized portions of the quoted section have an important bearing upon the questions involved in this case. This section was, for the first time, made a part of our organic law when the Constitution of 1901 was adopted. Prior to that time it had no counterpart in any of our Constitutions. Its adoption simply meant that the people of Alabama Avere determined that the costs of the above-mentioned improvements should be borne hy the municipalities under whose direction they were made, except such portions of such costs as were reflected in the increased values of [351]*351the properties which were peculiarly benefited thereby. The only method which has been provided by law for the ascertainment of the value of a thing is to ascertain its worth in money, and as the worth of a thing, in dollars and cents, is the legal and common understanding of the word “value,” we do not hesitate to affirm that when the people of Alabama, in adopting the above subdivision of the Constitution as a part of their fundamental law, declared that no assessment for the cost of sidewalks, street paving, or sewerage should, be made by a municipality against an abutting tract or lot of land “in excess of the increased value of such property by reason of the special benefits derived from such improvements,” they meant that value expressed in dollars and cents which had been added to such property by reason of the special benefits derived from such improvements. The criterion fixed by the people themselves for ascertaining the amount of such an assessment is the increasr ed value of the property, and, this being true, it is the duty of the courts to see to it that the proper criterion is observed.

2. In this case the principal question was whether, on account of a certain sidewalk which was laid by the city of Anniston on one side of the appellant’s land, such property, within the meaning of the above subdivision of the Constitution, had been “increased in value by reason of the special benefits derived from” such sidewalk. There was a conflict in the evidence on the subject and at the written request of the appellant the trial court gave to the jury the following written charge: “If the value of the property of the defendant Avas not increased by laying the sidewalk along the same, then your verdict should be for the defendant.” The appellant also asked the court to give to the jury [352]*352the following other charge: “Gentlemen, by ‘increase in value’ is meant increase in worth in dollars and cents, and, if Mr. Duke’s property has not been increased then you cannot find for the plaintiff.” The trial court refused to give this charge to the jury, and the refusal of the court to do so is here assigned as error.

As the above-quoted constitutional provision, in express terms, prohibits any assessment, in cases like the present, “in excess of the increased value of the property by reason of the special benefits derived from the improvement,” we see no reason why the above charge, under the facts of this case, does not express the law. It may be, as was said by the Supreme Court in Harton v. Town of Avondale, 147 Ala. 468, 41 South. 934, that it is often a difficult matter to ascertain accurately the extent of the benefits accruing to lands by reason of such improvements; but that difficulty does not change or affect the language or the meaning of the subdivision of'the Constitution above quoted. While the word “worth” in some connections means something other than pecuniary value — as when we speak, for instance, of a man or woman of worth — nevertheless, when used in law, it means that “sum of valuable qualities which renders a thing valuable and useful” expressed in the current medium of the country. As used in the above charge, it means value, and nothing more. When a man, in common parlance, says that a particular plantation is “worth” $10,000, he means that the value of that plantation is $10,000. When he says that A. is worth a million dollars, he means that the value of A.’s property is a million dollars. — Scruggs & Echols v. Riddle, 171 Ala. 350, 45 South. 641.

When we say that a man’s right arm is of great worth to him, we may have an idea entirely foreign to that of pecuniary value. If, however, that man’s arm, [353]*353through the negligence of another, is destroyed, and the worth of that arm to that man becomes a question for legal determination, then the idea of money compensation, and only that idea, is in the mind of the court. Its value or worth, expressed in money, taking into consideration the entire situation of that man, may be difficult to determine; but the delicacy of the task imposed does not, in any way, relieve the court of the duty of ascertaining the worth of that arm in money and of awarding the proper sum of money for the loss sustained to the party injured. The question, in the instant case, was simply this: “Was the appellant’s land increased in value by reason of the special benefits derived by that land from the laying of the sidewalk? If so, then what did that increased value of the land amount to, expressed in money? Was that land worth any more money after the sidewalk was laid, taking into consideration the special benefits derived from the sidewalk so laid, than it would have been worth if the sidewalk had not been laid, and, if so, how much more money was it worth?”

Of course, anything that tends to add to the actual or even prospective enjoyment by the owner of real property, or which tends, in any way, to increase its desirability either for business or residence purposes, any betterment which, to use the language of one of the witnesses in this case, makes “for tenants and renders it easier to hold tenants,” and anything which tends to increase the attractiveness of real property, may be said to add to the value or worth of such property. Under the plain mandate of the above constitutional provision, however, the cost of no street, sidewalk, or sewer improvement, and no part of the cost of any street, side-walk, or sewer improvement, can be legally assessed by a municipality against abutting land which [354]*354does not .increase to some extent tbe money value of sucli land, and only that increased money value'created by such improvement can be legally assessed against and collected out of such land. While great latitude must be allowed a court in its efforts to- ascertain whether such an improvement has, in fact, increased the actual money value or worth of a particular piece of land, and, if so', how much such increase amounts to, nevertheless the increase in money value must be in the land, created by the particular improvement, for a court to be justified in enforcing the payment, out of such land or by the owner of such land, of any sum of money on account of such improvement. The plain English.

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96 So. 2d 766 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1957)
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Bluebook (online)
60 So. 447, 5 Ala. App. 348, 1912 Ala. App. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duke-v-city-of-anniston-alactapp-1912.