Embree v. Kansas City & Liberty Boulevard Road District

240 U.S. 242, 36 S. Ct. 317, 60 L. Ed. 624, 1916 U.S. LEXIS 1447
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 21, 1916
Docket187
StatusPublished
Cited by86 cases

This text of 240 U.S. 242 (Embree v. Kansas City & Liberty Boulevard Road District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Embree v. Kansas City & Liberty Boulevard Road District, 240 U.S. 242, 36 S. Ct. 317, 60 L. Ed. 624, 1916 U.S. LEXIS 1447 (1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Van Devanter

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit to restrain the issue and sale of road district bonds and the levy and recordation of special taxés to pay them. A trial of the issues resulted in a .judgment for the defendants, which at first was reversed and on a rehearing was affirmed.. 257 Missouri, 593. The plaintiffs prosecute this writ of error.

When the suit , was begun the road district had been ■organized, a road had been selected for improvemént and preliminary steps had.been taken for issuing the bonds- and levying , the special taxes — all. conformably to the local, statute. Rev/ Stat. Mo., 1909, c. 102, art. 7;. Mo. Laws 1911, 373/ The district is about seven miles in. length and three in width, and is bounded on the greater part of one side by the Missouri River. The road selected for improvement extends through the .district, in the direction of its length; The cost of the improvement is to be met temporarily by the issue and sale of bonds and ultimately by .the levy and collection of special taxes upon all the lands in the district.. The cost is to be ápportioned by rating, the lands-^-without the buildings thereon — at their full fair-value where lying, within one mile of the road, at seventy-five per cent, of such value where lying between- one and two miles from the road arid at fifty per cent, of such value where lying iriore than two miles therefrom (all seeiri to he Within two miles here), and then charging each tract with a share of. the entire cost corresponding to its proportion of the value of-alb the lands as so rated. The. lands are appraised by the district commissioners and the .cost of the improvement is apportioned by the county clerk.

*246 The plaintiffs own lands within the district and object to the issue of the bonds and to the levy of the special taxes, upon the ground that the scheme for subjecting the. lands^ to the payment of the cost is repugnant to the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Cohstitution of the United States in that the land owner is not afforded any opportunity to be heard on the questions whether his lands, will be benefited by the improvement,. whether, if benefited, the benefits in the different zones, will be in accord with the graduated ratings before indicated, and whether the appraisement, of his lands for the purposes-of the.apportionment is fair.

■The district was not established or . defined by the legislature but by an order of the county court made under a general law. Whether there was need for the district and, if so, what lands should be included and what excluded was committed to the judgment and discretion of that court subject to these qualifications: First, that the district should contain at least 640 acres of contiguous land and be'wholly within the county; second, that the court’s action should be invoked- by a petition signed by the owners of a majority of the acres in the. proposed district, and, third, that public notice — conceded to be adequate — should be given, by the clerk of the court, of the presentation of the petition and the date when it would be considered, and that owners of land within the proposed district should be accorded an opportunity- to appear, either collectively or separately, and oppose its formation. In this connection the statute says: “The court shall hear such petition and remonstrance, and shall make such, change in the boundaries of such proposed district as the public good may require and make necessary, and if after such changes are made it shall .appear to the court that such petition is signed or in writing consented to by the owners of a majority of all the acres of land within the district as .so changed, the court shall make a prelim *247 inary order establishing such public road district, and such order shall set out the boundaries of such district, as-established •. . .' but the boundaries of no district shall be so changed as to embrace any land not included in' the notice made by the clerk unless the owner thereof shall in writing consent thereto, or shall appear at the hearing, and. is notified in open court of such fact and given an opportunity to file or join in a remonstrance.” The order actually made shows that four of the present plaintiffs, With three others, .appeared in opposition to the petition, recites that- “the court, after hearing and considering said petition and said protests and remonstrances and all evidence offered in support thereof, .finds that the public good requires and makes necessary the organization, formation and creation of such proposed public road, district ■ . .• . with boundaries as stated in said petition,” and sets out the boundaries of the district as established.

The sole purpose in creating the district, as the statute shows, was to accomplish the improvement of public roads therein — the particular roads to be designated by the district commissioners and an approving vote of the land owners. •

As the district ~was not established.by the legislature but by an exercise of delegated authority, there was. no legislative decision that its location, boundaries and heeds were such that the lands therein would be benefited by its' creation and what it was intended to- accomplish, and, this being so, it was essential to due.process of law that the land oWners be accorded an opportunity to be heard upon the question whether' their lands would be thus benefited. If the statute provided for such a hearing, the decision of the designated tribunal would be sufficient, unless made fraudulently or in bad faith. Fallbrook Irrigation District v. Bradley, 164 U. S. 112, 167, 174-175.

Did the statute contemplate such a hearing? We have *248 seen that it required that adequate public notice be given- of the presentation of the petition for the creation of the district and the time when it would be considered, made provision for the presentation of remonstrances by-owners of lands within the proposed district, and directed that the petition and remonstrances be heard by the county court, that the court make such change in the boundaries “as the public good may require” and that the boundaries be not enlarged unless the owners of the lands- not before included consent in writing or appear at the hearing and- be given an opportunity to present objections. That a hearing of some kind was contemplated is obvious, and is conceded. But it is insisted that it was not to be directed to the question whether the lands included would be benefited by the creation of the district and what it was intended to accomplish. If that were so, there wpuld be little purpose in the hearing and no real necessity for it.

True, the statute does not in terms say that lands which will not be benefited shall be excluded or that only such as will be benefited shall be included, but it does say that the court shall make sqch change in the proposed boundaries “as the public good may require.” In the presence of this comprehensive direction there can be no doubt that the legislature intended to authorize and require the county court to adjust the boundaries so they would include only such lands as might be reasonably expected to be benefited by the improvement of the district roads and therefore might be properly charged with the cost of that work.

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Bluebook (online)
240 U.S. 242, 36 S. Ct. 317, 60 L. Ed. 624, 1916 U.S. LEXIS 1447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/embree-v-kansas-city-liberty-boulevard-road-district-scotus-1916.