Fry v. City of Ronceverte

117 S.E. 140, 93 W. Va. 388, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 62
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 117 S.E. 140 (Fry v. City of Ronceverte) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fry v. City of Ronceverte, 117 S.E. 140, 93 W. Va. 388, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 62 (W. Va. 1923).

Opinion

Lively, Judge:

The question certified is: whether the city of Ronceverte has authority and power under its charter to require the owner of a lot which abuts on a street to make a fill with retaining wall to hold the same, on which to lay a sidewalk; and upon his failure to do so if the city may make such fill and build such retaining wall and assess the costs thereof as a lien against the lot.

On October 26, 1921, the city of Ronceverte served a notice on the complainant, Mrs. ij. W. Fry, requiring her to construct a permanent cement sidewalk on the south side of Greenbrier street avenue upon which her lot abuts 50 feet, the width of the sidewalk to be 5 feet and laid upon a grade to be established under the direction of the street commissioner ; and upon her failure so to do the city would proceed to construct said. sidewalk and that the full amount of the total cost of grading and filling, surfacing and completing the said sidewalk to be charged to her and reported as a tax lien against the lot, with interest thereon after the expiration of 30 days. Mrs. Fry failed to give notice that she would construct such fill and wall and lay the sidewalk thereon, and on March 6, 1922, the city ordered the improvement to be made and the sidewalk laid, advertised for bids therefor and awarded the contract to a bidder, who proceeded to make the fill and construct the walk. On June 14, 1922, Mrs. Fry presented her bill for injunction to the circuit court to enjoin the city from proceeding further in the work, which injunction was refused. Upon application to a judge of this court the injunction was granted, and at the September, 1922, [390]*390term of the circuit court the plaintiff filed an amended bill alleging among other things that the city had no power to require her to make the improvement designated in the notice or to require her to pay for the same; that it was proceeding to do so and intended to record the amount of the expense thereof as a lien against her lot which would be a cloud upon her title; and that the charter of said city, of such power and authority was given therein, was unconstitutional, because the special tax or assessment upon her lot was out of proportion to the value of the property, would not be uniform and equal in respect to other properties similarly situated, and would amount to a confiscation. The city demurred to the original, amended and supplemental bills, and answered the same. From the answer it appears that after the circuit court had refused to grant the injunction prayed for and before the injunction granted by a judge of this court had been served upon the mayor, the grading and construction of the retaining wall upon Greenbrier street avenue adjoining the plaintiff’s lot was completed, but since the injunction had been served no further work had been done. The cost of the grading and the construction of the wall was $301. Estimated' cost of constructing the cement sidewalk on the grade was $75, making a total cost of the entire improvement, $376. The gist of the answer is that the city by virtue of its special charter has implied authority to require complainant to make the improvement abutting, her lot as required in the notice and as hereinbefore set out, and that the improvement made and contemplated is not. unlawful, oppressive and confiscatory; and that the special benefits derived by her by reason of the enhancement of the value of her lot would exceed the amount of the assessment against the same for the improvements. Exceptions to the answer were filed and the cause submitted. Upon consideration the court sustained the exceptions to the answer and held that the same was insufficient in law to the extent that the allegations therein assert a claim and right and authority of the city to charge the expense of construction of grading, substructure and retaining ' wall; and decreed that the city was not justified in charging, the plaintiff with the expense of constructing the grade, the sub-structure and the [391]*391retaining wall to support the same, or to assess the amount of such expense as a lien against the lot. The city not desiring to amend its answer, upon motion of its counsel the court certified its ruling- to this court. The substance of the • question certified is whether the city has authority under its charter to construct, at the plaintiff’s expense, the fill and retaining wall.

Greenbrier street avénue was formerly a road which wound around a hill where plaintiff’s lot is located. Her lot fronts 50 feet on Main street and runs back with equal width up the hill to Greenbrier street avenue. Her dwelling on the lot faces Main street. In order to make the grade on which to lay the sidewalk as required by the city it would necessitate a retaining wall from 6 to 10 feet high for 50 feet along * the rear of her lot, and require a considerable'embankment between the retaining wall and the street. It appears that other abutting lot owners similarly situated have acceded to the demand of the municipal authorities and have erected the necessary retaining walls and made fills on which the sidewalk along their various properties is laid. The estimated total expense which will be required of complainant is $376.

The solution of the question propounded depends upon a construction of the authority given .to the city’in its charter, for such purposes. The charter is found in chapter 5 of the Acts of 1919, “Municipal Charters.” By the first section the city is given the power “to assess, levy and collect taxes for general and special purposes on all the subjects or objects within its boundaries, which the city may lawfully tax, * * * * may pave, re-pave, .curb, re-curb, grade, regrade, sewer, re-sewer or otherwise permanently improve any street, alley or roadway within the city limits and assess the cost thereof as hereinafter provided for * * * * and shall have all powers that now are or hereafter may be granted • to municipalities by the constitution or laws of West Virginia, or that are herein by implication' conferred, or are-necessary to or consistent with the purposes of this act; and all such powers, whether expressed or implied, shall be exercised and. enforced in the manner prescribed by this act, or when not prescribed herein, in such manner as shall be p'ro-[392]*392vided by ordinances or resolutions of the governing body herein provided for.” The provisions for construction of sidewalks are contained in section 41 which gives to the commissioners of the city power to determine the material to be used, where sidewalks shall be constructed, the width and grade thereof and to require the owners of lots facing a sidewalk to pave the same with the material and on the grade and of such width as may have been determined, at the expense of the owners, and under the supervision of the proper city official; and if the owners refuse to pay the same within the time required then the city has power to lay the sidewalk and assess the amount of the expense thereof to the ownérs, and cause a memorandum thereof to be filed with the clerk of the county court to be recorded on the judgment lien docket as a lien upon the lot, which lien may be enforced by a proper action in the circuit court; but reasonable notice shall be first given to the owners that they are required to construct the sidewalks. The same provisions are applicable to needed repairs for any of the sidewalks or substitution of new pavements for any which have been before laid and completed and which are deemed insufficient. This is the only section which has any reference to the construction of sidewalks, which a close inspection of the charter has disclosed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 S.E. 140, 93 W. Va. 388, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fry-v-city-of-ronceverte-wva-1923.