Harnwell v. White

171 S.W. 108, 115 Ark. 88, 1914 Ark. LEXIS 115
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 19, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 171 S.W. 108 (Harnwell v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harnwell v. White, 171 S.W. 108, 115 Ark. 88, 1914 Ark. LEXIS 115 (Ark. 1914).

Opinions

Kirby, J.,

(after stating the facts).

(1-2) The requisite number of property owners petitioned for the establishment of the improvement district, specifying the purpose thereof, and a majority in value of the owners of real property within the district, petitioned the council asking that the improvement be made and designating the nature of it for the purpose of “grading, curbing, guttering and macadamizing the streets included in the district,” and the commissioners or board of improvement for the district were appointed. It was 'by the commissioners’ report disclosed that the improvements could not be made within the limit of twenty per centum of the value of the real property in the district, thereupon the character of the improvement was changed and the four districts organized, three of them for the purpose of making each a portion of the improvement petitioned for and the fourth for making sidewalks, all upon the original petition asking for the single improvement and specifying it. The property owners have the right to and must designate in their petition the kind of improvement desired to be made and the city or town council is without power to establish .a district upon the petition praying for the establishment of an improvement different from that asked or prayed for in said petition. And it is a necessary prerequisite to the establishment of any improvement district that a 'majority in value of the real property owners within such district shall petition for such improvement, designating the nature of it, and the law also provides that no single improvement shall be undertaken which alone will exceed in cost twenty per centum of the value of the real property within such district as shown by the last county assessment. Section 5683, Kirby’s Digest. “Its purpose is to prevent improvement districts from undertaking any work which will cost more than one-fifth of the assessed value of the property therein, and whether the improvement can be made within this limit as to cost can, and must be ascertained from the outset. * * * The cost being ascertained, its comparison with the value of the real property within the district, as shown by the last county assessment, will disclose whether it exceeds twenty per centum of that value, and if it does, the improvement should not be undertaken, unless the plans can be changed to reduce the cost within the statutory limit.” Kirst v. Improvement District, 86 Ark. 21. In McDonald v. Improvement District, 97 Ark. 341, the court said: “These sections of the statute (referring also to section 5716, Kirby’s Digest) relate entirely to the matter of assessments and the limitation is placed therein as a protection to the property owners against excessive assessments. It is obvious that the Legislature meant only to limit the amount which can be assessed against the real property in the district. Neither does the city or'town council have authority to establish an improvement district for a purpose substantially at variance. with the one prayed for, nor can the commissioners in the construction of the improvement depart materially from the one designated in the petition praying for and the ordinance establishing the district.” Watkins v. Griffith, 59 Ark. 344; Kraft v. Smothers, 103 Ark. 269.

After the commissioners reported that the improvement prayed for and designated could not be constructed within the cost of twenty per centum of the assessed value of the real property within the district, as limited by the statute, it should have been abandoned ’and the council was without authority to authorize the establishment of a district for the purpose of making only a part of the improvement prayed for in the original petition that contemplated the entire improvement designated should be made and, certainly without authority to create other districts upon such petition for the purpose of constructing different portions of the improvement prayed for and designated in the original petition. It was the evident purpose of the statute to permit those desiring improvements made to designate the nature of the improvements to be undertaken for which the district should be organized, that the whole improvement should be seen from the beginning and that the cost of it should not exceed the amount fixed by the statute. The manifest intention of the law authorizing those who desire their property assessed for the purpose of making a designated public improvement and limiting the cost of such single improvement for their protection, as well as of all those who are required, to pay, whether the improvement is desired, by them or not, can not be evaded by splitting the entire improvement prayed for by the petitioners into separate sections or portions, and authorizing and establishing districts for the making of each portion that the single improvement undertaken may be within the cost limited by law. All the ordinances for the establishment of the different districts were without authority and void, and likewise the action of the commissioners thereunder. It is contended, however, that appellant is estopped to dispute the validity of the different improvement districts and escape the payment of the assessment levied therein on account of having received the benefits of the different improvements already constructed, and because of the instrument executed by her after the legality of the districts were questioned, waiving all irregularities in their formation, and guaranteeing the payment of all of the assessments levied for the construction of the different improvements. We do not agree with this contention. Improvement districts are creatures of the law and can not be created by consent, waiver, estoppel, nor agreement of the property owners. ” They are governmental agencies, deriving their powers directly from the Legislature and can exercise no powers, perform no duties nor incur any liabilities except by authority conferred upon them expressly by statute. Board of Improvement Sewer District v. Moreland, 94 Ark. 381; Lewis v. Rieff, et al., 114 Ark. 366.

The property owner has the right to rely upon the protection afforded him by the statute and to expect the organization of improvement districts in cities and towns and the levy and collection of assessments against his property in accordance with and as provided by law, and he is not estopped to deny the validity of any assessment against his property where the improvement district has failed to secure the power to make the levy in not complying with the terms of the statute authorizing- its creation as in this case. Here the defects complained of are not mere irregularities in the exercise of powers conferred upon the district but consist of failure on tbe part of the board of improvement to secure the power to make the improvement through the necessary prerequisite, the petition of the majority in value of the property owners of the district, and the appellant is not estopped to challenge the power of the district and the validity of the assessment because she has stood passively by and seen the improvement go on and paid all prior assessments levied against her property. Watkins v. Griffith, 59 Ark. 344.

Those interested in the- collection of the assessment as compensation for the work done in making the improvements can not be said to have relied upon her acquiescence in the creation of the district since they knew in making the contracts with the board of improvement that they were dealing with a governmental agency without powers, except as expressly conferred by statute and whose authority they were bound to know.

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Bluebook (online)
171 S.W. 108, 115 Ark. 88, 1914 Ark. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harnwell-v-white-ark-1914.