Hayman v. City of Grand Island

284 N.W. 733, 135 Neb. 873, 1939 Neb. LEXIS 52
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1939
DocketNo. 30474
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 284 N.W. 733 (Hayman v. City of Grand Island) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayman v. City of Grand Island, 284 N.W. 733, 135 Neb. 873, 1939 Neb. LEXIS 52 (Neb. 1939).

Opinion

Simmons, C. J.

The defendant city of Grand Island levied a special assessment on plaintiff’s property in that city to pay for the expenses and damages occasioned by the widening of a street. Plaintiff paid the tax and brought an original action to recover the same, alleging that the assessment was for an illegal purpose. Plaintiff recovered judgment for a part of the tax paid. Defendant appeals.

Prior to the events causing this litigation, Court street in the city of Grand Island was sixty feet wide to the west of Pine street. Sycamore street is immediately east of and parallel to Pine street. As originally platted, Court street did not extend east from Pine to Sycamore street.

In 1914 the owners of what is now the south half of Court street between Pine and Sycamore streets conveyed the same to the city of Grand Island for public street purposes. Court street, west of Pine street, was then sixty feet wide, and east of Pine street, was thirty feet wide.

The plaintiff is the owner of the property to the north [875]*875of Court street between Pine and Sycamore streets, upon which were located her home and two rental residence properties. The defendant is a city of the first class. By ordinance passed February 19, 1930, the defendant condemned the south thirty feet of plaintiff’s property for street purposes, and thereby widened Court street to sixty feet from Pine street to Sycamore street. The property so taken was appraised, and plaintiff’s damage determined to be $1,800. The defendant paid the amount to the plaintiff, and it was accepted by her. No complaint is made as to those proceedings.

The city council of defendant sat as a board of equalization to determine the benefits to plaintiff’s property. Plaintiff appeared before said board and objected to the assessment of her property, claiming that no benefits accrued thereto as a result of the widening of said street. Defendant found that benefits did accrue to plaintiff’s property, and, by ordinance passed November 19, 1930, levied special taxes to pay for the expenses and damage of widening Court street in accordance with the benefits so found. By that ordinance, defendant assessed a total of $1,053.30 against plaintiff’s property. The remainder of the $1,800, paid plaintiff as damages, was assessed in relatively small amounts against several pieces of adjacent property.

On November 29, 1930, the defendant notified plaintiff of such special assessment; that it would become delinquent December 21, 1930, and that it would draw interest at the rate of 1 per cent, per month thereafter. On December 19, 1930, plaintiff paid said special assessments under protest, and so notified the treasurer of the defendant. Plaintiff gave as her reasons, among others, that the special tax levied against her property was in excess of any benefits to said property; that it was a confiscation of said property without due compensation and without due process of law; that said property was not benefited by the widening of Court street; that the city was without legal authority to assess special taxes against the property; that they were invalid, inequitable, and unjust; that they were dispropor[876]*876tionate to other taxes levied on other property so situated; that they were not levied in accordance with the benefits derived by the property, but were arbitrarily assessed; and for those reasons were illegal. Plaintiff demanded repayment within the time provided by law, and notified the city that, if it failed to repay said sum, legal proceedings would be started to recover the same. The defendant did not refund the taxes so paid. On February 7, 1931, plaintiff began this action, and service was had upon the defendant city on •February 9, 1931.

Plaintiff did not prosecute her cause with diligence. The defendant did not insist upon a disposition of the action. Exactly seven years after the original petition was filed, the matter was put at issue upon plaintiff’s second amended petition, an amended answer, and reply.

The amended petition recited the facts in detail, and concluded that “said special taxes are unauthorized, invalid, illegal, and confiscatory.” Plaintiff prayed for the recovery of said special taxes so paid. Defendant’s amended answer alleges the benefits it claims accrued to plaintiff’s property, the finding of the board of equalization, the assessment, that no proceedings in error were had, and that the assessment thereby became final. The reply was a general denial. The case was tried in March, 1938.

Defendant objected to the introduction of any evidence, on the ground that the petition did not state a cause of action; that the plaintiff’s remedy was to take the matter to the district court on error proceedings; that the plaintiff had not proceeded in that manner; that the present proceeding was a collateral attack; that the plaintiff’s suit was prematurely brought, and that the petition does not show that the tax was for an illegal or unlawful purpose. Defendant moved for a directed verdict on substantially the same ground. The motion was overruled by the trial court. The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $777.44.

Defendant’s motion for a new trial was overruled. In that motion, and on appeal in its errors assigned in this [877]*877court, defendant raises substantially these propositions.: First, that the plaintiff should have appealed by error from the assessment of benefits made by the city council, and that an original action cannot be maintained to recover the tax; second, that the court erred in instructing the jury that, if they found that the special tax was in excess of the benefits accrued, they should include, in their verdict, interest on the amount of such excess; third, that the action was prematurely brought.

Section 77-1923, Comp. St. 1929, provides as follows: “No injunction shall be granted by any court or judge in this state to restrain the collection of any tax, or any part thereof hereinafter levied, nor to restrain the sale of any property for the nonpayment of any such tax, except such tax or the part thereof enjoined be levied or assessed for any illegal or unauthorized purpose; nor shall any person be permitted to recover by replevin, or other process, any property taken or restrained by the county treasurer for the nonpayment of any tax, except such tax be levied or assessed for illegal or unauthorized purpose; but in every case the person or persons claiming any tax, or any part thereof, to be for any reason invalid, who shall pay the same to the county treasurer, may proceed in the following manner, viz.: First. If such person claim a tax, or any part thereof; to be invalid for the reason that the property upon which it was levied was not liable to taxation, or that the property has been twice assessed in the same year and taxes paid thereon, he may pay such taxes under protest to the county treasurer, or other proper authority, and it shall be the duty of the treasurer, or other proper authority receiving such tax, to give a receipt therefor stating thereon that they were paid under protest, and the grounds of such protest, whether or not taxable or twice assessed, and taxes paid thereon. * * * Second. If such person claim the tax or any part thereof to be invalid for the reason that it was levied or assessed for an illegal or unauthorized purpose, or for any other reason except as hereinbefore set forth, when he shall have paid the same to the treasurer, or other [878]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 N.W. 733, 135 Neb. 873, 1939 Neb. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayman-v-city-of-grand-island-neb-1939.