Hoyt v. City of East Saginaw

19 Mich. 39, 1869 Mich. LEXIS 20
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 12, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 19 Mich. 39 (Hoyt v. City of East Saginaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoyt v. City of East Saginaw, 19 Mich. 39, 1869 Mich. LEXIS 20 (Mich. 1869).

Opinions

Cooley Oh. J.

The bill in this case was filed to enjoin the collection of an assessment which had been made for the grading, ditching and planking of Genesee street in the • city of Bast Saginaw. It appears that the Common Council, by 'resolution, determined that the cost and expense of the improvement would be the sum of $15,612, and that the property in the vicinity of the improvement would be benefitted by it to the amount of $11,700; and that they consequently assumed on behalf of the city the payment of $3,912, and directed the sum of $11,700 to be assessed upon the property in the vicinity which was particularly described in their resolution. The assessment was made accordingly, and the complainant who was owner of a portion of the property described and assessed, seeks to enjoin the assessment on- various grounds which are particularly set out in his bill.

It is not disputed that the provisions of the charter are such as, if valid, will warrant this mode of apportioning and assessing the expense of such improvements; and on reference thereto it appears that they establish a basis for the assessment, and require it to be made by commissioners appointed for the purpose upon the several parcels of land in proportion to the benefit each shall be deemed to have acquired by the making of the improvement. It is claimed, however, that those provisions are in conflict with the constitution and void because, as it alleged, there [43]*43is and can be under them no rule for tbe apportionment of the expense, inasmuch as the Council, according to their own “ whim, prejudice or-judgment’” determine upon what property the expense shall be levied, and “an irresponsible tribunal appointed for the particular case and no other” makes the assessment. To this position the cases of Williams v. The Mayor &c., 2 Mich. 560 and Woodbridge v. Detroit, 8 Mich. 274, are cited, neither of which I think will give it any countenance.

I have no doubt it is entirely competent for the Legislature to authorize municipal incorporations to assess the whole or any portion of the expense of these local improvements upon the property deemed to be particularly and specially benefitted thereby, in proportion to the benefit received, if in the judgment of the Legislature that rule of apportionment is most just and equitable. There is nothing in the constitution which expressly prohibits it, and nothing in the nature of the power of taxation which is inconsistent with it. This mode of assessing such burdens has been repeatedly sustained by the Courts of other States and is supported by the reasoning of the Court in the case of Williams v. The Mayor &c., and by that of the majority of the court in Woodbridge v. Detroit. I shall content myself, therefore, in this case with a reference to those cases and to that of Motz v. Detroit, just decided.

Whatever may be the basis <?f apportionment for such a tax, a taxing district must necessarily be established; and the Legislature in the charter before us have deemed it proper to empower the Common Council to judge what property is specially benefitted by the improvement and define the taxing district accordingly. As the question in such case is one which can only properly and intelligently be decided upon personal inspection of the improvement and the manner in which it will affect the neighboring property, it is obvious that the Legislature is not the .proper authority to [44]*44pass upon it, and the natural and proper course would seem to be to refer it to some local tribunal. If the Legislature consider the Common Council the proper tribunal for this purpose, there is not only no constitutional principle which precludes the question being referred to their judgment, but there is a manifest propriety in the reference. And the mode prescribed by the charter of apportioning the tax throughout the district which the Common Council have defined in proportion to the benefit which the several parcels of land receive, as determined by impartial commissioners, is equally free from valid objection.

The charter not being found defective, it remains to be seen whether the city authorities have complied with its provisions in the various steps taken by them and which are contested in this suit. Nearly every proceeding of the Common Council is attacked as irregular, illegal and void; but as we find ourselves compelled to hold that the first step in the proceedings, which must be the foundation of all the others, and without which the Council would have no jurisdiction to proceed.at all, was not taken in compliance with the charter, it does not seem to be important, and is not in accord with our usual practice to consider the objections taken to the subsequent proceedings, all of which are rendered immaterial by the neglect to comply with the law in the preliminary action.

The charter of the city of East Saginaw, provides that “ the Common Council shall have full power to lay out, establish, open, extend, widen, straighten, alter, close, fill in or grade, vacate or abolish any highways, streets, avenues, lanes, alleys, public grounds or spaces m said city whenever they may deem it a necessary public improvement,” and that “Avhenever the Common Council shall deem any such improvement necessary, they shall so declare by resolution, which shall be drawn by the attorney of the corporation, and said resolution shall describe the contemplated improve[45]*45ment.”—Laws of 1859, p. 997, §§1 and 2 of Title 6. This is made by the charter a necessary preliminary to the ordering by the Council of any of the public improvements here enumerated or to the levying of any assessment therefor; and however unimportant may seem this declaration in particular cases, the Council have no authority to dispense with it.

From the records of the Common Council, it appears that the first action, in reference to this improvement was had on the eleventh day of June, 1866, when a petition of citizens was presented asking for the grading, turnpiking and planking of Genesee street, from Jefferson street to the German Colony road; whereupon it was “Resolved, That the petition be received, and the improvement be ordered, the grading and turnpiking and one-half of the expense of planking to be paid by the property benefitted, and the expense of one-half the planking to be paid by the city at large.” On the same day and subsequently other resolutions regarding the implffvement were adopted, more particularly ordering the improving, grading, ditching, turnpiking, draining and planking of Genesee street between the points above mentioned, and prescribing the manner in which it should be done, and apportioning the amount of expense between the property benefited and the city at large; but there is no resolution entered upon the minutes of the Council which, in the words of the charter, declares the improvement necessary, or comes any nearer such declaration than the one above quoted.

It may seem perhaps, that the Legislature have been over particular in requiring from the Council an express preliminary declaration that they deem the improvement necessary, when the fact that they order it to be made is evidence that'such is their opinion; and it has been argued in this case that the resolution of.June 11, 1866, ought to be accepted as equivalent to the one made necessary by the [46]*46charter, and as a sufficient compliance with the legislative requirement.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Mich. 39, 1869 Mich. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoyt-v-city-of-east-saginaw-mich-1869.