In Re Johnson's Appeals

268 P. 164, 148 Wash. 140, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 836
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1928
DocketNo. 21075. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 268 P. 164 (In Re Johnson's Appeals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Johnson's Appeals, 268 P. 164, 148 Wash. 140, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 836 (Wash. 1928).

Opinion

Parker, J.

This case is a consolidation of the appeals of eighteen property owners from a judgment of the superior court for Thurston county affirming special assessments levied by the city of Olympia upon their respective properties, lying in the enlarged portion of a local improvement district, to aid in paying for the paving improvement of a portion of State avenue, formerly Third street, in that city, upon which their properties do not abut; they having appealed to the superior court from the confirmation of the assessments by the city authorities. The city authorities enlarged the assessment district so as to include appellant’s properties, assuming to so do under Rem. Comp. Stat., §9366 [P. C. §1002], and proceeding upon the theory that the properties of appellants would be specially benefited by the improvement, though not abutting thereon.

The controlling facts may be fairly summarized as follows: The Pacific Highway is the most important highway passing through the city. It lies along Fourth avenue, formerly Fourth street, parallel with, and one block south of, State avenue, formerly Third street, from the east city limits west to Capitol Way, and thence south along Capitol Way to the south city limits. The intersection of Fourth avenue and Capitol Way is the busiest traffic corner in the city, and has been for many years past the center of the business of the city, though in recent years the business of the city has a decided tendency to move south of Fourth avenue and east of Capitol Way. The Olympic Highway is second in importance of the highways entering the city. It lies along Fourth avenue west from the *142 intersection of that avenue with Capitol Way, joining the Pacific Highway at that point. There is no entrance to the business portion of the city from the west save along Fourth avenue over a waterway bridge near the head of the bay, which bridge is a short distance west of Capitol Way. State avenue ends at the water front, two blocks west of Capitol Way, and there is no likelihood of it ever being extended farther west across the head of the bay. The business of the city, other than lumbering and other manufacturing, is almost wholly south of State avenue. All residents of the city living south of Fourth avenue, and all living west of Capitol Way, going to the business portion of the city, would seldom have occasion to go upon State avenue. Residents of the northeasterly portion of the city, comprising less than one-quarter of the city’s population, in going to the business portion of the city, can go west along State avenue in preference to Fourth avenue and turn south on Capitol Way, or other streets, into the business district.

Some eight years ago, State avenue was improved by paving its roadway forty feet wide, from its west end for a distance of seven blocks east to Cherry street. The property abutting upon this paved portion of State avenue may be classed as business or manufacturing property. Aside from manufacturing and automobile garage business, the business along that portion of State avenue is of a very minor character as compared with the main business portion of the city. About the same time that portion of State avenue was improved, it was further improved by paving its roadway twenty feet wide from Cherry street for a distance of two blocks east to East Bay Drive. The property fronting this narrow pavement can hardly be classed other than as residence property, except the northeast corner of State avenue and Cherry street is occupied *143 by a veneer manufacturing concern. For some time' past, automobile travel entering tbe city from tbe east on the Pacific Highway has, to a considerable extent, turned south off Fourth avenue onto Central street, which is four blocks from the east city limits, and turned thence west on Sixth avenue, which is a wide paved street clear to Capitol Way, passing for two or three blocks before reaching Capitol Way through what may be termed the southern portion of the business district of the city; there passing the principal hotel of the city and the very much used suburban bus station of the city, which is the principal passenger transportation center of the city, being two blocks south and one block east of the intersection of Fourth avenue and Capitol Way.

In the spring of 1926, the city authorities and the state highway authorities came to an agreement that the Pacific Highway should, by the state acquiring-some additional right of way east of the city limits, make connection with State avenue at the east city limits so that travel entering the city from the east over the Pacific Highway could enter over State avenue as well as over Fourth avenue; the state, by appropriate signs, to indicate State avenue instead of Fourth avenue as the Pacific Highway, though leaving the Fourth avenue connection with the Pacific Highway undisturbed, so that travel would continue to be as free to enter the city over Fourth avenue as over State avenue. In this connection, we note that the Pacific Highway approaches the city from a somewhat southeasterly direction so that, in effecting its connection with State avenue, it will diagonally cross Fourth avenue a very short distance east of the city limits, and thus, in some measure, take a roundabout way in reaching the business portion of the city. We shall assume that this agreement between the city and state *144 highway authorities is being, and soon will be, fully consummated.

In June, 1926, the city authorities, by appropriate resolution and ordinance, established an enlarged local improvement assessment district looking to the improvement of State avenue from East Bay Drive to the east city limits, a distance of thirteen blocks, by paving its roadway twenty-four feet wide, and assessing the cost thereof against all the property in an enlarged assessment district consisting of all of the property abutting upon both sides of the street along its entire length from its west end at the waterway two blocks west of Capitol Way, to the east city limits; the city authorities proceeding upon the theory that the property in the enlarged portion of the district, that is, property west of East Bay Drive and not abutting upon the improvement, would be benefited by the improvement approximately in the same amount per front foot as the property abutting upon the improvement. These appellants, owners of property in the enlarged portion of the district, timely protested against their property being included in the enlarged district and charged with any portion of the cost of the improvement. These protests were overruled by the city authorities, the improvement was made and in due course assessments levied against the properties of the appellants over their former protests, and also over their timely objections to their several assessments, made also upon the ground that such assessments were, in any event, far in excess of any benefits to their respective properties resulting from the mailing of the improvement. In the levying of the several assessments, the city authorities levied a front foot assessment against the properties of the appellants, approximately the same in amount as the front foot assessments levied upon the properties abutting upon the improve *145

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 P. 164, 148 Wash. 140, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-johnsons-appeals-wash-1928.