Johnson v. McKenna

188 S.W. 480, 171 Ky. 389, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 377
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 10, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 188 S.W. 480 (Johnson v. McKenna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. McKenna, 188 S.W. 480, 171 Ky. 389, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 377 (Ky. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Clarke

Affirming.

This action was filed in the Kenton circuit court to enforce payment of a special assessment levied against [390]*390the property of appellants by the city of ■ Covington, to pay for the construction of a sewer laid by appellees under contract with, and pursuant to ordinance of, the city.

Appellants’ lot fronts 45 feet upon the street and abuts 131.72 feet on an alley in which the sewer was constructed. The sewer constructed along appellants’ property was a large one, connecting trunk sewers, and made available for connections to be made with abutting property. The total cost of the sewer was $5,984.10, and the number of abutting feet 2,127.29. The city assessed against the abutting property a tax of $1.00 for each front or abutting foot, and the remainder of the cost was paid by the city out of the general fund. No question is made • that all of the necessary preliminary steps were not regularly taken, but it is contended the city did not have the authority to provide for the cost of the sewer in the manner attempted, and the payment of the tax as assessed is resisted upon the ground that the city did not have this authority.

To determine this question a construction of section 3105 of the Kentucky Statutes is necessary. This section was originally enacted in 1894, and as it now stands is the result of amendments thereto in 1906 and 1910. The amendment of 1906 need not be considered, as upon the question involved here it is identical with the act of 1910. The act of 1894 is as follows:

“The general council shall have power to construct sewers along or under any of the streets, alleys or highways of the city, and may assess the entire cost, including intersection, of constructing the same to an amount •not exceeding one dollar per front foot of the abutting property upon the lots and lands bounding or abutting upon said streets, alleys or highways in, under or along which the sewers shall have been constructed; the cost of the construction of sewers, not exceeding said sum of $1.00 per front foot of the abutting property, shall be apportioned equally on the said abutting lot owners according to the front feet. "When the amount of the quotient, after dividing the entire cost of the construction of the sewer, as estimated and computed to the general council by the engineer by the number of front or abutting feet, exceeds the sum of one dollar per front or abutting foot, then and in that event, the entire cost of construction of said sewer shall be assessed upon the [391]*391lots and lands in the neighborhood of said sewer which may be benefited thereby, according to the benefits received ; and in every such case the council shall by ordinance fix and determine the amount of tax to* be levied upon the several lots or lands so benefited. The general council may, however, out of the general fund contribute and pay toward the construction of said sewer such part thereof as may to the council seem proper. The tax provided for in this section shall be a lien upon such abutting or benefited property, as the case may be, and may be collected and enforced, as street improvement liens are collected and enforced; but the amount of sewer tax assessed against any lot or land shall in no event exceed one dollar per front or abutting foot.”

The material parts of section 3105 of the statutes as amended in 1910 are as follows:

“The general council shall have the power to construct sewers along or under any of the streets, alleys or highways of the city, and may assess the entire cost thereof, including intersections, upon the lots and lands in the neighborhood of said sewers which may be benefited thereby, according to the benefits received, and may levy a special local tax on such lots and the lands for the cost of such improvements so assessed thereon, which tax shall be due and payable at the office of the City Treasurer upon completion of the work and acceptance thereof by the general council, and no property shall be exempt from such improvement tax. In every case the general council shall by ordinance or resolution fix and determine what lots and lands are benefited thereby, and fix and determine the amount of tax to be levied upon the several lots or lands so benefited: Provided that where the cost of a sewer does not exceed the sum of one dollar per abutting foot of the property bounding or abutting upon the streets, alleys or highways in, under or along which such sewer may be constructed, then such bounding or abutting property shall be deemed the property benefited thereby, and said cost shall be apportioned and assessed equally on such abutting lots or lands according to the feet abutting. No ordinance for the construction of a sewer at the cost of the abutting or benefited property owners shall be passed until a resolution declaring such construction a necessity, and setting out in general terms the property subject to the payment of the cost of same,- shall have. [392]*392passed by a two-thirds vote of the members elect of each board of general council, and the determination as to the necessity of any such sewer shall be final. . . . The general council may provide for the construction of sewers out of the general fund of the city.”

The ordinance providing for the construction of the sewer declared it to be a necessity; that the abutting property would be benefited by the improvement to the amount of $1.00 per front foot, and assessed a tax of $1.00 per front foot against the abutting property, payable to the contractors on the cost of construction, and that the balance of the cost should be paid out of the general funds of the city. It is the contention of appellants that, since the cost of construction of this sewer was in excess of $1.00 per foot of the abutting properties, under the Act of 1910 the city did not have the power to pay for the sewer by assessing a tax of $1.00 per foot on the abutting property, and by paying the balance of the cost out of the general tax fund; that the city under the present law may assess the abutting property with the cost of the construction only when that cost is less than $1.00 to each foot abutting; that where the cost, as in this case, exceeds $1.00' per abutting foot, the city is limited to one of two plans; either to pay the whole cost out of the general fund, or to assess the whole cost against the property in the neighborhood benefited by the sewer in proportion to the benefits. It will be noticed that under the act of 1894 it was provided that the city could, out of the general fund, pay such part of the cost of a sewer, in excess of $1.00. per front foot assessed against abutting property, as it should deem proper, and that this provision is omitted from the Act of 1910 as it was in the Act of 1906, but that the Act of 1910 authorized the city to pay for sewers constructed thereunder out of the general fund, a provision not found in the Act of 1894. It is contended by counsel for appellants that this change in the law manifests a purpose upon the part of the legislature to withdraw from the city the power theretofore conferred, to assess $1.00 per front foot against abutting properties when the total cost of construction exceeded the sum thus attainable, and to pay the balance out of the general fund.

As stated by the chancellor in his opinion, “This contention as to the intention of the legislature would [393]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 S.W. 480, 171 Ky. 389, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-mckenna-kyctapp-1916.