Johnston v. Conway

237 S.W. 80, 151 Ark. 398, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 248
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 23, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 237 S.W. 80 (Johnston v. Conway) 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
Johnston v. Conway, 237 S.W. 80, 151 Ark. 398, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 248 (Ark. 1922).

Opinion

Woon, J.

The Board of Improvement District Nr 16 of the city of Texarkana filed its assessment of the cost of the work in the district showing the cost to be $15,000 and $4,500 for interest on bonds, making a total cost of $19,500. An assessment of benefits was made by the board of assessors of. the district, filed with the city council and duly levied against the property in the district. The benefits thus assesséd were $18,945. The improvement district expected the city to contribute $1,000 to pay the difference between the benefits assessed and the cost of the work. Everv piece of property in the district had been assessed. The assessment roll showed a property value in the district of $106,380. Two of the board of assessors who made the assessment of benefits testified. Their testimony was to the effect that the assessment they made in 1912 provided for the entire cost of the improvement; that the assessment was made having in view the benefit that was to accrue to the property by reason of the work contemplated; that the assessment was as much or more than the benefits received; that they had not changed their opinion about the amount of the benefits to accrue to the property, and if they had to assess the benefits again they could not do otherwise than they had already done; that the benefit was fair and equitable.

C. M. Conway was the contractor who constructed the improvement of the district. Before the work was completed it was ascertained that the district did not have enough money to complete the improvements contemplated. After the work was well under way the board agreed with the contractor that he might go ahead and finish the work, and that he should take the note of the district for the amount that was due him over and above the amount derived from the assessment of benefits. Accordingly, the board executed its note to Con-' way in the sum of $3,221.91, on which Conway after-wards sued the district and recovered judgment in the sum of $3,222.91, with interest at the rate of 7% perannum from August 14, 1919, until paid, together with all .costs.

This action was begun in the Miller Circuit Court against D. B. Johnson, A. B. Little and F. E. Brown, as the Board of Improvement of District No. 16 of the city of Texarkana, and also against the board of assessors for the district and the collector and treasurer to require the levy and collection of an assessment against the property in the district to pay the judgment, interest and costs. The action was an application for a writ of mandamus. The prayer of the complaint is that the collector be ordered to return a list of delinquents, that the board of improvement be ordered to foreclose against such delinquents, and that the board be ordered and directed to require the assessors to readjust the benefits accruing to the lands by reason of additional improvements, and that the board be directed to require said assessors to assess additional benefits, sufficient to pay the plaintiff’s claim, not, however, in excess of 20% ; that the treasurer of the district be ordered to turn over all such funds as he has in his hands in payment of the judgment, etc.

The board of improvement answered and admitted the judgment set out in the complaint, but denied that the members of the board had failed to discharge any legal obligation in relation to the improvement district, and denied that the plaintiff was entitled to the relief which he asked. They set up that the district issued bonds with which to construct the improvement contemplated by the district; that the work was let to the plaintiff, and that the proceeds -of the sale of the bonds were paid to him on his contract for the- construction of the improvement; that the revenues derived from the assess^ ment of benefits were pledged to the bondholders, and that when the proceeds of the bonds were absorbed in the work by Conway he agreed to finish the work and accepted the note of the district for whatever might be due him, subject to the bond issue, and to take his chances on being able to collect the same. They allege that when the work was completed the board executed a promissory note in accordance with that understanding which was the basis of Conway’s judgment; that all the hands had not been paid; that a bond for $500 and interest was still due and that the district had not sufficient funds to take up that bond and interest. The cause on motion of Conway was transferred to the chancery court.

W. J. Paulk, Cleo Lynn, S. M. McAdoo, J. H. McLain and J. T. Davis filed an application to be made defendants in the suit, alleging that they were tax-payers in the district and were entitled to he heard in the proceeding, and further alleging that it was their opinion that it was not the purpose of the board of improvement to defend the suit, and that it was necessary that the petitioners appear and defend. They tendered an answer with their application to be made party defendants. In their answer these parties set up that they were tax-payers of the district and had paid all assessments of benefits levied against their property; that the district was organized in 1912, and that an estimate of the cost of improvement and the levying of assessment of benefits was made in 1912; that the funds derived from such assessment had been exhausted, and no further assessment existed against the property in the district. They set up that no authority existed for making any new or additional assessment; that the original cost of the work had been paid, and that any other costs than that shown by the report of the board of improvement to the city council upon which the assessment was based would not be a legal charge against the property in the district. They denied that the benefits equaled or exceeded the cost of the construction, and alleged, on the contrary, that the cost of the improvement exceeded the assessment of benefits, and that the excess of costs over such assessment is not collectable out of the property in the district. They denied all the other allegations of the complaint. They admitted that there was a small balance in the hands of the treasurer of the district, but alleged that there were outstanding bonds of the district more than enough to take up this balance.

Upon the issues and facts as above stated, the court entered a decree finding that the sum of $3,222.91 was due Conway with interest at the rate of 7 per cent, per annum from August 14, 1919, until paid; that the sum of $1,776 of said judgment is collectible from the tracts and parcels of land located within the confines of the district, ■and is a lien against the lands in the proportion named in the decree, and directed the collection of the amount in the proportions set forth in the decree against the several tracts of land in the district. The decree further appointed a collector to collect the assessment, and directed that he should file a report on the first of December, 1921, showing what collections he had made and what property was delinquent, so that the court might proceed to foreclose the lien for the amounts which remained unpaid. Both the plaintiff and the interveners excepted, prayed and were granted an appeal.

1. Upon the petition of the appellants to be made parties to the proceedings, setting up that they were taxpayers and interested in the result of the litigation, which petition was duly verified, the court ruled correctly in permitting the appellants to intervene and to be treated as parties defendant. Besides, there was no response to the application of the appellants to be made parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 S.W. 80, 151 Ark. 398, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-conway-ark-1922.