Keese v. City of Denver

10 Colo. 112
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 10 Colo. 112 (Keese v. City of Denver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keese v. City of Denver, 10 Colo. 112 (Colo. 1887).

Opinion

Rising, C.

This action was brought by the plaintiffs to restrain the sale of real estate described in the complaint, for the purpose of collecting an assessment placed thereon-to pay for the construction of a sewer, constructed under-the direction of the city council of the city of Denver. There are seven plaintiffs, and each has a separate interest in distinct portions of said real estate, and there is no> joint interest of any of the plaintiffs in any portion of such real estate, and the same relief is asked for all other persons similarly situated and interested as for themselves. Demurrer to complaint for defect and misjoinderof parties plaintiff, and that complaint does not state facts, sufficient to constitute a cause of action. Demurrer.[114]*114overruled, and, upon trial, judgment dismissing bill of complaint, from which judgment plaintiffs appeal.

There is no conflict in the testimony, and the objections urged against the validity of the sewer assessments, and appellees’ answer thereto, are based upon the provisions of the charter of the city of Denver, approved April 16, 1877, and an amendment thereto approved February 19, 1879, and upon the following facts: On January 5, 1880, the council passed an ordinance adopting the system of drainage and limits of districts as shown on map of sewer districts prepared by the city engineer, so far as the same applies to district No. 2, as the system of sewers for said sewer district No. 2. On May 6, 1880, the following communication from the board of health was presented to, and adopted by, the city council: “ Gentlemen: In accordance with the authority given to the board of health in section 3 of an act passed February 9, 1879, entitled ‘An act to enable the city council to establish a system of sewerage,’ we respectfully recommend as a sanitary measure the construction of district sewers as provided by ordinance. We further recommend that the district sewer on Sixteenth street be constructed this year from the main sewer on Wyncoop street to Curtis street; also that district sewer on Eighteenth street be constructed this year from the main sewer on Wyncoop street to Lawrence street.” An ordinance establishing the Thirteenth-street sewer district, and providing for the construction of a sewer therein, was passed by the city council, and approved by the mayor, on the 6th day of March, 1882, and was duly published. A majority of the property holders resident in said district did not sign a petition for the construction of said sewer, but said ordinance recites that it is enacted “in accordance with the petition of the citizens ” in said district. On July 5, 1883, the city council, by resolution, instructed the city engineer to compute the total cost of the sewer, including interest on warrants [115]*115already issued up to January 1, 1881, and including the cost of collecting the assessments; and on September 6, 1883, the city engineer reported, to the city council the total cost of the sewer to be $113,016.80, which report was adopted, and on the same day the city council, by resolution, instructed the city engineer to make a plat-book of said sewer, and report the same to the council for approval. On October 8, 1883, the city engineer presented to the council a book of plats, showing the area and tax of each lot or parcel of land in said sewer district, and the council by resolution adopted the assessments of sewer tax against lots and parcels of land in said district, as shown in said book of plats, subject to such changes and equalization as might thereafter be made by action of the council, and resolved that a committee of three be appointed as a board of equalization to hear and adjust complaints as to the assessment of séwer tax made against property in said district, and appointed as such committee, 0. Gove, G. N. Billings, E. P. McPhilomy. Due notice of the time and place of the meeting of this committee was given, and the committee sat for five' consecutive days, and on the 20th day of October, 1883, reported to the council that no complaints had been made as to the legality of the assessment or its manner of make-up, and recommended that the estimate of the engineer be made the assessments, and the lots assessed as per the accompanying abstract. On. the same day the following resolution was adopted by the council: “ Eesolved, that the lots and parcels of lots mentioned in the abstract of lots and assessments accompanying the report of the committee be assessed at the sums therein mentioned, and that the abstract and plats be forwarded to the county clerk and recorder of Arapahoe county, with instructions to extend the assessments with other taxes upon the lots and parts of lots therein mentioned.” The contract for the construction of said sewer was let on the 30th day of March, 1882.

[116]*116All the questions presented by the briefs of counsel are raised by the' issues made by the pleadings. The ordinance of March 6, 1882, for the establishment of the Thirteenth-street sewer district, and the construction of a sewer therein, recites that it was enacted in accordance with the petition of the citizens in said district. In their argument, counsel for appellants first attack the validity of the tax or assessments, upon the ground that the petition for the establishment and construction of said sewer was not signed by a majority of the property holders resident in said district, and that the board of health did not recommend the construction of such sewer, and that no recommendation of the board of health was approved by the city council. These objections are based upon the provisions of section 3 of the amendment to the city charter, approved February 19, 1879, which provisions are that “the city council shall cause sewers to be constructed in any district, whenever,a majority of the property holders resident therein shall petition therefor, or whenever the board of health recommend the same as necessary for sanitary reasons, and said recommendation is approved by the city council.” The evidence clearly shows that a majority of the property holders, resident in said district, did not petition for the construction of said sewer. To authorize the city council to act, under the provisions of said amendment, there must be a petition of property holders, or a recommendation of the board of health, as required by section 3, and a petition not complying with the requirements of said section did not authorize the council to act thereunder. The grants of powers to make local assessments are strictly construed, and must be strictly followed. Merritt v. Portchester, 71 N. Y. 309; Allen v. Galveston, 51 Tex. 302. Every material requirement of the charter must be strictly complied with before there can be any liability of adjoining lots for such work. Massing v. Ames, 37 Wis. 645; Pound v. Chippewa Co. 43 Wis. 63; Columbus v. [117]*117Story, 35 Ind. 97; Covington v. Casey, 3 Bush, 698; In re Sharp, 56 N. Y. 257; Kyle v. Martin, 8 Ind. 34.

The general rule is laid down by Judge Dillon in his work on municipal corporations (section 800), and is as follows: “Where the power to pave depends upon the assent or petition of a given number or proportion

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Bluebook (online)
10 Colo. 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keese-v-city-of-denver-colo-1887.