Kirst v. Street Improvement District No. 120

109 S.W. 526, 86 Ark. 1, 1908 Ark. LEXIS 349
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 30, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 109 S.W. 526 (Kirst v. Street Improvement District No. 120) 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
Kirst v. Street Improvement District No. 120, 109 S.W. 526, 86 Ark. 1, 1908 Ark. LEXIS 349 (Ark. 1908).

Opinion

Ashley Cockrill, Special Judge,

(after stating the facts.) This appeal involves the construction of our improvement district law's relating to the assessment against the property in the district of the cost -of the improvement, and proceedings incident thereto.

Under our statutes in force prior to 1899, the cost of a local improvement was assessed against the real property in the district by an ordinance of the council levying an assessment of a percentage of the value of the property, as shown by the last county assessment, sufficient to pay for the cost. The Legislature of 1899 changed this by adopting a method requiring a board to assess the value of the benefits accruing to the real property, and the council to make an assessment or levy on the property based on those benefits. Subsequent Legislatures have, made additional amendments, still adhering, however, to the benefit assessment scheme. The result is that today our improvement district laws have a body and many basic provisions adopted under and in consonance with the old plan of assessing according to value of property,- with the new method of assessing according to benefits rather awkwardly injected by way of amendment. These methods of assessment being radically different, it is a matter of no little difficulty to construe the various acts as a harmonious whole. In endeavoring to do so, however, it is helpful to refer briefly to the principles of law governing local assessments, and to compáre these two different methods of assessment.

Special assessments for local improvements find their only justification in the peculiar and special benefits which such improvements bestow upon the particular property assessed. Any exaction in excess of the special benefits is, to the extent of, such excess, a taking of property without compensation. N°D withstanding those principles so firmly settled, and in spite of Norwood v. Baker, 172 U. S. 270, it has been repeatedly held by the Supreme Court of the United States and this court that an act of the Legislature providing for the assessment of the cost of a local improvement according to the value of the property itself is not arbitrary, and is not in conflict with the Federal Constitution. These decisions are based on the principle that it must be assumed that the Legislature, in adopting such a method, has determined that the amount of benefits will accrue in proportion to the value of the property itself, and thus the assessment is still according to benefits, within the meaning of the law. The old act, therefore, adopting the plan of basing the assessments on the value of the property, was not in conflict with either the Federal or State constitutions. But it was entirely within the discretion of the Legislature to adopt the new plan, and it matters not whether this change was induced by the misconception of what was decided in Norwood v. Baker, 172 U. S. 270, or whether it was made because the Legislature determined the benefit method adopted to be the most equitable and just way of attaining uniformity and equality in the apportionment of local assessments. It is of no concern to the courts what was the controlling cause of the change 'of plan. Sufficient it is that the Legislature in the act of 1899 and in subsequent amendatory acts' has clearly adopted the plan of assessment according to the benefits, in place of that assessing according to the value of the property.

It is contended by counsel at the outset that sec. 27 of art. 19 of our Constitution, providing that local assessments shall be ad valorem and uniform, prohibits any assessments not made according to the value of the property itself. It is argued that “ad valorem“ means according to the value of the property, and that any assessment of benefits, not reached by taking a proportionate part of the value 'of the property itself, is prohibited by the Constitution, and that an act requiring an assessment made in any other way is in that respect unconstitutional.

The phrase “ad valorem’’ means simply according to value. There is nothing in the Constitution to indicate that it means according to value of property. This constitutional provision does not attempt to fix the thing or basis according to the value of which the assessment against the property is made. Its only mandate is that the assessment against the property shall be based on value, as distinguished from some other standard, without in any way expressing or implying that the basis shall be the value of the property itself.

According to the statute under consideration, the basis of the assessment against the property is benefits. The board of assessors is required to “assess the value of the benefits to accrue” to each lot in the district. That done, the basis is fixed. The council then levies against each lot that percentage of the value of the benefits thus assessed by the board necessary to pay the cost of the improvement. The estimate of the value of the benefits made by the assessors is thus the basis upon which the council afterwards fixes and levies the assessment against the property.

Under the old plan the county assessor valued the property itself, and the council levied against the property a percentage of -that value; under the present plan the board- of assessors values the benefits, and the council levies against the property a percentage of that value. Both plans conform to the ad valorem and uniform provision of the Constitution. While neither is in conflict with the Federal Constitution, the' present benefit plan of assessment more logically conforms to it and to the principle' that the basis of the assessments is benefits. This view of the meaning of the phrase "ad valorem” in our Constitution was adopted in Ahern v. Board, 69 Ark. 76. See Chamberlain v. Cleveland, 34 Ohio St. 565; Jersey City v. Vreeland, 43 N. J. D. 638.

After the assessment list had been properly filed with the city clerk, and within the ten days allowed, numerous property owners in the district filed with the city council appeals from the action of the board of assessors, setting up that the assessment of benefits against their property was in excess of actual benefits received and praying for a correction .of the assessment against their property. Two members of the board filed a formal communication with the council, stating that they were in doubt whether the)'- had estimated the benefits upon a proper basis, and asking for a return to the board of the assessment list for reconsideration and re-assessment. Pursuant to the report of a committee appointed to investigate the matter, the council, by adopting the report, found that the property owners objecting to said assessment had just grounds for complaint; that the assessment of benefits was arbitrary, discriminatory, unequal and unjust; that it would require more than the time of one regular meeting of the council to go into the various matters and questions involved, and that, as the board of assessors had asked for a return of the assessment list with a view to reconsider and correct the same, such a course might thus obviate the objections made in said petitions, protests and appeals. The council, therefore, ordered that the assessment list be returned to said board for the purpose of reconsideration and correction, and that in the meantime said petitions, protests and appeals lie on the table subject to call. The legality of this action of the council is challenged.

Counsel argue, first, that when the board filed its assessments its powers ceased, and that there was no board left to which to refer the assessment.

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Bluebook (online)
109 S.W. 526, 86 Ark. 1, 1908 Ark. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirst-v-street-improvement-district-no-120-ark-1908.