Lenon v. Brodie

98 S.W. 979, 81 Ark. 208, 1906 Ark. LEXIS 476
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 24, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 98 S.W. 979 (Lenon v. Brodie) 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
Lenon v. Brodie, 98 S.W. 979, 81 Ark. 208, 1906 Ark. LEXIS 476 (Ark. 1906).

Opinion

Battue, J.

This appeal involves the validity of the organization of “Street Improvement District No. 117,” of the city of Little Rock. On October 23, 1905, the petition of more than ten owners, resident in the district, was presented to the city council of Little Rock, asking for the laying off of “Street Improvement District No. 117,” including therein the real property for 150 feet on each side of Fifteenth Street from Main to Pulaski, Pulaski from Fifteenth to Sixteenth, and Sixteenth from Pulaski Street to Park Avenue.

Fifteenth and Sixteenth streets run about east and west, and Pulaski Street and Park Avenue about north and south. Through the district,'from east to west, a street railway is constructed and operated. The owner of the street railway, in consideration of the franchise granted it by the city, contracted to pave the streets over which its tracks are laid, between the tracks and for -two feet on each side thereof, with the sáme character of material, and in like manner, as the remaining portion of the street is paved, and to change the material used from time to time as that on the other portion of the street may be changed, using the same kind of material.

On the 20th of November, 1905, in response to the petition, the council passed an ordinance establishing the district for paving, except the portion of the street the car company are bound to pave. On the 8th of January, 1906, and in less than three months after the ordinance establishing the district was passed, a majority in value of the owners of real property within the district presented their petition to the city council, which we shall call the second petition, asking that the improvement be made and the costs thereof assessed and charged upon the real property within the district, and asking for the appointment of three persons for a board of improvement. The county-clerk of Pulaski County certified that the total assessed value of real estate within the district was $236,215, and that petitioners on second petition owned real property in the district of the assessed value of $148,900, showing a majority in value of $30,872 in favor of the petition. The council granted the petition, and elected Lewis Rhoton, George C. Naylor and Miles Scull members of the board of improvement; and they qualified as such board.

Three lots on the northwest corner of Fifteenth and Pulaski streets, three lots on the southeast corner of Sixteenth and Pulaski streets, and three lots on either side of Sixteenth Street and fronting on the west side of Park Avenue, were not included in the district. But the improvement nowhere runs by or alongside of any of these lots. The value of so much of the street railway as is in the district was not estimated and included in the valuation of the property in the' district in determining the total value of such property and whether a majority in value of the ówners of the .real property in ‘ the district signed the second petition.

The board employed an engineer to form plans for the improvement of the district and to estimate the cost of the' same, and on the 5th day of February, 1906, filed its report to the city council; and on the 16th day of April, 1906, filed an additional report, • stating that the cost of the improvement to be made by the district would be about $40,500, and that it had procured donations of $i8‘,500 from the city of Little Rock and the county of Pulaski.

On the 16th day of April, 1906, nearly five months after the passage- and publication of the ordinance laying off t-he district, a petition was presented to the city council by T. B. Martin and others, protesting against the maintenance of the improvement district, and asking that the ordinance creating same be repealed and the “commissioners be discharged.” A sufficient number of the original signers of the second petition signed the petition of T. B. Martin to reduce the majority to a minority, if their names could be taken off the second petition in this manner after the council had acted upon it. The council refused to consider Martin’s petition,, but referred it to the board of improvement.

On the first day of May, 1906, John Brodie and others brought a suit, in the Pulaski Chancery Court, against W. E. Lenon, mayor, -and the city council, of Little Rock, and the board of improvement, and others, and, among other things, alleged in their complaint “that Mayor W. E. Lenon and others circulated a petition for the formation of an improvement district, and that a" number of citizens in said district who signed the petition for the assessment of benefits were induced to do so after one or two calls for that purpose, and by false and fraudulent statements that it would take an assessment not exceeding one per cent, per annum for eight years, and to some that it would probably not be more than one per cent, for five years; that the statements were made for the purpose of fraudulently inducing the citizens in the district to sign the petition. * ’* * That a large number of the persons who signed the petition for the levying of an assessment signed a protest or objection to any further effort on the part of any one looking to the carrying out of the improvement (giving list of names). * * * That a majority in value of the owners of real property within the district have not petitioned the city council of the city of Little Rock to levy any assessment for said pretended district. * * * That the property in the district prior to March 1, 1906, according to its assessed value, amounted to $243,450, and the certificate of the county clerk shows that persons owning property in the district assessed in the sum of $148,990 had petitioned for the district; that persons owning property in the district who are now petitioning for it represent property valued at $77,420, thus showing that persons owning-property valued at. $166,030 are against the district. That, as a matter of fact, the owners of''property valued at $123,640 have protested against the formation of the district, thus showing the majority in value of property against the district to be $88,-610. * * * That it is the duty of the street car com'pany to pave between the car tracks and two feet on either side thereof. That it is the real contractor, and that the pretended con-, tractor is acting in the interest of the street car company. -1< =[= * That, the. city engineer who laid off the district left o.ut all the street car property in said district, although it will be benefited more than any other property in the district, and that the ordinance of the city of Little Rock granting the charter to the Little Rock Traction & Electric Company seven years. before its old charter had expired, requiring the street-car company to pave within its track and two feet on each side thereof, was nothing more than a part of the consideration for the charter rights and privileges granted, and does not exempt it from taxation or from the payment of its proportionate bene-. fir in any improvement district. * * * That at first persons representing in value $148,980 petitioned for the assessment of their property. That persons owning property valued at $71,-560 on.the first petition, together with persons owning property valued at $52,080, petitioned the city council against levying an assessment. That persons owning property in the district valued at $166,030 under the law are opposed to the levying of an assessment on their property, and that persons owning property valued at $77,420 are petitioning for the assessment.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 S.W. 979, 81 Ark. 208, 1906 Ark. LEXIS 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lenon-v-brodie-ark-1906.