Louden v. Saginaw

2 N.W. 182, 41 Mich. 18, 1879 Mich. LEXIS 773
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 2 N.W. 182 (Louden v. Saginaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louden v. Saginaw, 2 N.W. 182, 41 Mich. 18, 1879 Mich. LEXIS 773 (Mich. 1879).

Opinion

Campbell, C. J.

Louden sued the city of East Saginaw to recover back moneys paid under protest by himself and others who had assigned to him, under an assessment for paving Genesee street between Jefferson and James streets. The pavements were made in September, 1872, and October, 1872. The record, which is carelessly made up, does not show when this suit was commenced, but it is assumed to have been in time to avoid the limitation of six years, if that is to govern in the decision. As the court below directed judgment for defendant because no sufficient claim was made in time against the city, it becomes necessary to know just where the parties stand.

On the 28th of August, 1871, upon a petition and reference, a committee of the common council reported in favor of a wooden pavement on the section of the street in question.

On the 11th of September, 1871, the council passed a series of resolutions declaring the necessity of the improvement, defining its extent, and determining the street should be paved with Nicholson, McGonegal, or some other wood pavement; determining that this part of the work should be charged on the owners and occupants of the property benefited; directing the preparation of plans, profiles and specifications, and ordering advertising for proposals.

Proposals were received and accepted, and a contract ordered for the McGonegal pavement.

On the 13th of November, an estimate was filed, and [21]*21the council appointed a committee who subsequently reported what property would be benefited.

On the 8th of January, 1872, a resolution was adopted setting out the whole expense at $6,852 and directing the amount to be assessed on the property therein specified.

The assessment was made and reported to the council, who fixed May 13, 1872, for hearing objections. Notice was given which fixed the day of hearing on May 12th, which was Sunday, instead of May 13th. On May 13th the assessment was confirmed in the absence of any objections. In due time the collection was entrusted to the treasurer by warrant returnable September 29, 1872. On the 28th Louden and several of his assignors paid under protest to the treasurer $668.13. Of this Casper Esehenbach paid $258.35, which had been assessed to Jacob Beyer, of whom he purchased the property assessed to him about the time the assessment was made out. On the 28th of September, at the request of twenty-five citizens and tax-payers on the roll, the roll was extended thirty days. At the end of that time the remaining assignors paid their assessments, amounting to $819.52. By examination of the assessment notice it appears there were thirty-eight names of owners and occupants, and that thirteen paid their assessments in September. The October payments were therefore all made by persons who had been active in procuring this extension.

The treasurer paid out all the money thus received by him to the contractors. The record does not disclose the terms of the contracts. The court below held that the assessment was invalid by reason of the failure to give notice of the meeting to consider objections to the assessment, but denied the right of recovery because the money had been thus paid over before any claim was laid before the council.

. It becomes necessary to consider the position of the assessment at its various stages under the charter, in order to determine the precise condition of the litigation.

[22]*22A preliminary objection, that no action lies to recover illegal assessments paid under compulsion, by action against the city itself is not open to discussion. It was expressly decided in Nickodemus v. East Saginaw, 25 Mich., 456, that such recovery was allowable. That action was for an assessment paid for paving the same Genesee street to which the present controversy refers. And the charter recognizes in several places the power of the city to refund such assessments. Title 6, § 58; title 11, § 24.

No irregularity is pointed out earlier than the defective notice already referred to. The objection that no choice of kinds of paving was made before receiving bids is not, we think, well founded. The course taken of receiving bids for the various methods was well calculated to create a proper competition, and we have not discovered any thing in the charter against it. Upon all other matters the statute of 1869 was fully complied with. The resolution of January 8, 1872, covers the ground of previous action objected to as imperfect, and was adopted by the proper number of yeas and nays.

By this preliminary action the cost of the work was lawfully required to be assessed on the property described, and in the absence of any valid objections raised and sustained by the council, this action is declared by the charter to be final. Title 6, § 37.

Nothing was left to be done further except the distribution of the burden by an assessment upon some uni, form basis. So far as the assessment has been spread upon the record it apportions the cost by the frontage. But the property was all designated and the assessment made chargeable against it.

The case stands, therefore, on a very different footing from one relating to an entirely illegal assessment. The only illegality here was in a notice which may or may not have been seen by the parties. It was unquestionably a bad notice and did not of itself bind them. But it was an irregularity which any one could waive, and a waiver of which would make the assessment [23]*23entirely legal. The conduct of the parties is therefore an important element of decision.

The first question which arises is how far the payment of the assessment is to be deemed compulsory and not voluntary.

By section 44 of title 6, as amended in 1871 (2 Sess. Laws of 1871, p. 1207), such assessments are made personal charges against the persons named in them. They do not become a lien on realty unless returned unpaid. § 44. The owner of the land may pay if he chooses at any time while it remains in the hands of the treasurer, with accrued interest. If not sooner paid it goes upon the next tax-roll.

Plaintiff and all of his assignors except Eschenbach paid under pressure of a threatened levy and their payments were not voluntary. But Eschenbach was not-personally liable to have his own goods seized, and if the assessment was illegal he had no obligation to pay it on Beyer’s account. Paying under protest is an assertion of illegality. He could not know it was illegal without knowing in what the defect was, and he could have applied to the council to set the assessment aside, and it is fairly presumable they would have done so, and ordered a reassessment under section 58. He was under no immediate pressure, and the assessment had not yet become a lien on the land. His payment therefore was voluntary, and cannot be recalled.

The persons who paid in October knew of the assessment because they knew of the original warrant before it ran out. Instead of objecting to any supposed illegality, they saw fit to ask an extension, and they obtained an extension of thirty days. We think this was a waiver of the irregularity. Their action tended to mislead the city.'

Leaving out the Eschenbach payment and the October payments, the principal sum of these payments is reduced to a total of $409.77. If plaintiff can recover [24]*24at all, this is the largest amount of principal which this record shows to have been paid under compulsion. The party alleging error is bound to show error to his prejudice.

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Bluebook (online)
2 N.W. 182, 41 Mich. 18, 1879 Mich. LEXIS 773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louden-v-saginaw-mich-1879.