Marks v. City of Detroit

224 N.W. 619, 246 Mich. 517, 1929 Mich. LEXIS 926
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1929
DocketDocket No. 162, Calendar No. 33,914.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 224 N.W. 619 (Marks v. City of Detroit) 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
Marks v. City of Detroit, 224 N.W. 619, 246 Mich. 517, 1929 Mich. LEXIS 926 (Mich. 1929).

Opinion

McDonald, J.

This suit was brought to set aside a special assessment levied against the plaintiff’s lands for benefits claimed to have accrued thereto from the widening of Madison avenue in the city of Detroit, Michigan.

In the condemnation proceedings, the jury awarded the plaintiff $21,850 for damages to her property. Of this amount $14,800 was for the value of land actually taken, and $7,050 was for damages to her buildings. She accepted payment of the amount awarded, and deeded the condemned land to the city. The total damages awarded to the various parties in interest was $774,497.56. The common council determined that two-thirds of this amount should be paid by assessment on a special assess *519 ment district according to benefits and the balance should be paid by general taxation. Thereafter the board of assessors prepared the assessment roll. The plaintiff and all others interested were given a hearing on their assessments, after which the roll was signed and reported to the common council and then by resolution confirmed in accordance with the charter. The plaintiff’s property was in the assessment district and was assessed for benefits in the sum of $15,226.08. To restrain the enforcement of the assessment the bill was filed. From a decree for the defendant, the plaintiff has appealed.

It is first contended by the plaintiff that the procedure provided by the Detroit city charter which was followed by the common council and the board of assessors in levying this special assessment is in violation of the due process of law provisions of the Constitution of this State and of the United States, in that it denies to the property owner a hearing on the fixing of the special assessment district and of the proportion of the cost of the public improvement to be assessed thereon.

The provisions of the city charter providing for the taking of private property for public use require the district to be fixed by the common council before the condemnation suit is instituted. The next step in the procedure comes after the award of the jury and after judgment is confirmed and certified to the common council. Having then before it the cost of the public improvement, the common council shall by resolution determine what proportion thereof shall be assessed against the property in the special district previously fixed. The common council shall then direct the board of assessors to prepare an assessment roll according to the charter, which provides that the assessments shall be in proportion to the benefits which the land “is deemed to acquire by *520 the improvement.” When the roll is completed, notice thereof is given to the public, and for the purpose of their inspection it is retained in the office for 12 days during which time they may be heard as to its revision and correction. It is then signed by the board and reported to the common council, whose duty it shall be:

“To confirm assessment rolls and to sit as a board of review to hear and determine appeals from assessments. ’ ’ City charter, § 13, p. 26.

When the roll is confirmed, the last step in the procedure has been taken. From that time, until paid, the assessments constitute a lien on the premises. In this case all of the applicable provisions of the city charter were fully complied with. The plaintiff was not denied any hearing authorized by the charter. But the charter makes no provision for notice to property owners and a hearing on the question of fixing a special assessment district or on the question of what proportion of the cost of the improvement shall be assessed thereon. For this reason the plaintiff says that it is unconstitutional.

To sustain the constitutional validity of such an assessment, we think it must appear that the property owner has had an opportunity to be heard at some time before the roll is confirmed and the assessments thereon become a lien on the premises. In 3 Cooley on Taxation (4th Ed.), § 1113, p. 2254, it is said:

“To constitute due process of law, the right to a notice or a hearing in some stage of the tax proceedings, before collection, must exist.”

And in Voigt v. City of Detroit, 123 Mich. 547, this court said:

“When the proceeding has reached that stage where it becomes necessary to decide what propor *521 tion of the cost of the proposed improvement shall be assessed to any given description of land, there must be an opportunity given to the owner of the land to be heard upon that question. ’ ’

In affirming Voigt v. City of Detroit, the Supreme Court of the United States, in 184 U. S. 115 (22 Sup. Ct. 337), said:

‘ ‘ The contentions of plaintiff in error seem to be based on the assumption that a property owner must have notice of every step of the proceedings. Such assumption is untenable.”

In that case, as here, the plaintiff was complaining that he had no notice to appear before the council in relation to the matter of determining the assessment district and the amount to be assessed thereon.

We conclude that, if before the assessment becomes a lien on the premises the property owner is given an opportunity to be heard on the amount of the assessment, the due process of law provision of the Constitution is not offended.

In the instant case, the plaintiff had two opportunities to be heard: First, before the board of assessors, and, second, on appeal from the action of the board to the common council. In view of these facts, it cannot be said that her property was taken without due process of law.

It is further contended by the plaintiff that there is great inequality in the assessments on the various parcels of land within the district; that all of the land was not ratably assessed according to the benefits ; that in some portions of the district the assessments were “unreasonably and absurdly small,” and in other portions, particularly where the plaintiff’s lands were located, they were “unreasonably and absurdly large;” that the assessment on the *522 plaintiff’s property is excessive and was arbitrarily and unjustly imposed by the board of assessors and commoii council.

In determining the territory benefited by the improvement, the council took in a very, large area, two miles in length. The avenue was widened from Randolph street to Gratiot avenue, a distance of three blocks. The plaintiff’s property fronts on the northern side of Gratiot avenue in the block between Beaubien and St. Antoine streets, and extends in the rear to Madison avenue. All of the land in this portion of the district was assessed at a uniform rate per front foot, and, on the lots farther removed from the immediate vicinity of the opening, the rate was reduced, depending upon the benefits received. That is the plan which the board of assessors says it followed.- In transmitting the assessment roll to the common council, the board said:

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Bluebook (online)
224 N.W. 619, 246 Mich. 517, 1929 Mich. LEXIS 926, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marks-v-city-of-detroit-mich-1929.