Maxfield v. Brooks

144 N.E. 725, 110 Ohio St. 566, 110 Ohio St. (N.S.) 566, 2 Ohio Law. Abs. 116, 1924 Ohio LEXIS 415
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1924
Docket17829
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 144 N.E. 725 (Maxfield v. Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maxfield v. Brooks, 144 N.E. 725, 110 Ohio St. 566, 110 Ohio St. (N.S.) 566, 2 Ohio Law. Abs. 116, 1924 Ohio LEXIS 415 (Ohio 1924).

Opinion

Wanamaker, J.

On the 1st day of October, 1917, the board of commissioners of Clermont county passed a preliminary resolution in favor of the construction of the improvement herein involved. It was followed by other resolutions touching the improvement and seeking state aid.

On January '29, 1920, the county commissioners passed a resolution providing, among other things, that of the cost of the improvement the state was to pay 60 per cent., the remaining 40 per cent, to be paid by the county, the townships through which the highway passed, and the abutting property holders on either side thereof; it being set forth therein that the abutting property holders were to pay 8 per cent. Thereafter bonds of the county were issued and sold to pay the proportion of the cost to be paid by the county, the township, and the property holders.

On March 1, 1920, the state highway commissioner changed the plans and specifications from a water bound to a macadam road, thereby increasing the cost and requiring the sale of additional county bonds. So far the proceedings are not seriously attacked.

On October 3, 1921, the board of commissioners of Clermont county undertook to increase the assessment area, theretofore limited to “abutting property owners,” to “property owners within one mile on either side” of the improvement, which action was by the unanimous vote of the board. Subsequent to the passage of this resolution the *569 county surveyor, agreeable to the statute and pursuant to the resolution of the county commissioners, made a tentative assessment upon the various tracts and parcels of land in the district lying within one mile of either side of the improvement.

It is not seriously claimed that any attempt was made to make an actual assessment other than this district assessment first made by the county surveyor, as aforesaid. The major question is, therefore, whether or not this action of the board of county commissioners on October 3, 1921, in organizing a district, and providing for the assessment of lands throughout such district for partial payment of the improvement, was substantially a legal assessment.

It is obvious that within recent years the state of Ohio has entered upon a new program for the construction, improvement, and maintenance of highways. In earlier days this work was committed solely to the local authorities, and in many cases, either from unwillingness to improve, or inability to improve, the highways of certain portions of the state were practically impassable, especially for heavy traffic. In order to make the needed improvements a general policy of state aid was provided for through joint action of local and state authorities. Much legislation has been passed to provide for and to promote this policy, and large powers have been invested in the state highway department in that behalf; and there has also been a great enlargement of the powers of local authorities in order to accomplish the purpose sought by this new policy of road improvement. The particular statutory sections involved *570 in this improvement are Section 1211 and those following it.

The particular claim of the plaintiffs, and necessary to their contention, is that Section 1214 does not apply. It must be agreed that under Section 1211, and the companion sections following, the assessments shall not be made except “upon the completion of the improvement.” No question arises here as to the portion to be paid by the state, the county, the township, or the lands benefited. The only question is whether the private lands assessed are limited to abutting property owners, by virtue of the law and the proceedings of the county commissioners, county surveyor, etc., or whether at the time and in the manner shown by the record the county commissioners were authorized to and did legally create the one-mile district on either side of the improvement, and legally assess the lands within that district for such improvement.

Now Section 1214, here in question, is an unusually lengthy section. However, the pertinent part is included within this language:

“Ten per cent, of the cost and expense of the improvement, excepting therefrom the cost and expense of bridges and culverts, shall be a charge upon the property abutting on the improvement, provided the total amount assessed against any owner of abutting property shall not exceed thirty-three per cent, of the valuation of such abutting property for the purposes of taxation: * * * And provided further, that the county commissioners by a resolution passed by unanimous vote may make the assessment of ten per cent, or more. *571 as the ease may he, of the cost and expense of improvement against the real estate, within one-half mile of either side of the improvement or against the real estate within one mile of either side of the improvement. Township trustees shall have the same power to increase the per cent, to be specially assessed and to change the assessment area where the improvement is made on their application.”

The statute then continues, and makes provision as to the surveyor’s tentative apportionment, as to action by the county commissioners or township trustees, as to publication of notice, and so forth. At the close of the section the following provision appears, which is also pertinent in the consideration of this question:

“If any owner of property affected thereby desires to make objections he may-file his objection to said assessment in writing with the county commissioners or township trustees, as the case may be, before the time for said hearing. If any objections are filed the county commissioners or township trustees shall hear the same and act as an equalizing hoard and they may change said assessments if in their opinion any change is necessary to mate the same just and equitable, and such commissioners or trustees shall approve and confirm said assessments as reported by the surveyor or modified by them. ¡Such assessments when so approved and confirmed shall he a lien on the land chargeable therewith.”

Now, because the preliminary resolution passed in 1917 limited the property to be assessed to the abutting property owners, it is urged that that *572 fixed or limited the county commissioners thereafter as to the lands they had any right to assess. The statute itself clearly presumes that there had been a prior limitation put upon the lands locally assessed, for the statute expressly refers to a power “to change the assessment area.” That certain parties were exempted under the first arrangement does not give such parties a right per se to complain as to future assessments made pursuant to the statute. The same rule would apply, had the county commissioners passed preliminary resolutions providing for a one-half mile district and thereafter regularly proceeded to enlarge it by making it a one mile district, upon either side of the improvement. Where and how would any constitutional rights be invaded by such a change, by distributing the local costs over a wider area? Such course would clearly reduce the costs to each property owner under the law of general average.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
144 N.E. 725, 110 Ohio St. 566, 110 Ohio St. (N.S.) 566, 2 Ohio Law. Abs. 116, 1924 Ohio LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maxfield-v-brooks-ohio-1924.