McDonnell v. Improvement District No. 145

133 S.W. 1126, 97 Ark. 334, 1911 Ark. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 23, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 133 S.W. 1126 (McDonnell v. Improvement District No. 145) 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
McDonnell v. Improvement District No. 145, 133 S.W. 1126, 97 Ark. 334, 1911 Ark. LEXIS 41 (Ark. 1911).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

Appellants owned real estate within the limits of an Improvement district in the city of Little Rock, organized for the purpose of street paving, and they instituted this action in the chancery court of Pulaski County against said improvement district, attacking the validity of its organization and the assessments levied, and seeking to restrain further proceedings thereunder. Answer was filed*and proof taken, and on final hearing of the cause the chancellor dismissed the complaint for want of equity.

1. The validity of the organization is challenged on the ground that three petitions were filed at different times covering the same territory. One petition was filed in September, 1908, but no ordinace was passed by the city council creating the district. Nothing was done under it, and it must be treated as having been abandoned. Another petition was filed later, but nothing was done under that either. On June 28, 1908, a petition was filed, signed by the requisite number of property owners, and the. city council duly -passed an ordinance creating the district, -and within 90 days thereafter a second petition was presented by a majority in value of the property owners asking that the improvement be made.

We can not see that the presentation and abandonment of the former petitions had anything to do with the regularity or validity of the last petition, which was acted on by the city ■council. The fact that the first two efforts -to form an improvement district proved abortive and were abandoned did not exhaust the rights of the property owners under the statute to proceed again to the organization of a district.

2. It is next contended that the organization' is void because the petitions failed to contain the specification of the kind of paving- material to be used, and left it to the commissioners to determine the particular kind to be used. The petitions specified that the improvement should be made “by grading, draining, construction of curbing and paving, and that the paving be done by construction of macadam, bithulithic, wooden blocks, brick, or asphaltum pavements, as the commissioners of said district to be hereinafter appointed may select as being most substantial and economical for the benefit of the district, and that the curbing be built of such material as the commissioners hereinafter appointed may determine.”

The statute provides that the real estate of any city or town, or any district thereof, may be assessed “for the purpose of grading or otherwise improving streets and alleys, constructing sewers or making any local improvements of a public nature,” and that “when any 10 owners of real property in any such city or incorporated town, or any portion thereof, shall petition the city or town council to take steps toward the -making of any such local improvement, it shall be the duty of the council to at once lay off the whole -city or town * * * or the portion thereof mentioned in the petition * * * into one or more improvement districts, designating the boundaries of such district so that it may be easily distinguished.” Sections 5664, 5665, Kirby’s Digest.

The statute further provides that if, within three months after publication of the ordinance creating the district, “a majority in value of the owners of real property within such district adjoining the locality to be affected shall present to the council a petition praying that such improvement be made, which petition shall designate the nature of the improvements to be undertaken, and that the cost thereof be assessed and charged upon the real property situated within such district or districts, the city council shall at once appoint three persons, owners of real property therein, who shall compose a board of improvement for the district.” Sec. 5667, Kirby’s Digest.

The board of commissioners is required by the statute to “form plans for the improvement within their district as prayed in the petition, and shall procure estimates for the cost thereof,” and report same to the city council. Kirby’s Digest, § § 5672, 5676.

The statute, it will 'be observed, does not require a specification in the petitions of the kind of material to be used. All that is required is that the nature of the improvement be specified in general terms, so that the purpose of the organization may be set forth in the proceedings. Much must, of course, be left to the discretion of the commissioners in forming the plans for the improvement and making the estimates of the cost thereof. Fitzgerald v. Walker, 55 Ark. 148; Boles v. Kelly, 90 Ark. 37.

The property owners may -undoubtedly limit the powers of the commissioners in that respect by specifying with particularity the kind of material to be used and the cost of the improvement. Watkins v. Griffith, 59 Ark. 359. But when the petition of the property owners describes the character of the improvement only in general terms, or expressly leaves to -the commissioners the decision as to what kind of material shall be used, the validity of the organization is not impaired thereby, and the commissioners -may exercise the discretion thus left to them. Decisions in other States under different statutes are of no force here as precedents. The question must be determined in the light of the statutes on the subject.

It is also urged in this connection that two of the petitioners signed upon the express understanding and promise that the street was to be paved with brick. These two persons cannot defeat the organization merely by showing that they signed the petition upon an understanding or promise that brick were to be used, when the petition plainly authorizes the commissioners to determine the kind of material to be used.

3. The next objection is that one of the commissioners was a member of the city council when he was appointed. The fact that he was a member of the city council did not render him ineligible to service as a commissioner of the district. The duties of the two positions .are not incompatible with each other, and the only qualification specified by statute is that the commissioners shall be owners of real property in the district.

4. Another contention is that the proceedings are void because no street grade was fixed by ordinance before the district was created and the contract was let. The statute merely provides that “all such improvements shall be made with reference to the grades of streets and alleys as fixed or may be fixed by the ordinances of said city.” Kirby’s Digest, § 5672. It does not require that the grade shall be established foeforé the district is formed or the plans made. On the contrary, it clearly contemplates that the grades may be established at any time when the improvement may be made in conformity therewith. It is time enough for the property owners to complain when the work is about to be done without reference to the establishment of a grade by the city.

5. The statute limits the cost of the improvement to 20 per cent, of the value of the real property in the district as shown by the county assessments, and it is urged that the commissioners, in violation of that limitation, are about to undertake an improvement in excess of that percentage of the value in the district.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.W. 1126, 97 Ark. 334, 1911 Ark. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonnell-v-improvement-district-no-145-ark-1911.