Mills v. City of Detroit
This text of 54 N.W. 897 (Mills 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.
Opinion
This suit is to enjoin the collection of a sewer assessment, on the ground that the original ordering of the sewer, as well as the subsequent laying and. levying of the assessment to pay for it, was illegal.
It appears that the matter was first brought to the •attention ,of the common council by a petition. The board of public works, to which it was referred, recommended that the petition be granted, without giving any estimate of the cost of -construction. .The council, without any other report ■ or any further information in the matter/ and at the same session, ordered it built. Bids were advertised for, and only one bid made, which was $1.29 per lineal fook This was rejected because of its being the only one made. Later the- board of public works reported that the lowest bid was $1.35, and the committee to which it was referred recommended that a contract be made with this bidder. This was refused, and the common council directed a re-advertisement. This was never had; but the committee again reported, recommending that the contract be made with the former bidder, and a resolution was adopted directing the contract. 'The contract was made accordingly. There is nothing in rthe proceedings showing that at this time the council had .•ever had any estimate of cost before it, or information as -.to the extent of the work to b'e performed. The city '•charter provides :
TWhen any public inrprovement (except the opening of public streets) or public work is proposed, the common council shall, before proceeding with the same, refer the matter to said board of public works, and the board last named shall forthwith proceed to examine the same, and shall, as soon as practicable, report thereon to the common council, giving detailed estimates of the costs of 'such works nr improvements (if any costs there will ’be), and shall [425]*425make such recommendation as said board of public works may deem expedient’ Detroit Charter 1886, jd. 189, § 312; 3 Laws of 1873, Act No. 392, p. 180.
This provision was construed in Butler v. Detroit, 43 Mich. 552. It was there held that the provision prohibited the council from ordering any public improvement or public work, or committing itself to the making thereof, and from incurring the expense of advertising for bids thereon, without first getting an estimate from .the board of public works. The present case cannot be distinguished from the rule laid down in that case.
Under the city ordinances, the owner of lands to be assessed is entitled to a notice of the intended improvement, and an opportunity to show cause why the assessment should not be levied. This notice is to be served on the owner of the lot by delivering the same to him personally, or by leaving_ it at his place of residence. It is not claimed that this notice was ever served as the ordinance' directs.1
It appears that the complainant never received the notice, and the first he ever' heard of the intended improvement or of the assessment was when called upon to pay the tax, though he lived in the city, and had for many years. It does not appear, either, that the notice was published as directed by the ordinances2
The court below very properly decreed that the proceedings were void, and enjoined the collection of the tax.
That decree must be affirmed, with costs. ■
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54 N.W. 897, 95 Mich. 422, 1893 Mich. LEXIS 653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mills-v-city-of-detroit-mich-1893.