Oliver v. Bd. of Trsts. of Town of Alamogordo

1 P.2d 116, 35 N.M. 477
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 1931
DocketNo. 3637.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 1 P.2d 116 (Oliver v. Bd. of Trsts. of Town of Alamogordo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oliver v. Bd. of Trsts. of Town of Alamogordo, 1 P.2d 116, 35 N.M. 477 (N.M. 1931).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

SADLER, J.

The board of trustees of the town of Alamogordo at a meeting held on July 8, 1930, adopted a resolution calling for the paving of certain streets in said town, and fixing August 7, 1930, at 7:30 p. m. at the town hall as the time and place for protesting property owners to appear and have a hearing upon the advisability of making such improvements, the cost thereof, the manner of payment therefor, the amount thereof to be assessed against the property so improved, and providing' a notice for such hearing.

It appears from the complaint that appellants appeared and protested against the proposed improvements, and that their protests were formally overruled by the board. They thereupon instituted this suit against the board of trustees of said town, seeking primarily to set aside the determination of the board to proceed with the paving program, questioning its authority to make a threatened levy of one mill on the dollar on taxable property in the town to cover cost apportioned on a front footage basis of paving around certain publicly owned properties, praying a permanent injunction against the prosecution of the work, and for general relief.

The appellants, thirty in number, alleged themselves to be the owners of property abutting upon the streéts proposed to be paved, and that they prosecuted the suit not only in their own behalf, but in behalf of all other persons similarly situated who might desire to become parties plaintiff in the cause. The specific lots or parcels of land owned by the respective appellants áre not set forth in the complaint, nor is the estimated maximum benefit to be conferred on any particular lot o.r parcel of land set forth and complained of as excessive. It is apparent from a careful analysis of the complaint that its whole theory is predicated upon the idea that, by reason of one or the other or all of the matters and things therein alleged, the appellants are entitled to have annulled the determination of the town board to proceed with the paving program, and to have awarded them a permanent injunction restraining the board of trustees of the town from proceeding with the proposed paving program.

The appellees interposed a demurrer to the complaint, which was sustained by the trial court, and, the appellants electing to stand upon their complaint, an order was entered dismissing the same. From such order the appellants have prosecuted this appeal.

It is first urged by appellants that 1929 Comp., § 90-1214, limiting the time for suits to correct or set aside the determination of the governing body of a city or town respecting an improvement program, is an appeal statute granting a mandatory right of review rather than a statute of limitations. It reads as follows:

“At the time and place so fixed as aforesaid any owner of property to be assessed, or any person interested, may file a written protest or objection and may appear before said city council or board of trustees and be heard as to the propriety and advisability of making such improvements, as to the costs thereof and manner of payment therefor, and as to the amount thereof to be assessed against said property.
“Any person filing a protest or objection as aforesaid, shall have the right, within thirty days after the city council or board of trustees has finally passed on such protest or objection, to commence an action or suit in any court of competent jurisdiction to correct or set aside such determination, but thereafter all actions or suits attacking the validity of the proceedings shall be perpetually barred. (L. ’29, Ch. 118, § 3, amending Code T5, § 3667.)”

We disagree with counsel for appellants in the construction to be placed on this section of the paving statutes. It lacks many of the earmarks of the ordinary appeal statute. No particular court or forum is designated in which the appeal, if an appeal, shall be prosecuted. “Any court of competent jurisdiction” may be selected in which to maintain the suit. Nor are there present many of the incidents usual in an act creating a right of appeal and governing the manner of exercising the same.

The section in question creates no new right in a protesting party, though in form appearing so- to do. Independently of said section, the right would exist in any interested party to resort to equity to stay the threatened action, if facts warranting the exercise of equitable jurisdiction were shown to exist. And hut for said section such right would inhere, not alone for the thirty-day period limited in the act, but for the normal statutory period of limitation applicable to such a suit, unless lost by the existence of facts creating an equitable estoppel.

Short periods of limitations on the right to attack proceedings such as these are present almost invariably in legislation of this kind. 5 McQuillin, Municipal Corp. (2d Ed.) pp. 826 and 854. The reason therefor is well stated by the court in the case of Edmonds v. Town of Haskell, 121 Okl. 18, 247 P. 15, 19, where it said:

“This statute has a twofold purpose, and a twofold effect, viz.: That of stabilizing and maintaining the credit 'of a town in the commercial world, and thereby benefitting property owners by maintaining a sound credit for their town, and on the other hand it carries assurance to contractors and investors in town securities that the legal obligations of the town must be met.”

Such provisions are usually designated in the decisions as statutes of limitations. Plagmann v. City of Davenport, 181 Iowa 1212, 165 N. W. 393, and McKone v. Fargo, 24 N. D. 53, 138 N. W. 967. And while necessarily a review of the proceedings attacked is involved in every suit of this character, yet it is not such a review as an appellate court makes of a cause brought before it for consideration.

We therefore hold that said section 90-1214 provides a limitation on the time within which a suit of the kind mentioned may be instituted and maintained rather than granting a right of appeal and fixing the time for its exercise. In reaching this conclusion, we are not unmindful of the fact that the act in question uses some language-tending to- support appellants’ argument that what was intended was a “review”. It provides suit may be instituted to “correct or set aside” the board’s determination. We do not think the use of the word “correct” is controlling. Even in suits maintained solely upon a showing of grounds for equitable interference, the relief awarded frequently is cor rectory in character.

This conclusion forecloses appellants from, having a review in this court on many of the matters argued in their brief which involve the exercise of discretion by the town board. As against the wisdom of the proposed improvement, the appellants in their complaint set forth the existing financial depression, the inability of the citizens to meet current taxes, the closing down in the town of a large lumber industry, the reduction of its local forces by Southern Pacific Railway Company, and other matters of like import. All of these are matters which might have been, and no doubt were, urged upon the board of trustees of the town for careful consideration in determining the expediency of proceeding with the improvements.

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Bluebook (online)
1 P.2d 116, 35 N.M. 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-bd-of-trsts-of-town-of-alamogordo-nm-1931.