School Dist. No. 1 v. City of Cheyenne

113 P.2d 958, 57 Wyo. 121, 1941 Wyo. LEXIS 24
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1941
Docket2186
StatusPublished

This text of 113 P.2d 958 (School Dist. No. 1 v. City of Cheyenne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
School Dist. No. 1 v. City of Cheyenne, 113 P.2d 958, 57 Wyo. 121, 1941 Wyo. LEXIS 24 (Wyo. 1941).

Opinion

*128 Riner, Chief Justice.

The question to be determined in this case is whether a School District in this State may properly be held liable for the payment of its proportionate share of a special assessment for a sewer line constructed by a municipality of this commonwealth under the circumstances shown by this record. The district court of Laramie County decided that such School District could and should be held so liable, and entered a judgment accordingly. From that judgment the unsuccessful litigant, School District No. 1 of Laramie County, Wyoming, has appealed and employed the direct appeal method of procedure to bring the case here for review. For the sake of convenience and brevity the School District aforesaid will be hereinafter usually referred *129 to either as the “District” or as the “appellant”. The City of Cheyenne, which is the municipality seeking to collect the aforesaid proportionate part of the sewer assessment, will ordinarily be mentioned herein as the “City” or as the “respondent”. The facts involved may be briefly outlined thus:

The District as the owner of all of Block 373 in said City, some time previous to that when the sewer assessment proceedings presently to be mentioned were initiated by the City, erected on said block in said City a school building known as the Alta Vista School. This building is located on a portion of the east half of said block. When the said building was erected there were no lateral sanitary sewer lines in the vicinity of said block. In order to supply this school building with proper and essentially necessary sewer facilities, the City permitted the District to make a temporary sewer connection with the main trunk line sewer owned and constructed by the City, said trunk line being located on Logan Street on the easterly side of said block. It appears that the City ordinarily employs the trunk line sewers to be fed from lateral branches which empty into them, and such trunk lines are necessarily placed at a greater depth in the ground than the branch laterals. It is also true that these trunk lines usually have no wyes on them for connections to be thereby made for residences or other buildings adjacent which may need such facilities. Such being the situation, when the erection of the Alta Vista School Building was completed the sewer connection for it was made through a manhole of the trunk line sewer aforesaid.

As the demands of the property in the vicinity of this school building for sewer facilities increased, it became necessary for the City to construct a branch or lateral sewer line through the alley in certain blocks in that locality, among them being Block 373 aforesaid. This lateral sewer line connected with the trunk line *130 on Logan Street. It may be here noted that no assessment or charge was ever made by the City against the property owned by the School District for the accommodation of temporarily connecting the Alta Vista School Building with said trunk line, the cost of said trunk line being borne exclusively by the City; and also that in the course of his testimony in this case the City’s Engineer answered the query, “You say that the present connection of the Alta Vista School with the trunk line on Logan Street is through a manhole?” as follows: “It was. We had to take it out and put the laterals through the alley and make new connections.” The city having laid the necessary lateral sewer lines to service the locality, including therein Block 373, instituted assessment proceedings to collect the proportionate cost from the adjoining property owners, among these being the District aforesaid, its share of the cost being $290.59, the procedure being in accord with the provisions of Section 22-146 W. R. S., 1931, (Laws of 1917, Chapter 56, Section 1) and the city ordinances enacted thereunder. The School District filed its protest with the City against paying for the portion of the assessment charged against it. This protest was in due course considered by the City Council and rejected. Thereupon the District appealed to the district court aforesaid, and that court, as above indicated, after the several parties had presented evidence in the matter and been heard by counsel, entered its judgment finding that the relief prayed for by the appellant should be denied, and that thereafter it was “ordered, adjudged and decreed that the relief prayed for by appellant herein be, and the same is, hereby denied at appellant’s costs, and that said special assessment for sanitary sewer be confirmed and approved as against said School District No. 1; to all of which findings and judgment the appellant duly excepted, and exception allowed”.

*131 The District insists that it should decline to pay its proportionate part of this assessment. No objection seems to be made that the amount of the assessment was calculated inaccurately under the requirements of the law invoked by the City, but it is contended chiefly for said District that the City did not follow the proper statute in its procedure for assessment of property to pay for this sewer improvement; that as the District was allowed to make a temporary sewer connection with the manhole in the main trunk line sewer on Logan Street, it has all the sewer facilities it now needs, is not benefited for that reason, and consequently may not be assessed its proportionate part for this improvement; also that school property being exempt from taxation should not, and could not, be held responsible for the payment of this assessment, and that it would be a misappropriation of the funds of the District if the payment should be made. After careful consideration, we think all these contentions must be resolved against the District.

In making the questioned assessment the City followed the procedure directed by the provisions of Section 22-146, W. R. S., 1931, already mentioned. This statute was enacted first as Chapter 7 of the Laws of Wyoming for 1903. In its present form it appears first in the body of our law as Chapter 56, Section 1, Laws of 1917, and in that form it seems to have been carried forward without change into the 1931 Revision of the Wyoming Statutes. In large measure the essential features of the law were before this Court in the case of McGarvey v. Swan, 17 Wyo. 120, 96 P. 697, and its constitutionality was there upheld. Again, in the comparatively late case of Henning v. Consolidated Building & Loan Co. et al., 50 Wyo. 315, 327, 62 P. 2d 540, this statute as well as that appearing in the laws of Wyoming, 1915, C. 120, Section 1 et seq., now Revised Statutes of 1931, Section 22-1501 et seq., received con *132 sideration at the hands of this court, and this was said concerning the 1917 law:

“Chapter 56 of the Session Laws of 1917 provides that ‘every city or town in this state incorporated heretofore or that may hereafter be incorporated under the general laws of Wyoming, or under special charter, shall have the power to make special assessments for the construction of sewers’. The act then provides for the apportionment of the assessments, and continues to the effect that ‘each city or town is hereby authorized to adopt such ordinances and resolutions as may be necessary to levy and collect such special assessments,’ etc. It can hardly be contended that the city council of Casper did not comply with this law.

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Bluebook (online)
113 P.2d 958, 57 Wyo. 121, 1941 Wyo. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/school-dist-no-1-v-city-of-cheyenne-wyo-1941.