Smith v. City of Bozeman

398 P.2d 462, 144 Mont. 528, 1965 Mont. LEXIS 520
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 1965
Docket10602
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 398 P.2d 462 (Smith v. City of Bozeman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. City of Bozeman, 398 P.2d 462, 144 Mont. 528, 1965 Mont. LEXIS 520 (Mo. 1965).

Opinion

MR JUSTICE CASTLES

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal by the City of Bozeman from a judgment of the district court restraining the City from valuing, assessing, and levying taxes based upon an assessment for improvements done in Special Improvement District No. 421, and further, ordering the taxes previously paid under the assessment returned to the plaintiffs with interest at six percent.

Three separate suits were filed by the plaintiffs, residents of the improvement district, to recover the assessments paid under protest and to have the assessments levied against their respective properties declared null and void and not a lien against their property. The cases were consolidated and tried to the court on an agreed statement of facts.

On April 12, 1961, the Bozeman City Commission passed and adopted Resolution No. 1013, a resolution of intention to create a special improvement district to be known as Special Improvement District No. 421, for the purpose of installing curbs, gutters, and pavement on Sixth Avenue extending for two blocks from Villard Street to Durston Road and for one block on Short Street between Sixth and Seventh Avenues.

Notice of the adoption of the Resolution of Intention was *531 given and within the fifteen days required by section 11-2206, R.C.M.1947, the plaintiffs submitted written protests to the clerk of the city commission.

At the commission meeting on May 3, 1961, the city manager reported that only 36.099 per cent of the property within the proposed district, as computed by the office of the city engineer on the basis of actual area, was represented by valid protests filed by property owners opposed to the creation of the district. The total area of the improvement district was 211,414.70 square feet. Of this area, the plaintiffs, who were the only timely protestants against the creation of the district, owned a total of 76,320.1 square feet or thirty-six percent of the total area.

Based on this finding of the insufficiency of the protests on an actual area basis, the city commission on May 10, 1961, passed and adopted Resolution No. 1017 creating Special Improvement District No. 421. The minutes of the city commission meeting for May 10, 1961, indicate that the assistant city attorney informed the Commission that there was a serious legal question as to whether the protests should be considered on an area basis or on a lineal frontage basis. Without resolving this problem, the City let the contract for the improvements.

On October 18, 1961, after the improvements were completed, the city commission provisionally passed Resolution No. 1034 assessing the cost of the improvements against all of the property in Special Improvement District No. 421 as an extended district. The district in question was classified and assessed as an extended district by the city commission, but when the notice of intention to create the district was given, the City did not consider protests on an extended area basis.

Notice of the passage of the Resolution of Assessment was given in the manner prescribed by section 11-2223, R.C.M.1947, and when no protests were made the Resolution of Assessment was adopted.

Within the sixty day limit established by section 11-2239, *532 R.C.M.1947, the plaintiffs commenced these suits to recover the assessments paid under protest.

From the adverse judgment on appeal, the defendant City sets out twenty-one specifications of error which, in the written brief and oral argument, were resolved into four questions.

The first question we must decide is whether the owners of more than forty percent of the area of the property to be assessed protested against the proposed improvements.

The protest statute, section 11-2206, insofar as it pertains to this case, states:

“(1) At any time within fifteen days after the date of the first publication of the notice of the passage of the resolution of intention, any owner of property liable to be assessed for said work may make written protest against the proposed work, or against the extent or creation of the district to be assessed, or both. * * *

“ (2) At the next regular meeting of the city or town council or commission after the expiration of the time within which said protest may be so made, the city or town council or commission shall proceed to hear and pass upon all protests so made, and its decision shall be final and conclusive; provided * * * when the protest is against the proposed work, and the cost thereof is to be assessed against property fronting thereon, and the city or town council or commission finds that such protest is made by the owners of more than forty percent of the property fronting on the proposed work, or when the protest is against the proposed work, and the cost thereof is to be assessed upon the property within an extended district, and the city or town council or commission finds that such protest is made by the owners of more than forty percent of the area of the property to he assessed for said improvements, no further proceedings shall be taken for a period of six months from the date when said sufficient protest shall have been received by said clerk of the city or town council or commission; # # (Emphasis supplied.)

*533 In. the plain language of the statute, if the owners of more than forty percent of the area of the property to be assessed protest against either the extent or creation of the district, the City is without jurisdiction to proceed with the improvement. Hensley v. City of Butte, 36 Mont. 32, 92 P. 34; Shapard v. City of Missoula, 49 Mont. 269, 141 P. 544.

The jurisdiction of a city or town to continue creating an improvement district was discussed in Hawley v. City of Butte, 53 Mont. 411, 413, 164 P. 305, where this Court said: “Our statute [§ 11-2207, R.C.M.1947] is somewhat peculiar, in that jurisdiction to proceed with the improvement is not conferred upon the city until it has first determined that a sufficient protest is not before it.”

The answer to the first question requires an interpretation of the phrase “area of the property to be assessed” as used in section 11-2206 to describe the property owners who may protest against the creation of an extended improvement district. Although the statutes of several states are worded in similar terms, there does not appear to be any court decisions interpreting those words.

The City’s position as to the meaning of the words is well reflected in certain portions of the Resolution of Intention:

“Section 5 — Method of Assessment. The preliminary estimate of cost set forth above is, to be assessed on the area basis, with the first 25 feet of each lot next and adjacent to the improvement being recorded at double its actual area in computing the assessable area of each lot. On this basis the assessable area of the district is 299,163.20 square feet.” (Emphasis supplied.)
“Section 6 — Actual Area of District. The actual area of the district as prescribed is 211,414.70 square feet, and protests will be considered on an actual area basis.”

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Bluebook (online)
398 P.2d 462, 144 Mont. 528, 1965 Mont. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-city-of-bozeman-mont-1965.