State ex rel. McMillan v. Hills

186 P. 295, 109 Wash. 175, 1919 Wash. LEXIS 962
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1919
DocketNo. 15619
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 186 P. 295 (State ex rel. McMillan v. Hills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. McMillan v. Hills, 186 P. 295, 109 Wash. 175, 1919 Wash. LEXIS 962 (Wash. 1919).

Opinion

Holcomb, C. J.

The court below, after a due hearing upon proper proceedings, on September 24, 1919, granted a peremptory writ of mandate, directing the appellant, as' county engineer, to proceed with the engineering work in connection with the road improvement mentioned in the petition of the relator and to perform in all ways the duties required of him by the resolutions adopted by the board of county commissioners on file in these proceedings, from which judgment the engineer appeals.

Appellant, as county engineer, had refused to proceed under two resolutions by the board of county commissioners providing for highway improvements, made upon petition after due hearing, the first on May 28, 1919, designated as1 highway No. 25, and the second on August 8, 1919, and after the amendment of 1919 was effective, designated as highway No. 26.

The petitions for these improvements were in accordance with the so-called “Donohue Hoad Law” of 1893, and the amendments thereto by the legislature of 1917 (Laws 1917, p. 238, ch. 72), as to highway No. 25, and the amendments of 1917 and also of 1919 (Laws 1919, p. 230, ch. 95), as to highway No. 26, and called for the improvements to be paid for in not to exceed twenty annual installments, which, at least as to highway No. 26, were in excess of the number of annual installments allowed by law.

[177]*177It was tlie contention of appellant, in Ms refusal to proceed under tlie resolutions, and on tMs appeal, that “Chapter 95 of the Session Laws of 1919 so amended Sec. 5761 (Bern. & Bal. Code, as amended by chap. 72, sec. 17, Laws 1917 [p. 251]), that it will be impossible to divide the costs of the improvement chargeable to the county and the townships into annual installments, as the only provision for installments under the section as it now stands is for the assessments against property within the improvement district. ’ ’ This involves the construction of the amendatory acts, and it is stipulated that seventeen other counties of the state and a large number of pending contracts for road improvements are affected and a speedy determination is desired.

The case, however, does not involve any of the questions as to the status of Whatcom (and other) county bonds, as urged by counsel appearing as amici curiae, and insisting upon a determination thereof herein. Such questions will not be decided until met with in a proper case.

Whatcom county has township organization, and the resolutions of the board of county commissioners apportioned the estimated costs in ten annual installments for the improvement district and in five annual installments for the county and townships.

The trial judge very ably and accurately summarized and analyzed the legislation in question (excepting part) as follows: -

“Under section 5 of chapter 72, Laws of 1917, p. 242, amending section 5739 of Bemington & Ballinger’s Code, it is made the duty of the county commissioners to appoint appraisers whose duty it shall be to assess the benefits of the improvement to the corporations, companies, persons and property particularly benefited by the same. These appraisers are required, under [178]*178the same section, to prepare a schedule, which shall set forth:
“First—The benefits assessed to the county for such improvement, which shall- be one-half of the whole estimated cost thereof.
“Second—The benefits assessed to each road district or township through or into which the improvement is located, which assessment shall be equal upon all the assessed property in the road district or township according to the value thereof as shall appear upon the duplicate. assessment roll of the county at the time, and which benefits shall be one-fourth of the whole estimated cost of the improvement within the boundary of the road district or township, and
“Third—The benefits assessed to the lots and lands lying within the proposed improvement boundary, et cetera.
“The same chapter 72 amended section 5761, Remington & Ballinger’s Code, so as to provide for the payment of such improvement by annual installments by an annual tax levied upon the property assessed for the benefits in proportion to the benefits assessed, whenever the petition for the improvement shall so request.
“This section further provides that the petition shall set forth that the improvement shall be paid for by installments, and provides that the number of years shall be not more than twenty. In such case it is provided that the portion of the expense to be borne by the county, townships or road districts shall be levied and collected as other taxes, after the awarding of the contract, ‘provided that the board of county commissioners shall, if the petitioners so request, arrange that the portion of the expense to be borne by the road districts or townships be paid in not to exceed five annual installments, and the board may in its discretion provide that the portion of the expense to be borne by the county be paid in not to exceed five annual installments, and shall divide that portion of the expense to be borne by the county, road district or townships, and also the lots and land lying within the proposed improvement boundaries and found to be [179]*179specially benefited, into as many equal parts as there are installments, and shall each year, when an installment is payable, extend the amount of the same, together with interest on the deferred payments at the rate of six percentum per annum, upon the duplicate assessment roll against the persons and property assessed for benefits,’ et cetera.
“Chapter 95 of the act of 1919, entitled ‘An Act Relative to Payment of Highway Assessments’ and amending the said section 5761 of Remington & Ballinger’s Code, consists of but one section. This section is in the exact language of the original section 5761, except that it contains, as an addition thereto, a provision to the effect that ‘in the event that the entire assessment upon any single tract or parcel of land, or contiguous tracts or groups of tracts belonging to the same owner is $25 or less, such assessment shall become due and payable at the time the first general taxes next after the date of the levy shall become due, and the terms of this act relating to the payment of assessments in installments shall not apply to such assessments. ’
“The section of the act, chapter 95, Laws of 1919, except the addition thereto respecting the payment of assessments of $25 or less, is as follows:
“ ‘When the petition shall so request, the improvements provided for under this chapter shall be paid for in annual installments by an annual tax levied upon the property assessed for benefits. The petition shall set forth ‘that the improvement be paid for on the -years installment plan,’ and the number of years shall be not more than ten. When the improvement is done under the provisions of this section, the clerk of the board of county commissioners shall divide the total estimated cost of the improvement, including interest on deferred payments, into as many equal parts as there are installments, and shall each year when an installment is payable, enter the amount of the same upon the duplicate assessment roll against the persons and property assessed for benefits, and it shall be the duty of the county treasurer to collect the same the same as other taxes are collected. ’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 P. 295, 109 Wash. 175, 1919 Wash. LEXIS 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-mcmillan-v-hills-wash-1919.