Town of Monticello v. Finlayson

17 So. 2d 84, 154 Fla. 274, 1944 Fla. LEXIS 678
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 10, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 17 So. 2d 84 (Town of Monticello v. Finlayson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Monticello v. Finlayson, 17 So. 2d 84, 154 Fla. 274, 1944 Fla. LEXIS 678 (Fla. 1944).

Opinion

THOMAS, J.:

The statute to which reference will often be made in our discussion of the salient points of the appeal is Chapter 9298, Laws of Florida, Acts of 1923, now appearing in Florida Statutes, 1941, and in F.S.A. as Sections 170.01 et seq. We say that repeated reference will be made to the law because it was to foreclose liens created under, it that suit was brought by the town, appellant, against the appellee property owner and her husband. Prior to the creation of these liens, according to the bill of complaint, resolutions complying with Section 3 of the Act had been adopted by the town council. They provided for the improvement of certain streets and sidewalks on which were located two lots then owned by the predecessors in title of appellee. Each of them, too, provided that two thirds of the cost of construction should be assessed against the owners of lots on the street, according to front footage, and that the remaining one third should be borne by the municipality.

In the pleading there were described in some detail the various steps taken by the municipality or its officers from the adoption of the original resolution forming the basis for. the liens and the issuance of bonds until the liens were perfected. It does not appear necessary to elaborate further on the contents of the bill so far as they referred to the procedure followed by the town council to put in motion and consummate the paving program.

The work contemplated by the town council was completed, so the pleader continued, and the assessments for the property owners’ share of the cost were required to be paid in ten annual instalments drawing interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum. Payments were made by the then owner on the instalments for improvements abutting the property of the appellee, some as early as 1926 and some as late as 1929, excepting, however, that none of the assessments for construction of sidewalks was discharged.

*276 Summarizing, the suit was instituted to enforce by foreclosure the payment of these liens, the pleader alleging that in each instance the requirements of the law which we have cited were met in every material particular.

After detailing the procedure culminating in the establishment of liens and after specifying the amounts in default against each lot of the appellee this feature was added in the bill; when the liens attached and the improvements were installed the property involved in this suit was not owned by the appellee. She first became interested in the lots about the year 1927 when she inherited from her father a mortgage on them. In her bill to foreclose this mortgage, filed in the year 1933, she averred that the liens involved in the instant suit had become due and prayed that the mortgagors be required not only to pay the money secured by the mortgage but also such sums as appeared due on the liens. At the trial of that foreclosure suit the amounts of the liens were established, and eventually the property was sold by the master in chancery to Mary P. Finlayson, plaintiff there, appellee here. The sum realized from the sale was not sufficient to discharge the debt, so she applied for a deficiency decree which was subsequently entered specifically providing that she recover, to quote the present bill, “from the said defendants the sum of $4,925.87, which was the amount determined to be due the said Mary P. Finlayson ‘for past due taxes and improvement liens.’ ” From an exhibit attached to the bill it appears that this appellee for a consideration of $2,000 satisfied the deficiency decree. This, averred the pleader, established in the suit of the appellee the validity of the very improvement liens which she in the instant case, attacked.

In the answer the authority of the town to invoke the provisions of Chapter 9298, supra, was challenged because of the alleged failure of the officers to follow the requirements there defined in determining the burden which should be placed against the properties abutting the streets improved. Great emphasis was placed by the appellees on the failure to fix the amount of special benefits, and this alleged dereliction was presented in various ways. For - instance, it was *277 charged that no notice was given of a hearing to determine special benefits; that no hearing was held to consider testimony about special benefits; that “no special benefits were pro-rated among the various pieces of abutting property;” that “the assessment was made in proportion to the costs of such improvements and in entire disregard to any special benefits;” that “the governing authority . . . never . . . discerned any . . . special benefit accruing ... to the property;” that “on the contrary, the value of the . . . property was actually lowered.”

Although the actions of the officials generally were questioned it is obvious from the answer, the brief, and the argument of appellees that the attack was centered upon some failure on the part of the officials to investigate and determine what special benefit inured to the property of the defendant by the improvements irrespective of the proportionate cost of the entire improvement allotted according to linear feet along the street.

Further answering, defendants admitted that in the suit for foreclosure which resulted in the appellee Mary P. Fin-layson acquiring title to the property it was alleged that the paving and sidewalk liens were long past due, but they denied that the bill in that suit contained a prayer for the payment specifically of amounts due on these assessments. They denied also that in the subsequent petition for a deficiency decree they particularly sought recovery for these items and asserted that they prayed only a money judgment for the remainder of the deficiency after credit had been allowed for the net proceeds of the sale.

Although, as we have stated, the appellees stressed the absence of any special benefit to the property now owned by one of them, nevertheless their answer having contained the bald statement that the town failed utterly to comply with the procedure outlined in Section 9298, supra, it may not be amiss to give the result of our careful examination of the evidence offered by the plaintiff in support of the bill of complaint. Our perusal of the record has convinced us of the propriety of the governing authority in its every action from the inception of the paving program until its accom *278 plishment. The requisite resolutions, plans, specifications, and the like seem to have been adopted in the manner and at the time required by the law, and evidently all provisions for publication of notices and assessment rolls were scrupulously obeyed. The governing authorities, sitting as an equalizing board, after due notice of their meeting, considered and determined complaints and made necessary adjustment in assessments. Therefore, in the main, no defect in the procedure resulting in the liens against the property of appellee has been discovered.

Evidently it is appellee’s view that more than this was required of the city officials, a thought probably suggested by some of the phraseology in Section 2 of the act. We quote so much of this section as is necessary to present clearly the point: “Special assessments against property deemed to be benefited by local improvements . . .

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Related

City of Treasure Island v. Strong
215 So. 2d 473 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1968)
City of Treasure Island v. Strong
206 So. 2d 269 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1968)
Town of Monticello v. Finlayson
23 So. 2d 843 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1945)

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Bluebook (online)
17 So. 2d 84, 154 Fla. 274, 1944 Fla. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-monticello-v-finlayson-fla-1944.