Town of Oneida v. Pemberton

12 S.W.2d 389, 157 Tenn. 624, 4 Smith & H. 624, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 230
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 12 S.W.2d 389 (Town of Oneida v. Pemberton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Oneida v. Pemberton, 12 S.W.2d 389, 157 Tenn. 624, 4 Smith & H. 624, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 230 (Tenn. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKinney

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By this proceeding Pemberton questions the right of the Town of Oneida to assess a corner lot which he owns for paving purposes, in excess of twenty-five per cent of its actual cash value.

By chapter 298 of the Private Acts of 1915, towns of the State having, a population of not less than 1.850 nor more than 2050 are authorized to create improvement districts for the purposes of opening, widening’, extending, grading, curbing, guttering, paving, gravelling, macadamizing, parking or laying permanent sewers. The act applies to the Town of Oneida.

Main Street in said town runs north and south, and North Street runs east and west. The lot in question is located at the northwest corner of Main and North Streets, fronting seventy-five feet on Main Street and running hack west on North Street 120 feet.

*626 Main Street is in Improvement District No. 1 and Nortli Street is in District No. 4. Pemberton admits the right of the Town of Oneida to assess his property for paving purposes in both districts, provided the aggregate assessments do not exceed twenty-five per cent of the cash value of his lot, exclusive of improvements.

The Town oE Oneida, on the other hand, insists that it can make assessments in each district up to the twenty-five per cent limit.

The trial court and the Court of Appeals held against the Town of Oneida, and the case was brought to this court by petition for certiorari, which has heretofore been granted, and argument waived.

Section 7 of said act is as follows:

“That whenever any street, highway, avenue, alley, or part thereof, in the cities or towns aforesaid, is laid off as, and constituted, an Improvement District as hereinbefore provided, that two-thirds of the expenses or cost of .the improvement made therein shall be assessed against or upon the land abutting on, or adjacent to, said street, or alley, or part thereof, to be improved, and constituting /the Improvement District, and one third of such expenses shall be paid by said city or town out of its general funds, or special funds to be raised for the purpose of paying the city’s or'town’s share of the cost of said improvement. The city or town in addition to said one-third cost of the whole shall also pay for the cost of said improvements at the intersections of said street, highway, avenue, or alley, with other streets, highways, avenues, or alleys and the space opposite alley, and also for the spaces in front of city property, and the cost of subgrading or of establishing permanent grades as hereinbefore provided. Said two-thirds of the cost *627 or expense of said improvement on such street, highway, avenue or alley, or part thereof, constituting the Improvement District that is to he assessed against, or upon the lands abutting on or adjacent to said street, highway, avenue, or alley, shall be assessed upon, or algiainst said land and the several lots or parcels thereof with equality and uniformity and according to the value thereof without including in such value the cost of the improvements thereon; provided, however, that the aggregate or total amount of the levy or assessment made upon or against any lot or parcel of land shall not exceed twenty-five per cent of the actual cash value of said lot, or parcel of land, not including the improvements thereon, and the city or town shall pay any part of such levy or assessment upon or against any such lot or parcel of land as may be in excess of twenty-five per cent of the actual cash value thereof, not including the improvements thereon.”

This provision, it will be noted, deals with an improvement district and undertakes to define the obligations and rights of the town and the property owners within said district. The proviso is “that the aggregate or total amount of the levy or assessment (that is within the district) made upon or against any lot or parcel of land shall not exceed twenty-five per cent, of the actual cash value of said lot.”

The use of the word ‘ ‘ aggregate ’ ’ implies more than one assessment. -But the act contemplates grading, curbing, guttering, paving, gravelling, macadamizing or laying permanent sewers. To illustrate, the town may at one time assess for guttering, at another for sidewalks, and still later for sewerage. The meaning of the act is that the town may do all of these things within the dis *628 trict, provided the aggregate cost to tlio owner shall not exceed twenty-five per cent of the value of the lot.

But we cannot extend this proviso to some other district, when the Legislature was defining the obligations and rights of the parties with respect to a particular district.

Under the title “Municipal Corporations,” 44 C. J., section 3078, it is said:

“As elsewhere shown, it is generally held that a corner lot may be assessed for improvements made on either street upon which it abuts. And while there is some authority to the contrary, the better view is that this rule is not affected by the existence of a statute limiting the assessment to a certain percentage of the value of the property assessed, and that corner lots maj^ be assessed for the improvement of each street up to the statutory limit. ’

The text is supported directly or in principle by the following cases: Covington v. Schlosser, 141 Ky., 838; Rich v. Woods, 118 Ky., 865; Miller v. Sheldon, 198 Ia., 855; Durst v. Des Moines, 164 Ia., 82; Ross v. Barker Asphalt Paving Co., 158 Cal., 37; Allen v. Krenning, 23 Mo. App., 561.

In the first case cited above the statute under which the city proceeded was in this language:

“No city of the fourth class, by virtue of any authority it has to improve its street or other public ways at the cost of the owners of ground fronting or abutting thereon, have authority to charge the ground or the owmer thereof on account of such improvements with more than one-half the value of such ground, after the improvement is made, excluding the value of buildings and other improvements upon the property so improved.”

*629 The court in the opinion said:

•'‘Counsel for appellees insist that when the city has assessed a corner lot for the improvement of the street or public way on either street in a sum equal to one-half the value of the lot, it is -thereby estopped from assessing against the lot the cost of improving the street or public way on the other street, and that the charge for constructing sewers is to be treated as a part of the improvement of the street or public way in determining; the amount that may be assessed. While counsel for the city contends that the city has the power to charge a corner lot with the cost of street and public way improvements on each street to the extent of one-half the value of the lot; and in addition thereto with the cost of sewer construction.

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.W.2d 389, 157 Tenn. 624, 4 Smith & H. 624, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-oneida-v-pemberton-tenn-1928.