Von Damm v. Conkling

23 Haw. 487, 1916 Haw. LEXIS 51
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 24, 1916
DocketNo. 960
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 23 Haw. 487 (Von Damm v. Conkling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Von Damm v. Conkling, 23 Haw. 487, 1916 Haw. LEXIS 51 (haw 1916).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE JUSTICES BY

ROBERTSON, C.J.

The plaintiff in this case is a citizen, resident and taxpayer of this Territory and the owner of land situated in Manoa Improvement District No. 1, a residential section of the city and county of Honolulu. He purports to enter into this submission on behalf of all other citizens and taxpayers of said district, as well as on his own behalf, but no others have appeared. The defendant, as treasurer of the city and county of Honolulu, in furtherance of certain ordinances passed by the board of supervisors of the city and county and pursuant to a certain resolution of said board, proposes to prepare, issue, sell and deliver certain improvement bonds of the city and county, and this the plaintiff seeks to have enjoined. The plaintiff claims that the statute under which the municipal officials have proceeded is in conflict with the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution and section 55 of the Organic Act of this Territory; that the proceedings were not in conformity with the statute; and that the bonds, if issued, will be invalid. The improvement statute, comprising sections 1793 to 1813, of the Revised Laws, as amended in certain respects by Act 164 of the Session Laws of 1915, provides in substance, as follows: That whenever in the opinion of the board of supervisors of the city and county of Honolulu it is desirable to open, extend or widen, or to grade, pave, curb or otherwise improve any highway, such betterments or im[489]*489provements shall be made and done according to the provisions of the statute, and the cost thereof shall be assessed against the land benefited, either on a frontage basis or according to area, and, if the latter, the board of supervisors shall establish an improvement district, and the municipality may pay out of general revenue all or any part of the cost of acquiring any new land required, or of the improvement of a main or general thoroughfare (Sec. 1793); the board shall, by resolution, propose' the making of any such improvement, specifying the character and extent thereof and the proportion, if any, of the cost proposed to be borne by the municipality, the materials proposed to be used, and whether the cost is to be provided by assessment per front foot against the land abutting upon such highway or per square foot according to area of land within an improvement district, the general boundaries .of such district and sub-districts, if any, against which different proportions of the cost are intended to be charged, and directing the preparation of all necessary maps, plans, specifications, estimates and other details so as to show the total cost and the approximate share thereof that would be assessable against each parcel of land, and the part, if any, proposed to be borne by the municipality; and thereupon the board shall give notice by publication of all thereof to the owners, lessees and occupants of the lands proposed to be assessed or taken, and fixing a date and place when a public hearing will be had respecting the proposed improvements and a full opportunity given to all persons interested to present suggestions or objections to the proposed improvements or any part or detail thereof (Sec. 1794); if the owners of fifty-five per cent, of the total frontage or area to be assessed shall file a written protest against the making of the improvements or any part of the plan therefor the same shall not be made contrary to such protest (Sec. 1795); if sufficient protests have not been filed, and the board decides to [490]*490proceed with the plan without material change, it shall, by-resolution, create, define and establish the extent of the frontage or the improvement district to be assessed, define the kind, extent and details of the proposed improvements, declare the proportion of the cost which is to be borne by the municipality and the method of assessment determined on, and direct the preparation of a corrected map showing the exact location of the improvement and all details with final plans and specifications for the work, which shall be used as the basis for the calling for bids and awarding of contracts for doing the work (Sec. 1796); the owners of sixty per cent, of the frontage upon any highway or of the area of a proposed improvement district may by petition initiate such proceedings (Sec. 1797); all such improvements shall be constructed under contract let to the lowest responsible bidder after public advertisement for tenders; no bid shall be considered unless accompanied by a certified check, or its equivalent, for not less than ten per cent, of the amount bid, which shall be forfeited to the municipality unless the successful bidder shall sign the contract and furnish an approved bond for its faithful performance within ten days after the contract is awarded; and any other method of letting contracts shall be illegal and void (Sec. 1798); before the letting of any contract the board shall cause a corrected map to be prepared showing in detail the proportionate amount per front foot or per square foot, as the case may be, to be assessed against the property in the district, or sub-districts, if any, and a list of all known owners, lessees and occupants of the lands, and give notice by publication of the total amount of the cost of the improvement based upon the bid of the lowest responsible bidder, the maximum share per front foot or per square foot proposed to be charged to the district or sub-districts, and that the map may be seen and examined at the office of the city and county engineer, and fixing a date and place when a public [491]*491hearing will be had and the supervisors will sit as a board of equalization to receive complaints or objections respecting the method of apportionment, or respecting the proposed several assessments (Sec. 1799); after such hearing the supervisors shall proceed to make such changes as they may deem just and equitable in, or shall confirm, the first proposed assessment, and, upon reaching a final decision, shall fix by ordinance the portions of such cost to be assessed against the lands in the district and the owners thereof respectively (Sec. 1800). Then follow provisions for the giving of notice to the land owners of the assessments and when the same shall be payable; as to liens upon the lands for unpaid assessments; and the sale at auction of land for default in payment. Section 1808 provides that at any such sale the treasurer of the city and county shall bid for any property so to be sold the amount due on account of the unpaid assessment, and if the bid is the highest offer shall pay for the same in cash out of the general funds of the city and county, and receive a conveyance of such property in the name of the city and county. And there are provisions authorizing the issuance of interest bearing improvement bonds by the city and county to defray the cost of any such improvement, such bonds not being a charge against or payable out of the general funds of the municipality, but only the special fund composed of the moneys collected on account of assessments made for the improvement for which they are issued, and the municipality shall not otherwise guarantee payment of any such bonds. Section 1812 provides that no action or proceeding at law or in equity to review any act done or to enjoin the performance of any act proposed to be taken under the statute shall be maintained unless begun within thirty days after performance of the act or the passage of the resolution or ordinance complained of.

The agreed facts show that on May 17, 1915, the board [492]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 Haw. 487, 1916 Haw. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/von-damm-v-conkling-haw-1916.