Weaver v. City of Chickasha

1912 OK 783, 128 P. 305, 36 Okla. 226, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 845
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 26, 1912
Docket2246
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 1912 OK 783 (Weaver v. City of Chickasha) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weaver v. City of Chickasha, 1912 OK 783, 128 P. 305, 36 Okla. 226, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 845 (Okla. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion by

BREWER, C.

This is a suit by M. Weaver ■and other property owners in Improvement District No. 5 of the •city of Chickasha, and is brought to set aside an assessment levied on the lots of plaintiffs in such district. It was filed in the district court of Grady county October 7, 1909. The plaintiffs in error here were the plaintiffs below, and the parties will be referred to herein as they were known in the trial court. At •a trial on the 3d day of November, 1910, the court at the close of all the testimony sustained defendants’ demurrer to the evidence. On November 4, 1910, the court overruled the motion for •a new trial, and the plaintiffs appeal to this court.

The facts material to this inquiry briefly stated are: Improvement District No. 5 embraces a number of streets in the •city of Chickasha. On October 23, 1908, the city council passed •a resolution declaring the necessity of improving and grading the ■streets embraced in that district. This resolution was properly •published for six days beginning October 25, 1908. On November 19th following the city council passed a second resolution reciting the passage and publication of the first one, and that no ■sufficient protests against the proposed improvement had been ■filed, and that bids for 'said work should be called for. The city-engineer made plans and specifications for, and an estimate of, the costs of such improvement, filing same with the city clerk. Bids were advertised for, and on December 3, 1908, the bids received were opened and the contract awarded to the defendant Heman, who proceeded to improve and grade the streets according to the plans and specifications of the city engineer, under his •contract. On April 23, 1909, H. B. Spender, Elmer Terrell, and Ben Hampton were appointed to appraise and apportion the *229 benefits of the improvements to the various lots and parcels of land in the improvement district. These appraisers performed their work, and on June 15, 1909, filed with the city council their appraisement and apportionment. The city council set July 1, 1909, at 3:30 p. m. as the date for hearing complaints and objections by property owners in such improvement district to the appraisement and apportionment so made. Notice of the time and place of hearing such protests and objections were published in the Chickasha Daily Express, a daily newspaper, published and of general circulation in the city of Chickasha, on the 19th, 31st, 33d, 33d, and 34th day of June, 1909. On the day named in such notice, July 1, 1909, at 3:30 p. m., the plaintiffs through their spokesman, Mr. Weaver, appeared before the city council, and presented and demanded a hearing upon the following written protest:

“To the Honorable Board of Mayor and Aldermen of Chickasha, Oklahoma — Gentlemén: We the undersigned hereby enter our protest against levying or collecting of any taxes whatever on the streets described by the published copy hereto attached. We deem same injurious to said streets and of no use or benefit whatever. We desire to state that we will resist any and all payment of any kind or nature. Respectfully submitted. [Signed] M. Weaver and by twenty-nine other names.”

The notice referred to in this paper was the one published by the city clerk fixing the time and place for hearing objections to the appraisement and apportionment theretofore filed by the .appraisers.

The plaintiffs contend that the assessment made against their property under above proceedings is void: (1) That the council refused to hear and consider the protests of plaintiffs; (3) because the contract was let for a price greatly in excess of that for which the work could have been done; (3) that the report ■of the appraisers was not filed within ten days after their appointment ; (4) that the notice fixing the time for protests against the apportionment was not published for five successive issues of a daily newspaper as required by law.

1. No charge of fraud or collusion is made in this suit against the officers and agents of the city or the contractors. *230 No charge of irregularity is urged relative to any of the proceedings of the council from the preliminary resolution of the necessity of the, improvement up to the filing of the report of the appraisers showing the appraisement and apportionment of the cost of the work upon the various individual lots and parcels of land in the district. No protest or objection to making the improvement was filed, as the parties had the right to do under the law; but, instead, the various resolutions were pissed and published, the contract was let on competitive bidding, and the improvement and grading was permitted to proceed without objection, until it was nearing completion, when the paper set out above was filed as a protest. The protest was filed under section 726, Comp. Laws 1909, which provides, in substance, that, a's soon as the cost of the improvement is ascertained, the council shall appoint a board of appraisers to appraise and apportion the benefits to the lots and tracts of land liable for the cost of the construction of the improvements; and that, when such board shall have completed its work, it shall return and file its report thereof with the city clerk. When this is done, the act further provides that the mayor and council shall thereupon “appoint a time for holding a session on some day to be fixed by them to hear any complaint or objections that may be made concerning the appraisement and apportionment as to any of such lots or tracts of land, and notice of such session shall be published by the city clerk in five successive issues of a daily newspaper or two issues of a weekly newspaper published and of general circulation in said city,” etc. The mayor and council at said session “shall have the power to review and correct said appraisement and apportionment and to raise or lower the same, as to any lots or tracts' of land as they shall deem just, and shall, by resolution, confirm the same as so revised and corrected by them. * * * ” This provision does not authorize or contemplate such a protest, or such objections as were filed in this case. The protest was “against levying or collecting any taxes whatever” because “we deem same injurious to- said streets, and of no use or benefit whatever.” And it closes by saying: “We will resist any and all payments of any kind or nature.” (Italics ours.) .

*231 The complaints or objections of property owners to be heard by the council at this stage of the proceedings were such as concerned an equitable and just distribution of the total cost of the improvements, according to benefits received, upon the various lots and tracts of land affected. If one proprietor owned all the lots, it might be quite immaterial about the distribution; but where the lots, to be in the aggregate charged with this total cost, are owned by different individuals, then it always is a question of deep individual concern, as to the apportionment or distribution upon the various lots of this total cost of improvement.

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Bluebook (online)
1912 OK 783, 128 P. 305, 36 Okla. 226, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weaver-v-city-of-chickasha-okla-1912.