Webb v. City of Atlanta

198 S.E. 50, 186 Ga. 430, 1938 Ga. LEXIS 620
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 25, 1938
DocketNo. 12221
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 198 S.E. 50 (Webb v. City of Atlanta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webb v. City of Atlanta, 198 S.E. 50, 186 Ga. 430, 1938 Ga. LEXIS 620 (Ga. 1938).

Opinion

Hutcheson, Justice.

On October 22, 1936, L. K. Webb, J. E. Jackson, and J. E. Jackson Jr., brought a petition against the City of Atlanta and Eiley E. Elder as municipal-revenue collector of said city. The petition as amended contained substantially the following allegations: Petitioners are the owners of certain property located on Atlanta Avenue S. E., in said city, which street was paved under a certain plan hereinafter set out. “The City of Atlanta acting under its charter powers as contained in sections 183 and 301(a) [Atlanta City Code, 1924], caused said street to be repaved with a patent pavement' known as 'Wilhite paving/ which street was paved during the year 1924, and the resolution accepting said paving on the part of the City of Atlanta was adopted by general council” on November 3, 1924. “That by virtue of the ordinance accepting the pavement as complete the City of Atlanta acquired a lien upon the property of the petitioners, as provided by section 301 (s) [Atlanta City Code, 1924], which lien dated from November 3, 1924. Said lien is governed and controlled by sections 304 and 305 of City Code, 1924. Said liens when attached shall be levied and executed under the provisions of section 306 [City Code]. That, pursuant to the further provisions of the charter of the City of Atlanta, said street was paved with 'Wilhite5 pavement, notwithstanding a majority of the property owners in number and front footage had requested and signed a petition for concrete paving, and notice of concrete paving was served upon said property owners.55 The petition for Wilhite paving was circulated and the signatures obtained by a contractor after the bids were advertised for concrete paving, and said Wilhite paving was put down without bid or advertising for bids, and “said method of obtaining petitions is in violation of the charter of the City of Atlanta.” Notwithstanding the failure of the city to pave or cause to be paved said street with concrete, petitioners L. K. Webb and J. E. Jackson (acting for his wife, the then owner of certain of said property) agreed to accept said paving upon the assurance of a then member of city council and the then superintendent of construction of the city that said pavement was and would be as satisfactory and permanent as concrete pavement; and L. K. Webb paid, and J. E. Jackson caused Mrs. J. E. Jackson to [432]*432pay, one tenth of the assessed cost of said pavement against the respective properties levied upon in the instant case, and signed a series of notes covering the balance of said paving costs. Pursuant to the provisions of the charter, section 301(f), said pavement carried a guarantee by the contractor of workmanship and materials, for a period of five years from the date of completion. Said pavement did not last for the period required by the charter, but cracked and became broken before the five-year period elapsed, and said pavement was not and is not reasonably worth the price charged therefor and which petitioners agreed to pay. The failure of said pavement to remain unbroken and perfect was not the fault of the petitioners. The pavement is not and was not reasonably worth half the amount -which the petitioners agreed to pay therefor ; and having paid more than half of the agreed price, they have paid more than the pavement is and was worth.

Petitioners allege that they had a right to rely upon the statement of the superintendent of construction of the city, who by virtue of his office was in position to know the respective qualities of street-paving materials, or should have known them, and the failure of said paving to hold up “was a latent defect which could not be ascertained by defendants at the time they agreed to accept said paving in lieu of concrete paving, and that said latent defect was and is the cause of the -defective condition of said paving, and the contractor and the superintendent of construction, by virtue of their training and experience and knowledge of paving, should have known of its inferiority.” The City of Atlanta is required by its charter to require a contractor doing paving work to give a five-year guarantee; is under a duty to the property owners whose property is improved, to see that such guaranty is given, to supervise and inspect the work and approve it for final payment; the work is to be done under the supervision of the superintendent of construction; and if a contractor does paving imperfect or otherwise, it is the duty of said official to condemn the same in the name of the city'', and failing to do so the city is negligent and has been negligent in the instant case. The contractor attempted to repair said paving before the expiration of the five-year guarantee, by pouring the cracks in said pavement with tar or other soft substance; and notwithstanding the failure of said pavement to hold up as concrete pavement, the city carelessly and negligently, and [433]*433with, utter disregard of the rights of the property owners to receive a reasonably permanent paving equal in quality and durability to concrete, “accepted said pavement and continued to attempt to collect” therefor. For these reasons the petitioners refused to make any further payments on their assessments. Petitioners petitioned the street committee of said city to cancel said assessments; and notwithstanding the complete failure of said pavement to hold up as any reasonable pavement of the same cost would be expected to do, the defendants have levied fi. fas. upon the property of petitioners, and have advertised the same for sale on the first Tuesday in November, 1936. The fi. fas. were issued on September 23, 1926, 11 years, 10 months, and 20 days after the lien of the assessments attached to the property of the petitioners. No execution having been issued, and no public effort to enforce the lien of the assessment having been made within seven years from the accrual of the lien (November 3, 1924), the lien is dormant and can not be enforced. Although the defendants are required under the terms of the agreement (notes) and assessment (charter provisions) to proceed at once to collect the balance due, when the assessments due November 4, 1931, were unpaid, the defendants failed to issue a fi. fa. as required by law. The note or agreement (reciting its contents) was in accord with the provisions of the charter relating thereto. The petitioners allege that the liens, under the provisions of the charter, were as complete and full as if execution had issued and been entered on the general execution docket, on November 3, 1924, and that the failure of the defendants to issue and levy executions within the longest period of existence, that is before November 3, 1933, and immediately after the remaining installments of the asr sessments became due on November 3, 1931, rendered the lien dormant; and under the law as set out in the Code, §§ 92-7701, 92-7702, the city could not renew the lien after it had expired on November 3, 1933. Since the signing of the notes or agreement above referred to, Mrs. J. E. Jackson “has departed this life, and the property covered by the notes she signed at the direction of J. E. Jackson . . has become the property of J. E. Jackson and J. E. Jackson Jr., respectively, who assumed all the outstanding debts against said property.” An attack is made upon the constitutionality of City Code § 301 (s), the nature of which will more fully appear hereinafter. The prayers are for injunction and [434]*434cancellation. The court sustained demurrers and dismissed the petition. The petitioners excepted.

The first question to be determined is whether the lien of the assessments or the executions issued thereon are dormant.

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Bluebook (online)
198 S.E. 50, 186 Ga. 430, 1938 Ga. LEXIS 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-city-of-atlanta-ga-1938.