Wey v. City of Hobart

1917 OK 361, 168 P. 433, 66 Okla. 175, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 169
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 10, 1917
Docket8031
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1917 OK 361 (Wey v. City of Hobart) 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
Wey v. City of Hobart, 1917 OK 361, 168 P. 433, 66 Okla. 175, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 169 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion by

HOOKER, C.

On August 11, 1914, a petition of ten citizens of the city of I-Iobart was presented to the mayor and eouncilmen of said city for the construction of a sidewalk along the east side of the property involved here, which petition was considered by the governing body of said city at that time, and a resolution adopted deeming the construction of the sidewalk necessary, and ordering the same constructed as prayed for, and thereupon the street commissioner of said city was directed to serve written notice of the action of said council upon the owners of the property as provided by ordinance. The governing body of the city of Hobart was the judge of the necessity for the construction of said sidewalk, and the same is not subject to review here.

The ordinance of said city under which the sidewalk in Question was constructed, among other things provides:

“That upon the filing of a petition-signed by ten or more citizens with the eouncilmen praying for the construction of a sidewalk, * * * the council, if in their judgment the same shall 'be necessary, shall order the same to be built.”

And section 4 thereof provides:

“That when the council shall have ordered any sidewalk to be built or repaired as provided in sections 3 and 4 of the ordinance * * * the street commissioner shall serve a written or printed, or partly printed and partly written, notice of the action of the council in making such order upon the owners or agent of each and every abutting-upon such sidewalk, said notice shall de-serme such lot by its block and number, and shall notify him of the cost of such sidewalk: that the council has ordered the same to be built or the cost of building it turned over to the street commissioner within ten days from the service of such DOtice or tax warrant for the actual labor and material to be used to which will be added the cost of publication will be issued and shall put a special assessment • against such lot. Such notice shall be served by delivering a copv thereof to the owner or agent or by leaving at the residence of such owner or agent with some person of twelve years of age or over and informing such person of the contests thereof. If no owner or agent be found, service may be made by publication of said notice for four weeks in a paper of general circulation in said city. The street commissioner shall make a return of such notice showing the person upon whom service was made and the manner of service and file the same in the office of -the city clerk. * * * ”

And section 6 thereof provides:

“If any such owner or agent of such lot shall fail to construct any such walk or place the amount required in the hands of the street commissioner within ten days after the service of such notice, the street commissioner shall report such fact to t>he council, whereupon tlie council shall contract with some person or persons to construct such sidewalk at a cost not excluding the actual cost of labor and material at the market price, used, which shall not be more than the amount stated in the notice, and issue a tax warrant against such lot for such mount to pay the same: Provided, such person or persons accept for constructing the same a tax warrant against such lot without said city becoming liable for the amount or any part thereof, and provided that said construction be under the supervision of the street commissioner.”

This court in the case of Strahan v. Town of Ft. Gibson, 44 Okla. 79, 143 Pac. 674, said:

“Where the authority of a board of trustees to order the construction of street intersections depends upon the filing of a petition by -ten or more citizens, the filing of snick. petition is jurisdictional, and the want of the filing1 of suc2i petition makes the whole proceeding void.”

Under the ordinance involved in this action, the filing of a petition as was done here by the ten citizens named therein, conferred upon the city of Hobart the authority to order the sidewalk in question constructed in the manner and form as provided by said ordinance.

The street commissioners of the city of Hobart in executing the notice provided for by the section of the ordinance above quoted, directed the same to one A. B. Wey, as the owner of the property involved here, and executed the same by delivering- a copy to the plaintiff in error, Helen G. Wey, the wife of A. B. Wey, she being a member of the family of A.*B. Wey over 12 years of age. The proof here discloses that Helen G. Wey was the owner of the property at the time the sidewalk in question was ordered constructed, and that she immediately, after the council ordered the construction of said sidewalk, had actual knowledge thereof, and had also had actual knowledge of the contents of said notice. Upon the failure of the owner of this property to construct the sidewalk as provided by the ordinance, a eon- *177 tract was let by the city to P. E. Wbeeler, .a contractor, to construct the same, and the said Wheeler thereupon made preparation to build said sidewalk and did build the same but, before doing so, the plaintiff in error, Helen G. Wey, objected to him and notified him. that she was not willing for said sidewalk to be constructed, and that if he did, it was over her protest and objection, and he would have to look to someone else for his pay, but the plaintiff in error did not seek to enjoin the construction of this sidewalk, but waited until the same was placed upon her property so that it was impossible to remove the same. And before the proceedings could be had by the governing body of the municipality to make the same a lien upon her property, she sought by injunction to prevent the levy and collection of the special tax, and urges two reasons why the same is illegal. First, that no notice was served upon her, as provided by the ordinance; second, that the contract was not let at the time and manner provided 'for in the advertisement, inasmuch as the governing body of said city had advertised- that a contract would be let on a certain day for the construction of this work, and that the same was not let until another date, on which date the governing body of said city had let the same at a higher rate than the actual cost necessary therefor.

It cannot be doubted from the record here that before the construction of the sidewalk the plaintiff in error had full knowledge of the contents of this notice, which was delivered to her for her husband as the supposed owner of the property in question, inasmuch as after (he delivery of this notice to her she acted thereupon by protesting and objecting to the supposed contractor against the construction of the sidewalk. The Supreme Court of Massachusetts in Beals et al. v. James et al., 173 Mass. 594, 54 N. E. 245, said:

“Although the notice was directed to the heirs of the estate, it was received by Beals, and he was the person who should have received it. He received it in time to appeal to the jury, and he had substantially the same notice and knowledge of the assessment as he would have had if the notice had been directed to him as trustee. He suffered no injury in this respect.”

And in Lawrence v. Nahant, 136 Mass. 477, it is said:

“The acts done were within the limits of a town way, which the plaintiff contends was not legally laid out, because no sufficient notice of the intention of the selectmen to lay it out had been given to him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 361, 168 P. 433, 66 Okla. 175, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wey-v-city-of-hobart-okla-1917.