Williams v. Sewer Improvement District No. 86

22 S.W.2d 405, 180 Ark. 510, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 332
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 25, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 S.W.2d 405 (Williams v. Sewer Improvement District No. 86) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Sewer Improvement District No. 86, 22 S.W.2d 405, 180 Ark. 510, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 332 (Ark. 1929).

Opinion

Butler, J.

An improvement district was organized in the city of Hot Springs, Garland County, Arkansas, in the year 1926, designated as Sewer Improvement Dis.trict No. 86, for the purpose of constructing a system of sewers for the use of the inhabitants of said district, which district was perfected and completed in that year. The appellants are the owners of five lots in said district, fronting on Grove Street, along which the sewer was laid. The first installment of improvement assessments became due May 1, 1927, and in September, 1927, the appellants filed this suit, attacking the validity of the organization of the district and praying that the assessments made against their property be canceled and the officers and employees restrained from acting under said assessments.

The appellees filed an answer and cross-complaint, asking judgment against the property for the 1927 and 1928 installments of the assessments, for penalty of 20 per cent, and attorney’s 'fees, and that the property be sold to pay the delinquent assessments, etc. On the hearing the court dismissed the complaint of the appellants for want of equity on the ground that plaintiffs (appellants) “failed to begin legal proceedings within thirty days after the publication of the ordinance fixing the assessments of benefits in the said Sewer Improvement District No. 86, to correct or invalidate said assessments, and the plaintiffs are therefore barred and pre-. eluded from questioning said assessments or benefits, and that said Sewier Improvement District No. 86 of the city of Hot Springs is a duly -organized and existing local improvement district under the laws of the -State o-f Arkansas.” The court further found on defendants’ cross-complaint that the assessments for the years 1927 and 1928 were delinquent, and gave judgment against the property for the same, but failed to -give judgment for the statutory penalty and attorney’s fees. From this decree the plaintiffs (appellants) prosecute their appeal, and the defendants (appellees) prosecute a cross-appeal from that part of the decree eliminating the statutory penalty and attorney’s fees.

The appellants, for grounds for reversal, insist, first, that the district had not been properly formed, and that no petition of a majority of the owners of real property in Sewer Improvement District No. 8-6 was ever filed with the city council, or proof of the same offered or filed in this cause; second, that the district was formed and the improvements made and completed and the assessments levied on the property before any attempt of any kind had been made to establish the grades, as provided by law, and that no street grade was fixed by ordinance before the district was created and the contract was let; and fhird, that the assessments of benefits are invalid by reason -of the fact that the assessments are not made upon the benefits actually received, either present or future, but are based wholly on a foot-frontage basis.

The appellees, on their cross-appeal, insist that, as the court gave judgment against the property for the delinquent installments of assessments, it necessarily should have included in the judgment the twenty per cent, penalty provided by § 5673 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest, and attorney’s fees, as provided for in § 5678 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest, and on their cross-appeal pray that the judgment be corrected so as to include these items.

On the trial of the case it was agreed by the parties “that the improvement district was organized, perfected and completed in the year 1926; that no- ordinance establishing a grade on Grove Street was ever offered or passed until November 21, 1927, nor was the grade as provided by the statutes of the State of Arkansas ever established until November, 1927, and that the plaintiffs in the case are the owners of the property in controversy herein.” Certified copies of the records were introduced in evidence, showing that the first petition for the formation of the district provided for by § 5649 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest was filed and acted on by the city council by ordinance No................, entitled, “An ordinance laying off a portion of the city of Hot Springs into a sewer improvement district, to be known as Sewer Improvement District No. 86,” and that the petition of a majority of the landowners had been duly published. The council found that the'petition contained a majority in value of the owners of real property in said district, and afterward by resolution appointed assessors to assess the estimated benefits, which assessments were duly filed with the city council, and published in a newspaper published in said county for one month nest before the date of the first publication of the advertisement. There was no other evidence introduced relative to the filing of the initial petition, the second petition, or the assessments, and publication of notice thereof.

With the admissions made by the parties, and on proof of the filing of the initial petition and the record as to the action of the council with reference to the majority petition of the landowners and of the ordinance fixing the assessments and the publication thereof, the burden was on the appellants to prove noncompliance with the requirements of the statute necessary for the creation of the improvement district. In the case of Board of Improvement Dist. v. Carman, 138 Ark. 339-346, 211 S. W. 170, where it was contended that an improvement district for the construction of waterworks and electric lines were invalid, among other «things, because a majority of the property owners had not petitioned for tlie formation of the district, the court, in passing upon that question, said: “ It is very earnestly insisted that neither the initial nor the majority petition contained the requisite number of signers, and in support of this contention it is asserted that 'it does not affirmatively appear that all the testimony offered at the trial is included in the transcript, and that we must therefore indulge the presumption that omitted testimony would support a finding that the petitions did not contain the requisite number of signers.’ * * * The court below made no finding on the question of majorities, and it may be true, as counsel contends, that such a finding cannot be made from the record before us. But the districts are not to be defeated on that account. No burden rested upon the districts to show affirmatively that they had 'been established upon majority petitions. Under the statute the assessments of benefits could not have been levied as liens upon the lands within the districts until the precedent finding had been made by the town or city council that the improvements had been petitioned for by a majority of the_ property owners in the districts; and, while this finding was not conclusive, it was prima facie correct, and imposed the burden of showing that the districts had not been petitioned for by a majority of the property owners upon him who attacked the districts on that g-round. ”

Having failed to discharge this burden, it follows that the presumption must be indulged that the district was legally established. Moreover, the record of the ordinance and resolutions kept by the city clerk under the direction of the city council, and the by-laws and rules of the city, disclose the fact that the council found, on the 19th day of March, 1926, that a majority in value of the owners of real property in the district had signed a petition praying that the improvement be made, etc., and that the notice of said petition had been duly given.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.W.2d 405, 180 Ark. 510, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-sewer-improvement-district-no-86-ark-1929.