Wood v. City of Kalispell

310 P.2d 1058, 131 Mont. 390, 1957 Mont. LEXIS 127
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1957
Docket9788
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 310 P.2d 1058 (Wood v. City of Kalispell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. City of Kalispell, 310 P.2d 1058, 131 Mont. 390, 1957 Mont. LEXIS 127 (Mo. 1957).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES:

This is an appeal from a judgment and decree declaring .a special improvement district null and void and enjoining the defendants perpetually from .further proceedings in connection therewith.

Plaintiffs, some sixty-nine in number, filed suit against the City of Kalispell, its mayor, councilmen and city clerk asking that an improvement district be declared null and void and that the defendants be enjoined from proceeding with the creation of such special improvement district and from issuing and selling bonds connected therewith. After all pleadings were made, it was stipulated between the parties that the case be submitted on the pleadings inasmuch as there was no dispute as to the facts.

It appears that the defendants attempted to establish a special improvement district for the purpose of raising funds with which to participate with the state highway department in improving a city street, which is also a state highway, under the Federal Aid Road Act where the defendant city did not intend to award the contracts for the work to be done. It was admitted that the estimated cost of the proposed project was $440,-000, and that the defendant city was to participate in the cost to the extent of 25 percent, or $110,000.

*392 It was agreed that there were only two issues: (1) Did the City of Kalispell have jurisdiction to create the proposed special improvement district where notice of intention to create it was not mailed to all property owners in the district proposed to be assessed to pay the cost of the improvements? (2) Is a city empowered to participate in a federal aid highway program through use of special improvement district proceedings to raise the city’s share of the total cost of the improvements?

It was admitted in the pleadings that five persons who were the owners of property within the proposed special improvement district were not mailed notices of intention to create the district. Three of those five had signed waivers and consents to create the district. One other of the five did not participate in this action. Thus, so far as concerns this opinion, only one person, plaintiff Pettibone, out of the sixty-nine plaintiffs failed to receive notice. It appears from the record that notices were mailed to four hundred twenty-four property owners, but that the four hundred twenty-fifth one, plaintiff Pettibone, was not mailed a notice.

The reason why one property owner was not served does not appear, and it was assumed by counsel and the district court that it was either through inadvertence or mistake and not due to' any bad faith.

The trial court made a finding of fact that one property owner had not been mailed a copy of the notice required by law and pursuant to statute. Prom this finding, it made a conclusion of law that the formation of the proposed special improvement district was invalid.

The trial court also made a conclusion of law that there is no legal objection to the city forming a special improvement district as proposed in conjunction with the state highway commission and the Federal Bureau of Public Koads. On this latter conclusion, the plaintiffs, respondents herein, have cross appealed and cite this conclusion of law as error.

R.C.M. 1947, section 11-2204, in dealing with the establishment of special improvement districts provides in part: “ * * * *393 the council must give notice of the passage of such resolution of intention, which notice must be published for five days in a daily newspaper * * *” and then provides that “a copy of such notice shall be mailed to every person, firm, or corporation, or the agent of such person, firm, or corporation having property within the proposed district at his last known address, upon the same day such notice is first published or posted.”

The question presented on the first matter then is whether or not failure to mail notice to a single individual property owner, will cause a lack of jurisdiction for the municipality to proceed with the special improvement district.

This court in Billings Bench Water Ass’n v. Yellowstone County, 70 Mont. 401, 408, 225 Pac. 996, 998, said:

“The statute [a statute similar to R.C.M. 1947, section 11-2204J explicitly requires notice of the passage of the resolution of intention to create the district, to be given (1) by publication in a newspaper, (2) by posting of a copy of the notice in three public places within the boundaries of the proposed district, and (3) by mailing a copy of such notice to every person, firm or corporation having property within the district, at place of last lmown residence, ‘upon the same day such notice is first published or posted’. Nothing short of a strict compliance with all of these requirements will suffice.”

The court also states in that case, 70 Mont. at page 410, 225 Pac. at page 999: “And it is quite generally held that failure to give the notice prescribed b\ statute in the attempted creation of an improvement district deprives the county of jurisdiction to proceed, and a property owner is not estopped tO' deny the validity of an assessment, though he makes no objection until after the work is completed. Johnston v. City of Hardin, 55 Mont. 574, 179 Pac. 824; Cooper v. City of Bozeman, 54 Mont. 277, 169 Pac. 801.”

And in Scilley v. Red Lodge—Rosebud Irr. Dist., 83 Mont. 282, 304, 272 Pac. 543, 552, this court said in a case involving an irrigation district, “* * * the service of notice as prescribed is jurisdictional as to the determination of the benefits *394 to be derived and tbe inclusion of the particular lands in tbe district by reason of benefits derived, and, originally, the statutory requirements in this regard must be fully met before the court can proceed.” Citing Billings Bench Water Ass’n v. Yellowstone County, supra; In re Gallatin Irrigation District, 48 Mont. 605, 140 Pac. 92; Fallbrook Irrigation District v. Bradley, 164 U.S. 112, 17 S. Ct. 56, 41 L. Ed. 369.

From the above-quoted statements of this court, it would appear that service of notice in strict compliance with the statute was jurisdictional, and that until it was done no jurisdiction would attach to the municipality. However, in each of the cases quoted from, the fact situation was such that it applied to one owner only and did not invalidate the entire proceeding. In the Billings Bench Water Ass’n v. Yellowstone County case, the court observed that it was not an action to invalidate the entire district. The court held that service of notice was jurisdictional as to the sole owner who did not receive notice. In the Scilley v. Red Lodge — Rosebud Irr. Dist. case, the court found that the order of creation, in so far as it relates to the inclusion of plaintiff’s land (only), is void for want of jurisdiction.

It seems clear then, that as to the plaintiff, Pettibone, because of failure to mail the notice of intention as required by the statute, the defendants were without jurisdiction. But, this leaves unanswered the proposition of whether the municipality was without jurisdiction as to the subject matter itself, i. e., the improvement district, because of the failure to serve one property ■owner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
310 P.2d 1058, 131 Mont. 390, 1957 Mont. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-city-of-kalispell-mont-1957.