Woodring v. Straup

143 P. 592, 45 Utah 173, 1914 Utah LEXIS 75
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1914
DocketNo. 2659
StatusPublished

This text of 143 P. 592 (Woodring v. Straup) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodring v. Straup, 143 P. 592, 45 Utah 173, 1914 Utah LEXIS 75 (Utah 1914).

Opinions

McCARTY, C. J.

This is an original application to this court for a writ prohibiting the board of trustees of the Town of Bingham Canyon from creating and levying a special tax to defray the cost of grading, curbing, paving, and otherwise improving a portion of Main Street in said town.

Defendants demurred to the petition on the ground that “no facts are shown by the said petition or writ sufficient to constitute a cause of action against these defendants or any of them.”

It is admitted that the Town of Bingham Canyon is a municipal corporation incorporated under Comp. Laws 1907, section 299. It is also admitted that petitioner, W: H. Wood-ring, is the owner of certain land abutting on Main Street that will be subject to the special tax about to' be created and levied. Under section 302x11, Sess. Laws- 1911, taxes for general corporation purposes are limited to^ iy2 per cent. It is admitted that the revenue derived from taxes collected for general purposes is wholly insufficient to enable the town to pave the streets or any substantial portion thereof. The case is therefore narrowed to the single question of whether [175]*175incorporated towns are given the power to create, levy, and collect a special tax h> defray the costs of paving or otherwise improving the streets1.

1 It is vigorously contended on behalf of petitioner that the statute neither expressly nor impliedly gives incorporated towns any such power. Defendants, on the other hand, invite attention to section 302x12, e. 123, Sess. Caws 1911, which, among other things, provides that towns acting through their boards of trustees shall have power “to la.y out, construct, open, grade, pave, and otherwise improve streets, lanes, alleys, sidewalks and crosswalks.” They also invite attention to section 302x18 of the same chapter, which provides that the board of trustees shall have power “to make, ordain, pass, establish, and enforce such ordinances and regulations, not repugnant to the laws of this state, for the purpose of carrying into effect the provisions of this title, as it may deem proper; and to repeal, alter, or amend the same at pleasure.” Counsel for defendants vigorously contend that, as section 302x12 in express terms gives incorporated towns the right to “pave and otherwise improve streets,” etc., and section 302x18 grants the power to make and enforce such ordinances and regulations as may be necessary to carry into effect the several provisions of the same chapter, the power to levy and collect special taxes lior street improvements, if not. expressly given, is necessarily implied. It is further argued that the “paving of streets is not a general corporation purpose,” and that • therefore the provisions of the act in question do not contemplate that the cost of paving streets shall be paid out of the funds derived from taxes levied and collected for general corporation purposes, but that special taxes shall be levied and collected to defray the cost of such improvements.

The statute providing for the incorporation of towns was first enacted in 1884 (see Sess. Laws 1884, p. 42), and, as occasionally amended, has been carried forward in the several revisions and compilations of the General Statutes until the present time. The provisions of sections 302x11, 302x12, and 302x18 are, so far as material here, suhstan-[176]*176tially as they were when first enacted. The paving of the streets is one of the things that an incorporated town may do, and hence is as clearly a' corporation purpose as any other act which a town is, under the statute, authorized to do. There is, however, no provision of the act as originally passed or as amended that empowers a town to- levy and collect a special tax to defray the cost of paving or otherwise improving streets. In 1888 (Laws 1888, c. 48) the Legislature passed a general law providing for the incorporation of cities, in which the powers of the city council are defined and .enumerated. The act provides, among other things, that the city council shall have power:

“3. To levy and collect taxes for general and special purposes on real and personal property. * * * 8. To lay out, establish, open, alter, widen, extend, grade, pave, or otherwise improve streets. * * * 12. To provide for the lighting, sprinkling and cleaning of the same. * * *■ 90. To pass all ordinances and make all regulations * * * necessary for the carrying into effect or discharging all powers and duties conferred by this act.”

Section 1799, vol. 1 (Comp. Laws 1888), p. 644, provided that:

“The city council are authorized and empowered to divide the city into districts for sewerage, paving, or other like purposes, * * * and * * * for making therein street improvements and repairs * * * and for the payment of the costs and expenses thereof, * * * levy and collect local taxes, in proportion to benefits, upon the property within said districts,” etc.

Salt Lake City, proceeding under the foregoing provisions of the statutes, established sprinkling districts and levied a special tax, or, as it is sometimes designated, a local assessment, to defray the cost of sprinkling streets within the districts. Parties owning property subject to the tax brought-suit to enjoin the city from collecting the same. This court, in a well-considered opinion (Pettit v. Duke, 10 Utah 311; 37 Pac. 568) held that the statute did not authorize -or empower the city to collect a special tax to defray the expense of sprinkling streets, and that the assessments made for that [177]*177purpose were illegal and void. The court, among other things, said:

“The Legislature has expressly conferred, upon the city power ‘to levy and collect taxes for general or special purposes on real estate and personal property’ and ‘for the lighting, sprinkling and cleansing of streets.’ 1 Comp. Laws, p. 621. It has also given the city power to levy taxes by local assessment for ‘sewerage, paving and other like purposes,’ including street improvements and repairs, waterworks, and gas mains. 1 Com.p. Laws, art. 15, pp. 644, 645. But the sprinkling of streets is not included in the enumeration of instances in which local assessments may be levied.”

The powers conferred upon cities to levy and collect taxes for corporation purposes are much broader — more comprehensive — than those granted to incorporated towns along that line. In the ease at bar the statute under which the legality of the special tax in question is defended and sought to be upheld does not authorize the levy and collection of special taxes for any purpose except “to lay out, construct, open and keep in repair canals, water ditches, or water pipes for irrigation, domestic or other use for the inhabitants of such towns (and) for the purpose of protecting the water that is used for culinary and domestic uses from pollution. ’'

2 The rule, as declared by the great weight of authority, is that, in determining whether the Legislature has granted to municipal corporations the power to levy and collect special taxes, the statutes under which it is claimed such power is conferred are strictly construed. In Suth. Stat. Const., See. 363, the author says:

“A due regard for individual rights and the plainest principles of justice requires that taxing statutes shall have only the effect which the Legislature clearly intended; in construing them all reasonable doubts as to such intent should be resolved in favor of the-citizen.”

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Related

Gassner v. McCarthy
116 P. 73 (California Supreme Court, 1911)
Pettit v. Duke
37 P. 568 (Utah Supreme Court, 1894)

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Bluebook (online)
143 P. 592, 45 Utah 173, 1914 Utah LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodring-v-straup-utah-1914.