City of Omaha v. State ex rel. Metzger
City of Omaha v. State ex rel. Metzger
Opinion of the Court
In 1894 Fannie Croft, as trustee, held the legal title to a tract of land within the corporate limits of the city of Omaha. In that year, the city took tortious possession of a strip of such tract, for the purpose of widening one of its streets, without any proceedings to condemn the same as required hy la,w for the exercise of the right of eminent domain.
Afterward, said trustee brought an action, in the district court for Douglas county, against the city to recover’ damages for the wrongful appropriation of her property, in which she recovered a judgment for $874.66, and costs of suit. The judgment of the district court was affirmed by this court March 21, 1900. City of Omaha v. Croft, 60 Neb. 57. Afterward, and before the proceedings had for the levy of the special assessment hereinafter mentioned, the ownership of the judgment, and the title to the tract of land, less the strip appropriated by the city, passed to a third party, who in turn assigned the judgment to the relator in this case.
On the 11th day of April, 1901, the city council, by resolution, directed the city engineer to prepare a plan of assessment to pay the judgment, and submit the same to the city board of equalization. The city engineer prepared and submitted a plan, which contemplated a levy of a special assessment against the tract of land from which the strip was taken, of $874.66, the full amount of the damages recovered in the action hereinbefore mentioned. The plan was adopted by the city council, and, on the 13th day of June, 1901, a special assessment in the sum of $874.66 was accordingly equalized and levied against the tract of land in question. The assessment was never paid.
Afterward, the city paid into court the costs arid in
The trial court found all the issues in favor of the relator, “except upon the issue raised pertaining to the. validity of the special assessment and levy,” hereinbefore mentioned, and granted the writ as prayed. The respondents bring the case here on error.
The only question presented in this case is, whether the relator is required to look to the fund sought to be raised by the special assessment, above referred to, for the payment of the remainder due on his judgment. The respondents contend that he is, and, in support of that contention we are cited to the following provisions of chapter 12a, Compiled Statutes (Annotated Statutes, 7456-7626) :
“Sec. 7. Lands, houses, moneys, debts due the city, and property and assets of every description belonging to any city governed by this act, shall be exempt from taxation, execution and sale; judgments against said city shall be paid out of the judgment fund or when a special fund is created for such purpose, out of such special fund.”
“Sec. 158. The council shall have power, and is hereby authorized, to assess the damages awarded or recovered for grading, change of grade, or for the appropriation of private property, upon the lots and lands benefited, which shall abut or be adjacent to the street, avenue or alley graded,*32 or for the Opening, extending or widening of which, private property-shall be appropriated, or on which the grade shall _ be'changed/and in case of the appropriation of land for the widening of a street, avenue or alley, the council may consider for the purpose of determining benefits and equalizing-such assessment, whether any portion of the street, avenue or alley had been previously donated from any lot oí* piece of land abutting or adjacent thereto.”
It is insisted that' the “special fund” referred to in sec-' tion 7, includes the assessments levied in pursuance' of section 158 for'damages for the appropriation of. private property.' We find ourselves unable to accept that cónstruct!on.' Section 158 does not provide for a special assessmeiit to pay the owners of property appropriated the amount awarded or recovered by them therefor, but merely authorizes' the city council to assess the amount, so awarded or-recovered, against the abutting or adjacent ’property.' In other words; instead of authorizing a special ¿ssessin'ent for the payment of damages awarded the owners of the property appropriated, it simply provides a means'Whereby the city may reimburse itself, in whole or in part, for the amount it may expend in payment of such damages. '• • •
- That this is the true construction is clear, we think, from other provisions of the city charter. Section 29 prescribes the manáér in Avhich the city may exercise the right of eminent domain, and'for an aAvard of damages to the owners of the7 property sought to be appropriated. It also makes the payment of the amount aAvarded, or a deposit thereof With the city treasurer, a condition precedent, to the appropriationof the property. Section 30 provides' -for'an'appeal by the owner of the property from the award, and that'such appeal shall' not delay the taking of the property by the city. If it be true, that the fund created by the levy, authorized by section 158, is a special fund far* the payment to the-owners-of property of the damages ■awarded or recovered by them therefor, then such assess- ■ ment .and le-vy, of necessity, must precede- an approphia
The respondents insist that the present owner of the land in question who assigned the judgment to the relator is bound, in equity and good conscience, to pay the special assessment, and, inferentially, that the relator stands in no better position than would such assignor had this proceeding been brought on his relation; consequently, that he is in no position to complain because, upon the payment of the special assessment, the fund thereby sought to be created would be sufficient to pay the warrant drawn
The judgment of the district court was right, and we recommend that it be affirmed.
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- City of Omaha v. State of Nebraska, ex rel. Alphonse Metzger
- Status
- Published