State ex rel. Guye v. City of Seattle
State ex rel. Guye v. City of Seattle
Opinion of the Court
This is an action for a writ of mandamus to compel the city treasurer to permit relator to offset damages against an assessment for local improvements. Respondent, F. M. Guye, was, on December 26, 1906, the owner of a certain lot on Third avenue in the city of Seattle, a portion of which lot was taken in a proceeding instituted by said city on said date for the widening of Third avenue in said city, pursuant to ordinance No. 14845 of said city, and ever since said date respondent was, and now is, the owner of that part
After said assessment roll was so certified to the appellant Russell for collection, and before the roll became delinquent, Guye sought to offset the two accounts by tendering to the appellant Russell a duly certified transcript of his said judgment, showing due satisfaction thereof, and at the same time tendering to the appellant Russell said warrants Nos. 251 and 252 for cancellation, together with the sum of $1,187.84 in cash (said sum being the balance of said assessment remaining after offsetting the amount of his said award and costs) seeking thus to bring himself within the provisions of ordinance No. 10725 of the city of Seattle, which is set out in full in the
The material sections of the ordinance referred to are as follows:
“Section 1. Whenever, in condemnation proceedings prosecuted by the city of Seattle, compensation or damages, or both, are awarded to the owners thereof, and other persons interested in any real property taken or damaged, and an assessment upon property benefited is made to pay the whole or any part of the compensation or damages, or both, awarded in such proceeding, and any person or persons to whom such compensation or damages or both is made, also owns real property which is assessed in the same proceeding to pay the compensation and damages awarded in said proceeding, such person or persons may offset pro tanto, the amount of the compensation or damages, or both, awarded to such person or persons, against the assessment levied upon real property owned by such person or persons, in the manner herein provided.
“Section 2. Any person or persons wishing to offset an award of compensation or damages, or both, against any assessment, as provided in section one of this ordinance, shall receipt upon the execution docket of the court in which such award is made, and make satisfaction, on said execution docket, of the amount so sought to be made an offset; and*44 shall procure from the clerk of said court and present to the city treasurer a certificate under .the seal of the court specifying the amount of which satisfaction has been made on the execution docket, the date of such satisfaction, the number and a brief title of the proceeding, including the number of the ordinance under which said proceeding was prosecuted.
“Section 3. The city treasurer, upon receipt by him of the certificate provided for in section two of this ordinance, shall be and he is hereby authorized and directed to cancel such assessment upon the assessment roll, to the amount specified in said certificate, making suitable notation thereof upon the assessment roll.”
It is the contention of appellants that the respondent, by taking the warrants, waived his right to offset his allowance for damages against the assessment made upon his property, and that the city treasurer could not cancel the two warrants and permit the offset when requested so to do by appellants, as such transaction would amount to the paying of said warrants out of their order and in advance of other warrants theretofore issued against the same fund. We do not believe this position is tenable. These warrants are not regular city warrants. They are drawn solely against the fund collected for the payment of the damages allowed in the prosecution of this particular improvement. The purpose of the statute requiring that warrants upon the general fund shall be paid in the order of their issue is to guarantee the payment of a city’s indebtedness in the order of the incurring thereof. This is just and fair to its creditors. But in an instance like the one before us, all of the people whose property is taken or injured by this improvement stand as a matter of justice in the same position, and it could hardly be said that any one had, or was entitled to, preference over any other person to whom was due compensation by reason of such taking or injuring of property for the improvement in question.
Whatever might be said as to the order of precedence in the payment of warrants drawn upon this special fund, we do not think the contention of appellants can be sustained
We think the spirit of the ordinance will be observed by permitting this offset, and the judgment of the superior court is therefore affirmed.
Hadley, C. J., Fullerton, Crow, and Mount, JJ., concur.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.