Court Opinion

ID: 3243016
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:15:59.554987+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:40.519121
License: Public Domain

The judgment in this case was rendered February 16, 1925. Within the time allowed by law, motion was made to set aside the judgment and for a new trial. This motion was regularly continued from time to time, until April 24, 1925, when judgment was entered overruling the motion, and on May 23d following an appeal to this court was perfected. It is now insisted that to give this court jurisdiction the appeal must have been perfected within 30 days from rendition of the original judgment. To sustain this position we are cited to section 2211, Code 1923, providing for appeals from judgments of the kind here considered. We are not in disagreement with the decisions in Lewis v. Martin, 210 Ala. 401, 98 So. 635, Snider v. Funderburk, 209 Ala. 663, 96 So. 928, and other authorities cited by appellee, but the filing of the motion for new trial in accordance with rule 22, Circuit Court Rules, 4 Code 1923, p. 901, its regular continuance from day to day, had the effect of suspending the judgment until the determination of the motion. Florence C.  I. Co. v. Field, 104 Ala. 471,16 So. 538.
It is next insisted that no sufficient exception is reserved to the action of the court in overruling the motion for new trial. This contention is not tenable. The motion is set out in extenso in the record, it was not necessary to have again copied it in the bill of exceptions. When the motion is so set out, all that is necessary is for the bill of exceptions to show a ruling on the motion and an exception reserved. Wood 
Pritchard v. McClure, 209 Ala. 523, 96 So. 577; Grand Bay L. Co. v. Simpson, 202 Ala. 606, 81 So. 548; Sansom v. Covington County Bank, 17 Ala. App. 556, 87 So. 406.
The appeal in this case is from a judgment of the circuit court of Jefferson county, determining and fixing the amount of the increased value of defendant's property, by reason of special benefits derived from street improvements adjacent thereto, under statutes authorizing the improvements and the assessments of the amounts to the property adjacent.
In this character of proceeding it is not necessary to file a complaint; the transcript being equivalent to a formal complaint. Code 1923, § 2209.
Acting under the powers conferred on municipalities by article 26, c. 32, of the Code of 1907 (sections 1359-1420), the commissioners of the city of Birmingham prepared to make certain improvements as to Twenty-Eighth *Page 343 
Street, Ensley, and to levy assessments against the adjacent property to pay for the costs thereof. On February 6, 1923, acting under section 1366 of the Code of 1907, an ordinance was adopted fixing the grade of the street which was proposed to be improved. This ordinance seems to be in all things regular. Following this ordinance, an ordinance was on the same day adopted providing for the improvement therein described, the authority for which is found in section 1359, Code 1907. This ordinance appears to be in all things regular. In this ordinance it was provided (section 3 [c]):
"That no assessment shall exceed the costs of such improvements or the increased value of such property by reason of the special benefits derived from such improvements."
Section 4 of the ordinance fixed the estimated costs of the improvements, and February 27th was fixed as a day for hearing protests from interested parties. On February 27, 1923, at a meeting of the commission, called as above noted, no protest being filed, the former ordinance was ratified. Bids were advertised for by publication as required, and on March 20, 1923, the contract for the improvement was let at the contract price of $5,561.25. Then follows a notice to property owners of the time and place when assessments will be determined, and on the day and date set the commission in regular meeting passed a resolution reciting the several ordinances formerly passed relative to the improvement, the letting of the contract, the actual cost of the improvements, the hearing of the protest as to assessments by several property owners, among whom were these defendants, a ratification of former ordinances, a fixing of the aggregate amount, and a detailed assessment to each of the abutting property owners.
An appeal was taken by appellants here from the finding of the commissioners to the circuit court, and from a judgment in that court this appeal is taken. The issues presented in the circuit court were: (1) Whether or not the amount assessed against the property was in excess of the cost of the work. (2) Whether or not the amount assessed was the true increased value of the property, by reason of the special benefits derived from the improvements. Hood v. City of Bessemer, 213 Ala. 225,104 So. 325.
On the trial, a transcript of all proceedings before the commission, duly certified and identified, was introduced in evidence, which was prima facie evidence of the correctness of such assessment, and that said property and persons, including defendants, are justly indebted to the city for the amount here claimed. Code 1923, § 2208.
On the trial, defendant offered to introduce the contract of Fromhold  Kessler, made in compliance with their bid and the bond given by them to indemnify the city against loss. This evidence was objected to by the city, the objection sustained, and exception duly reserved. The only purpose of this evidence was to show the price at which the contract for the work had been let, while the real inquiry was, what had the work actually cost. This evidence, had it been admitted, would have introduced issues into the case entirely foreign to any that could be legally adjudicated here. As to the price at which the contract was let, that fact was set out in the transcript filed by the city, and was in evidence for whatever it was worth, but the cost of the work as ascertained by the commissioners could not be impeached by proof of contingent claims arising on an indemnifying bond, unless defendants had gone further and offered to prove that some amount had actually been collected from the indemnifying bond, to be applied to a reduction of the cost of construction. It is perfectly clear that a municipality will not be permitted to charge or assess against the abutting property a greater amount than the actual cost of the improvements made, and yet we must recognize that in the making of improvement contracts and the assessing of the cost against abutting property the city authorities act in the capacity of legislators, judges, and executives. The ascertainment of the cost of the improvements requires judicial action, involving, it may be, many items of construction arising during the execution of the work. Code 1907, § 1365. According to the record this was done, and the findings of the commissioners are presumptively correct. The amount of the contract price was already in evidence, and the additional fact of an indemnifying bond, without more, would not tend to impeach the findings of the commissioners.
In urging first, eleventh, and twelfth assignments of error, appellants base their contention upon the statement that there is a failure to show that a proper grade had been established or an assessment roll had been prepared. As to these contentions it is sufficient to call attention to the ordinance fixing the grade, approved February 6, 1923, notice to property owners, May 3, 1924, the final resolution of the commissioners, May 27, 1924, setting out detailed assessment roll, and the findings of facts in the resolution. The final resolution of May 27th, supra, had the effect of supplying and correcting any defects in former orders, ordinances, assessments, etc. Code 1923, § 2195 (Code 1907, § 1380).
The contentions as to the second and ninth assignments are based upon the assumption that the city had failed to show that the grade for the street had been established prior to the letting of the work. As has heretofore been seen, the grade was established by the ordinance of February 6, 1923. Any other grade was irrelevant.
The statement that the sidewalk was not high enough anywhere was a conclusion *Page 344 
of the witness Cox, and was properly excluded. Whether a storm sewer would have prevented water from standing on the sidewalk was immaterial. Whether or not the construction of a storm sewer would have improved the drainage conditions on this particular piece of work was immaterial and irrelevant.
It was not competent to prove by the witness Webb what he had assessed against the abutting property belonging to the city. No such duty rested on Webb. The assessment roll fixing values and assessments by the commission was in evidence, and was conclusive on this point.
The fifth assignment of error is not well taken. The question involved here is not the general increase in property values by reason of the work being done. The inquiry is confined to the increased value of property against which the cost of improvement is assessed, by reason of the special benefits derived from the improvements. Const. 1901, § 223.
The fourth assignment is not well taken. The reason why a sale of the property failed of consummation would not be relevant.
The city proceeded to the improvements of Twenty-Eighth street in accordance with the statutory requirements; each step necessary to the carrying out of the purpose designed was taken. The contract was let, the amount of cost ascertained, due and legal notices given, objections and protest heard and determined, and assessments made as required by law. A full record of all proceedings duly certified was filed in this cause and introduced in evidence under authority of sections 2208 and 2209 of the Code of 1923, becoming thereby the pleadings and prima facie proof of the city's case. In addition there was other evidence tending to prove that the commissioners had properly ascertained and assessed the amount against defendant's property not in excess of the increase of defendant's property by reason of the special benefits derived from the improvement. We would not be warranted in holding that the trial court committed error in refusing to grant the motion for a new trial.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.