Court Opinion

ID: 7135276
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:23:16.321878+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:36.419462
License: Public Domain

*440Opinion of the court bt
JUDGE PAYNTER
Affirming.
The only question involved here is as to whether or not the cost of the improvement of Zane street, between Fifth and Sixth streets, by original construction of the carriageway by grading, paving, and curbing the same, should be apportioned in accordance with section 2835, Kentucky Statutes, 1899, or under the act approved March 19, 1898 (Sess. Acts 1898, p. 120, c. 48), which went into effect June 19,-1898, and which act is amendatory of the act of which the section to which reference is made is a part. Under the law before the passage of the act of 1898, the cost of curbing in. the improvement by original construction of the carriageway was to be charged only against the owners of lots in front of which the curbing was placed, except the owners of corner lots were chargeable with the cost of curbing their sidewalk intersections; and, if a corner lot had a 30-foot front, and extended back to the depth of the territory assessed, its owner was chargeable with 25 per cent, more than the owners of lots of the same size within the taxing district. By the amendment the cost of grading and curbing, when a part of the improvement by original construction of a carriageway, should be apportioned against the ownfers of lots in the quarter squares contiguous to the improvement, and according to the number of .square feet owned by each. The owners of corner lots in quarter sections are not required to pay for the intersections and the 25 per cent, more than other lot owners. In other words, under the amendment the curbing constitutes part of the cost of the construction of the street, not of the sidewalk. The ordinance under which the improvement was made was passed June 6, 1898, and reads as follows: “That the carriageway of Zane street, from the west line of Fifth or Pope street, to the east line of *441Sixth street, shall be thirty feet wide, and shall be improved by grading, curbing and paving with vitrified brick or block pavement, with corner stones at the intersections of the streets and alleys, and footway crossings across all intersections, streets and alleys, in accordance with the plans and specifications on file in the office of the board of public works. Said work shall be done at the cost of the owners of ground as provided by law, and all ordinances in conflict herewith be and the- same are hereby repealed.” It will be observed that it was passed after the enactment of the amendment, but before it took effect. So the section to which we have referred was in force when the ordinance was passed. The city did not enter into the contract for the improvement of the street until after the amendment took effect. The court below held that the apportionment should be made under the statute as it stood at the time the ordinance was adopted. For the appellant it is insisted that, as the contract was not made for the improvement until the amendment took effect, the cost should have been apportioned under the statute as amended.
The ordinance was passed with reference to the statute then in force. It did not provide how the cost of the improvement should be apportioned, but simply provided that it should be done in the manner- fixed by the statute. It is not the province of the general council by ordinance or otherwise to further prescribe the method for apportioning the cost of the improvement. When it ordered the improvement, the statute prescribed the method of apportionment. The ordinance was the basis for the contract for the improvement, the execution of it, and the apportionment of the cost. The ordinance and statute then in force fixed the liability on the owners of lot's fronting on the improve*442ment and the method of apportioning the cost of it. Whilst it might have been immaterial to the contractor as to which method was employed in the apportionment, because he would probably have received his money in any event, it, however, is a matter of great importance to some of the owners of lots chargeable with the cost of improvenent to have the liability enforced only as fixed by law at the time the ordinance was passed. The exact question here was under consideration in Cincinnati v. Seasongood, 46 Ohio, 296, 21 N. E., 630. It was held in that case, as a municipal corporation, by its proper boards and officers, passed a resolution and ordinance, the assessment of the cost should be governed by the law in force at the time of their passage; that a subsequent change in the law could not affect the question of apportionment of the cost. The court took the view that the ordinance was passed with reference to existing rights and liabilities.. In considering a similar question, Elliott on Roads & Streets, section 552, says: “Rights acquired in such a case by contract and by proper ordinance should not be impaired by subsequent legislation.” There is no clause in the amendment indicating that the General Assembly intended the amendment should act retrospectively. It is urged that the General Assembly had the right to repeal the ordinance in question. It is a sufficient answer to say it manifested no purpose to do so. Besides, section 465, Ky. St., 1899, provides, that: “No new law shall be construed to repeal a former law . . . as to any act done ... or any right accrued or any claim arising under former law.” The passage of the ordinance was an act done, and when done the rights of the lot owners as to the cost of the improvement were fixed. Hence the rule for the construction of statutes pre*443scribed by tbe General Assembly shows that it was not intended to affect any rights which had been fixed by ordinance and statutes then in force.
The judgment is affirmed.
Petition for rehearing by appellant overruled.