Court Opinion

ID: 7133374
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:21:18.693105+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:32.585287
License: Public Domain

JUDGE HAZELRIGG
delivered tiie opinion of the court.
Whether the lot owners shall pay the cost of improving Shelby street in the city of Louisville, or whether said improvement must be at the expense of the city, is the chief question on this appeal.
*234The statutes provide that when the improvement is the original construction of any street, road, lane, alley or avenue such improvement shall be made at the exclusive cost of the owners of the lots; but when the improvement is the reconstruction of such streets, etc., the city is to pay the costs. The law seems to have been founded on the theory that for such original construction the lot owners should meet the expense because they are proportionately benefited; but that, when the owners have done this much, the city should thereafter maintain the way.
The street in question was originally a turnpike road leading into the city. By an act of the General Assembly, in 1868, the limits of the latter were extended so1 as to include a portion of the road, and it was thereafter a public way of the city and as such a few repairs were made on it.
In 1890, for the first time, an ordinance was passed looking to a radical improvement in the old road, and making it conform to the general street system prevailing in the city.
The carriage way of the street, from the center line of Meriwétber avenue, if extended, to the center line of Stonewall street, was to be thirty-six (36) feet in width, and be improved by grading and paving with macadam pavement, with corner stones at the intersections of streets and alleys, flagstone gutters, and footway crossings across all intersecting streets and alleys, all in accordance with the drawings and specifications on file in the city engineer’s office.
In our opinion this was an original construction of the street by the city within the meaning of the statute, and the costs should be borne by the lot owners.
It appears that the method of apportionment was based on the assumption that the contiguous property was not *235divided into squares by principal streets, and it is the appellant’s contention that the' property was in fact so divided, and that, therefore, the method applied was erroneous. While the record does not show clearly the situation of the property in this respect, the exhibits, maps, etc., seem to show no such division into, squares; but if it were otherwise, it does not appear that, under a different method of apportionment, the appellant would be required' to pay less than under,the method adopted.
It is further contended that the ordinance under which the work was done was not published’ as required by the charter.
Proper averment on this behalf is found in the petition, but this is denied by the answer, and there is no testimony on the subject.
The statute, however, disposes of this question by providing that copies of the ordinánce authorizing the improvement or work, a copy of the contract therefor and of the apportionment, each attested by the clerk of the board of councilmen, shall be proof of the due passage, approval and publication of the ordinance and prima facie evidence of every other fact necessary to be established by the plaintiff in actions to enforce such liens. And this statute was upheld in Zable v. Louisville Baptist Orphans’ Home, 92 Ky., 91.
The judgment is affirmed.