On motion to dismiss or affirm, it is only necessary to print so
much of the record as will enable the court to act understandingly
without referring to the transcript.
The party objecting that enough of the record is not printed to
enable the court to act understandingly, on a motion to dismiss
should make specific reference to the parts which he thinks should
be supplied.
The Kentucky statute of March 24, 1582, which authorizes the
city government of Louisville to open and improve streets and
assess the cost thereof on the owners of adjoining lots, does not
deprive such owners of their property without due process of law,
and does not deny them the equal protection of the laws, and is not
repugnant to Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States.
When, on a motion to dismiss a writ of error or an appeal for
want of jurisdiction or affirm the judgment below, it appears that
there was color for the motion to dismiss and that the contention
of the plaintiff in error or the appellant has been often pressed
upon the court and as often determined adversely, the motion to
affirm will be granted.
These were motions to dismiss or affirm under Rule 6, Paragraph
5, 108 U.S. 575. The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 128 U. S. 579
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Judgment was rendered in the Louisville Chancery Court in favor
of the defendants in error in the first of the above-named causes,
directing the enforcement of a lien given by a statute of the
Commonwealth of Kentucky approved March 24, 1882, entitled "An act
to amend the charter of the City of Louisville," by a sale of
certain lots in the City of Louisville owned by plaintiffs in
error, to pay the amounts assessed against such lots for a local
improvement, and, upon appeal, was affirmed by the Court of Appeals
of Kentucky. In the second case, which arose upon another local
improvement, but involves the same questions here, the Louisville
Chancery Court denied the defendants in error relief because in its
opinion the proceedings for the improvement had not been properly
taken, but the Court of Appeals reversed the judgment of the
chancellor and remanded the cause "with directions to enforce the
lien and for proceedings consistent with the opinion herein, which
is ordered to be certified to said court."
Writs of error were thereupon prosecuted to this Court, to
dismiss which motions are now made, united with motions to affirm
under the rule.
A preliminary objection is raised that defendants in error
should have caused the entire record to be printed. But we only
require the printing of so much of the record as will enable us to
act understandingly without referring to the transcript, and if, in
the judgment of counsel opposing the motions, more in that respect
was needed, he might have made such specific reference thereto as
would have enabled counsel for the moving parties to have supplied
it. As the cases stand, we have apparently been furnished with
quite enough for the disposition of the questions involved.
The parts of the statute necessary to be considered upon these
motions are as follows:
"§ 1. 'Public ways,' as used in this act, shall mean all
public streets, alleys, sidewalks, roads, lanes, avenues, highways,
and thoroughfares, and shall be under the exclusive management
Page 128 U. S. 580
and control of said city, with power to improve them by original
construction and reconstruction thereof as may be prescribed by
ordinance. 'Improvements,' as applied to public ways, shall mean
all work and material used upon them in the construction and
reconstruction thereof, and shall be made and done as may be
prescribed either by ordinance or contract, approved by the general
council."
"§ 2. When the improvement is the original construction of
any street, road, lane, alley, or avenue, such improvement shall be
made at the exclusive costs of the owners of lots in each fourth of
a square, to be equally apportioned by the general council
according to the number of square feet owned by them respectively,
except that corner lots (say thirty feet front, and extending back
as may be prescribed by ordinance) shall pay twenty-five percent
more than others for such improvements. Each subdivision of
territory bounded on all sides by principal streets shall be deemed
a square. When the territory contiguous to any public way is not
defined into squares by principal streets, the ordinance providing
for the improvement of such public way shall state the depth on
both sides fronting said improvement to be assessed for the cost of
making the same according to the number of square feet owned by the
parties respectively within the depth as set out in the ordinance.
A lien shall exist for the cost of original improvement of public
ways, . . . for the apportionment, and interest thereon at the rate
of six percent per annum, against the respective lots, and payments
may be enforced upon the property bound therefor by proceedings in
court, and no error in the proceedings of the general council shall
exempt from payment, after the work has been done, as required by
either the ordinance or contract, but the general council, or the
courts in which suits may be pending, shall make all corrections,
rules, and orders to do justice to all parties concerned. . .
."
"§ 4. . . . When improvements in public ways have been made
. . . and the contract therefor completed, the city engineer shall,
by one insertion in one of the daily newspapers published in
Louisville, give notice of the time and
Page 128 U. S. 581
place fixed for the inspection and reception of the work by the
city engineer, or either of his assistants or deputies, and such
owners, their agents and representatives, may appear and be heard
before such engineer, his assistant or deputy, as to whether such
improvements have been made in accordance with the ordinance
authorizing the same, and the contract therefor."
1 Kentucky Session Laws 1881, 990.
In accordance with the provisions of this act, the local
improvements in question were made and warrants issued for the sums
apportioned against each of the lots belonging to plaintiffs in
error as their share of the cost, to Joseph Nevin, the contractor,
one of the defendants in error, who assigned them to Samuel B.
Richardson, the other, and they brought the actions.
The plaintiffs in error set up in their pleadings and insisted
in the trial court that the act of the General Assembly, so far as
it authorized the cost of the improvements of streets and other
ways to be assessed against the owners of lots and gave a lien
thereon in the manner therein provided, and all the proceedings
thereunder, were in conflict with section one of the Fourteenth
Amendment to the Constitution of the United States as amounting to
a deprivation of property without due process of law and a denial
of the equal protection of the laws. The statute has been
repeatedly before the Kentucky Court of Appeals, which has
sustained it as constitutional and proper legislation, the powers
vested thereby in the local government being subjected to the
supervision of the courts,
"where the particular facts in each case can be examined and the
controversy determined by those rules and principles which have
always governed courts in dealing with questions of assessment and
taxation."
Preston v. Roberts, 12 Bush 570, 587;
Beck v.
Obst, 12 Bush 268;
Broadway Baptist Church v. McAtee,
8 Bush 508, 516. Unjust, unequal, or arbitrary burdens are not
authorized to be imposed by the terms of the act, and opportunity
is given to every party interested to be heard in opposition to the
enforcement of the liability in the courts, which are specifically
authorized to "make all corrections, rules, and orders to do
justice to all parties concerned."
Page 128 U. S. 582
In
Davidson v. New Orleans, 96 U.
S. 104, it was held by this Court, MR. JUSTICE MILLER
delivering the opinion,
"that whenever, by the laws of a state or by state authority, a
tax, assessment, servitude, or other burden is imposed upon
property for the public use, whether it be for the whole state or
of some more limited portion of the community, and those laws
provide for a mode of confirming or contesting the charge thus
imposed, in the ordinary courts of justice, with such notice to the
person, or such proceeding in regard to the property, as is
appropriate to the nature of the case, the judgment in such
proceedings cannot be said to deprive the owner of his property
without due process of law however obnoxious it may be to other
objections. . . . It is not possible to hold that a party has,
without due process of law, been deprived of his property when, as
regards the issues affecting it, he has, by the laws of the state,
a fair trial in a court of justice according to the modes of
proceeding applicable to such a case."
And the conclusion was reached that neither the corporate agency
by which the work is done, the excessive price which the statute
allows therefor, nor the relative importance of the work to the
value of the land assessed, nor the fact that the assessment is
made before the work is done, nor that the assessment is unequal as
regards the benefits conferred, nor that personal judgments are
rendered for the amount assessed, are matters in which the state
authorities are controlled by the federal Constitution. So the
determination of the taxing district and the manner of the
apportionment are all within the legislative power.
Spencer v.
Merchant, 125 U. S. 345;
Stanley v. Supervisors, 121 U. S. 550;
Mobile v. Kimball, 102 U. S. 691;
Hagar v. Reclamation District No. 108, 111 U.
S. 701;
United States v. Memphis, 97 U. S.
284;
Laramie v. Albany, 92 U. S.
307. And whenever the law operates alike on all persons
and property similarly situated, equal protection cannot be said to
be denied.
Wurts v. Hoagland, 114 U.
S. 606;
Railroad Company v. Richmond,
96 U. S. 529.
The remedy for abuse is in the state courts, for, in the language
of MR. JUSTICE FIELD in
Mobile v. Kimball,
"this court is not
Page 128 U. S. 583
the harbor in which the people of a city or county can find a
refuge from ill advised, unequal, and oppressive state
legislation."
As the question raised in these cases is a federal question,
Spencer v. Merchant, supra, we will not sustain the
motions to dismiss, but as there was, in our judgment, color for
those motions, and the contention now made has often been pressed
upon our attention before, and as often determined adversely, so
that the rule must be regarded as settled, we shall grant the
motions to affirm.
Affirmed.