Due process of law does not require that the owners of property
to be assessed for a local sewer improvement shall be notified in
advance of the formation and bounds of the improvement district,
when this is established by the legislature directly or by a
municipality to which full legislative power over the subject has
been delegated by the state. P.
250 U. S.
455.
The case is different when the district is established by a
board or other inferior tribunal exercising only administrative or
quasi-judicial authority. P.
250 U. S.
458.
When the legislature itself prescribes that the cost of such an
improvement shall be apportioned against the lots in the district
in proportion to area, there is no occasion for a hearing with
respect to the mode in which the assessment shall be apportioned.
Id.
How much of such cost shall be specially taxed to the property
benefited, and whether the distribution shall be according to
benefits to particular lots or according to frontage, values, or
area are matters of legislative discretion, subject to judicial
relief in case of abuse or error in execution. P.
250 U. S. 459.
168 P. 445 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 250 U. S. 455
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
Plaintiffs in error, owners of real estate in the City of
Muskogee, brought suit in an Oklahoma state court seeking an
injunction to restrain the city and its officials from encumbering
their lands with a special assessment to pay for the construction
of a sewer in Sewer District No. 12 of that city, contending that
the statutes of the state and the ordinances of the city under
which the district was created and the cost of the sewers therein
assessed against the property within the district were in violation
of the Fourteenth Amendment in that they deprived plaintiffs of
their property without due process of law. The trial court refused
relief, the Supreme Court of Oklahoma affirmed its judgment (168 P.
445), and the case comes here by writ of error.
The statutes, as they existed at the time the proceedings in
question were had, are to be found in Snyder's Comp.Laws Okl.1909,
§§ 984-993. They authorize the mayor and councilmen in
any municipal corporation having a population of not less than
1,000 to establish a general sewer system composed of public,
district, and private sewers, and also to cause district sewers to
be constructed within districts having limits prescribed by
ordinance, the cost of district sewers to be apportioned against
all lots and pieces of ground in the district in proportion to
area, disregarding improvements and excluding the public
highways.
It is contended that the statute is void because it gives no
notice to property owners and makes no provision for hearing them
as to the formation of the district or its boundaries, the proposed
plan or method of building the sewer, or the amount to be assessed
upon property in the district. While it is conceded to have been
established by previous decisions of this Court that, where the
legislature
Page 250 U. S. 456
fixes by law the area of a sewer district or the property which
is to be assessed, no advance notice to the property owner of such
legislative action is necessary in order to constitute due process
of law, it is insisted that in the present case the legislature has
not done this, and hence it is essential to the protection of the
fundamental rights of the property owner that, at some stage of the
proceeding, he have notice and an opportunity to be heard upon the
question whether his property is erroneously included in the sewer
district because it cannot be benefited by the sewer or for any
other reason is improperly subjected to assessment.
But we find it to be settled by decisions of the Supreme Court
of Oklahoma, which as to this are conclusive upon us, that, in
respect to the establishment and construction of local sewer
systems and the exercise of the power of taxation in aid of this
purpose, the entire legislative power of the state has been
delegated to the municipalities. In
City of Perry v.
Davis, 18 Okla. 427,
445, referring to this same legislation, the court held:
"When the legislature delegated the power to the mayor and
councilmen of municipal corporations in this territory having a
bona fide population of not less than 1,000 persons to
establish a general sewer system, that delegation of power carried
with it all the incidental powers necessary to carry its object
into effect within the law. Of what utility would such a grant of
power be if unaccompanied with sufficient power to carry it into
effect? Under our system, the power of taxation is vested
exclusively in the legislative branch of the government, but it is
a power that may be delegated by the legislature to municipal
corporations, which are mere instrumentalities of the state for the
better administration of public affairs. When such a corporation is
created, it becomes vested with the power of taxation to sustain
itself with all necessary public improvements unless the
Page 250 U. S. 457
power be expressly prohibited. That the mayor and council of the
City of Perry were authorized to establish and construct a
necessary sewer system for the city in the absence of prohibitive
statutes should not be questioned. The power to establish and
construct a sewer system carried with it the power to create
indebtedness and taxation for its payment."
The court further held that the act constituted due process, and
that the passage and publication of an ordinance establishing a
sewer district constituted sufficient notice and conferred
jurisdiction upon the city authorities to perform the work and
provide payment therefor. This was followed in
City of Muskogee
v. Rambo, 40 Okl. 672, 680, and also in the present case.
So far, therefore, as the present ordinance determined that a
district sewer should be constructed and established the bounds of
the district for the purpose of determining what property should be
subjected to the special cost of constructing it, there was an
authorized exercise of the legislative power of the state, which,
according to repeated decisions of this Court, was not wanting in
due process of law because of the mere fact that there was no
previous notice to the property owners or opportunity to be heard.
The question of distributing or apportioning the burden of the cost
among the particular property owners is another matter.
Spencer
v. Merchant, 125 U. S. 345,
125 U. S.
355-357;
Paulsen v. Portland, 149 U. S.
30,
149 U. S. 40;
French v. Barber Asphalt Paving Co., 181 U.
S. 324,
181 U. S. 343;
Shumate v. Heman, 181 U. S. 402,
aff'g Heman v. Allen, 156 Mo. 534;
Wagner v.
Baltimore, 239 U. S. 207,
239 U. S. 218;
Withnell v. Ruecking Construction Co., 249 U. S.
63.
We do not mean to say that if, in fact, it were made to appear
that there was an arbitrary and unwarranted exercise of the
legislative power, or some denial of the equal protection of the
laws in the method of exercising it,
Page 250 U. S. 458
judicial relief would not be accorded to parties aggrieved. The
facts of this case raise no such question.
See Wagner v.
Baltimore, 239 U. S. 207,
239 U. S. 220;
Houck v. Little River District, 239 U.
S. 254,
239 U. S. 265;
Myles Salt Co. v. Iberia Drainage District, 239 U.
S. 478,
239 U. S. 485;
Gast Realty Co. v. Schneider Granite Co., 240 U. S.
55,
240 U. S.
59.
The chief reliance of plaintiff in error is upon those decisions
which have held that, where the legislature, instead of determining
for itself what lands shall be included in a district or what lands
will be benefited by the construction of a sewer, submits the
question to some board or other inferior tribunal with
administrative or
quasi-judicial authority, the inquiry
becomes in its nature judicial in such a sense that property owners
are entitled to a hearing or an opportunity to be heard before
their lands are included.
Fallbrook Irrigation District v.
Bradley, 164 U. S. 112,
164 U. S.
166-167,
164 U. S.
174-175;
Parsons v. District of Columbia,
170 U. S. 45,
170 U. S. 52;
Embree v. Kansas City Road District, 240 U.
S. 242,
240 U. S. 247.
But they have no application to a case where, as in the case before
us, full legislative power over the subject matter has been
conferred by the state upon a municipal corporation. Where that has
been done, a legislative determination by the local legislative
body is of the same effect as though made by the general
legislature.
Withnell v. Ruecking Construction Co.,
249 U. S. 63,
249 U. S.
70.
It is suggested further that the statutes and ordinances in
question were wanting in due process, in that they afforded the
property owner no opportunity to be heard as to the distribution of
the cost of the sewer among the different properties in the
district or the ascertainment of the amount of the assessment to be
imposed upon the lands of plaintiffs in error. Respecting this, it
is sufficient to say that, as the legislature itself has prescribed
that the entire cost of a district sewer shall be apportioned
against the lots in the district in proportion to area
(excluding
Page 250 U. S. 459
the highways), there is no occasion for a hearing with respect
to the mode in which the assessment shall be apportioned, since
this is resolved into a mere mathematical calculation. And it is
settled by the cases above cited that whether the entire amount or
a part only of the cost of a local improvement shall be imposed as
a special tax upon the property benefited, and whether the tax
shall be distributed upon a consideration of the particular benefit
to particular lots or apportioned according to their frontage upon
the streets, their values, or their area, is a matter of
legislative discretion, subject, of course, to judicial relief in
cases of actual abuse of power or of substantial error in executing
it, neither of which is here asserted.
Judgment affirmed.