1. A state legislature may, without notice to property owners,
establish a sewer district and direct that the cost of the sewer be
assessed upon the real property within the district in proportion
to its value as ascertained for purposes of general taxation. P.
261 U. S.
162.
2. It is not a valid objection to such an assessment, under the
Fourteenth Amendment, that the property assessed can receive no
direct benefit where it ultimately may be benefited by future
extensions of the sewer. P.
261 U. S.
163.
3. Nor is it of importance from the constitutional standpoint
that the sewer had been completed before the boundaries of the
district were established. P.
261 U. S.
164.
4. Where the state law gives the property owner an opportunity
to be heard upon the valuation of his property for general
taxation, he is not entitled under the Amendment to a further
hearing on that subject when such valuations are used as bases for
apportioning special assessments. P.
261 U. S.
164.
193 App.Div. 433, 231 N.Y. 558, affirmed.
Error to a judgment of the Supreme Court of New York, Appellate
Division, entered on mandate of affirmance from the Court of
Appeals, and directing dismissal of the complaint in an action
brought by the present plaintiff in error to declare void a special
tax assessment and to restrain its collection.
Page 261 U. S. 158
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Plaintiff in error, a New York corporation, seeks cancellation
of an assessment of taxes upon its real property to pay for
construction and operation of the Bronx Valley sewer. Westchester
County, a necessary party under the local statute, demurred to the
complaint upon the ground that it states no cause of action. The
trial court overruled
Page 261 U. S. 159
the demurrer. The Appellate Division reversed the judgment, 193
App.Div. 433, and the Court of Appeals affirmed this action without
opinion, 231 N.Y. 558.
The complaint alleges:
Plaintiff in error owns certain designated lands in Westchester
County assessed for taxes for the year 1918 for the benefit of the
Bronx Valley sewer.
That, under c. 646, New York Laws of 1905, entitled
"An act to provide for the construction and maintenance of a
sanitary trunk sewer and sanitary outlet sewer in the county of
Westchester, and to provide means for the payment therefor,"
and sundry amendments thereto, especially c. 646, Laws of 1917,
the legislature attempted to designate the area benefited by the
trunk and outlet sewers and to provide for taxing all property
therein. The trunk sewer is 11 3/4 miles long; the outlet sewer 3
miles. Both are wholly within Westchester County. The former lies
along the Bronx River. At a point near the south line of the
county, it connects with the outlet sewer, which extends thence
westwardly under two high ridges and across Tibbetts Valley to the
Hudson River.
That the sewer system carries house drainage only -- no surface
water -- and throughout its entire course, the grade is downward.
The sewage flows by gravity. There are no pumping stations.
That east of and near Hudson River, a high ridge runs north and
south. Immediately east of this lies Tibbetts Valley; further east
there is a second north and south ridge; then comes Bronx Valley,
shut in on the east by a third ridge. The natural drainage of Bronx
Valley is southerly into East river; Tibbets Valley also drains
southerly, but into Harlem River. No natural drainage connection
exists between the two valleys; they are separated throughout their
entire length by the second ridge.
That the outlet sewer, through which the whole system
discharges, extends from the trunk sewer in Bronx Valley
Page 261 U. S. 160
under the second ridge a great depth below the surface, thence
across Tibbetts Valley and under the first ridge, also at great
depth, to the Hudson River. Any connection with this sewer from
Tibbetts Valley must be made therein, and lands there cannot be
connected at all with the trunk sewer.
That about 2,500 acres -- Lincoln Park section -- of Tibbetts
Valley is now connected with the outlet sewer; no other lands
therein can use it, unless and until a connecting line, four miles
long, is constructed at a probable cost of $300,000.
That, notwithstanding this limited possible use, Tibbetts Valley
is assessed to meet the cost of the entire system, just as the
lands in Bronx Valley. Taxes for construction and maintenance are
based wholly upon assessed valuations for general purposes. Each
lot is taxed according to value, and irrespective of benefits
received. No power is conferred to reduce assessments in one
section not benefited equally with others.
That the district was defined by the amendment of 1917, twelve
years after the original act and five years after completion of the
sewers. The first act limited the total cost to $2,000,000 and
provided that commissioners should determine the benefited area
after opportunity for hearings. Amendments have changed these
fundamental provisions; the total cost exceeds $3,250,000, and the
boundaries have been designated without notice to owners.
That the challenged assessments are upon valuations of both land
and improvements, and disproportionate to benefits. The board of
supervisors is required to adopt a budget, which includes
unconstitutional and unlawful items -- among them cost of
litigation and contingent fund for deficiencies.
That the act as amended prohibits assessments against lands
within the sewer district when also in Mt. Vernon, but directs that
a corresponding sum shall be
Page 261 U. S. 161
paid by levy upon all property, real and personal, within that
city.
That plaintiff's lands have been illegally assessed. The act as
amended violates the Fourteenth Amendment by depriving plaintiff of
property without due process of law and without just compensation,
and by denying it equal protection of the laws. The assessments are
a cloud upon plaintiff's title, and greatly depreciate market
values. There is no adequate remedy at law.
The prayer is for a decree declaring the assessments void,
directing their cancellation and restraining collection, and for
general relief.
Counsel for plaintiff in error states that:
"the question here involved is whether the statutes of the State
of New York, under which the Bronx Valley sewer assessments were
imposed over a large area of many square miles, in Westchester
County, New York, are in contravention of due process of law under
the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United
States."
The argument proceeds thus:
The sewer system, intended for house drainage only, consists of
a trunk sewer 11 3/4 miles long, in the Bronx Valley, connected
with an outlet sewer extending westward three miles to the Hudson
River. The act of 1905 -- c. 646 -- provided that commissioners
should prepare a map of the assessment district after notice to
owners and opportunity to be heard. The supplemental act of 191 --
c. 646 -- disregards this map, substitutes definite boundaries, and
directs assessments upon all lands therein according to value,
including improvements; all parcels to be treated alike.
That such assessments disregard the difference in conditions,
locations, and benefits, and no notice or opportunity for hearing
concerning the apportionments to particular parcels is provided
for.
Page 261 U. S. 162
That plaintiff's Tibbetts Valley lands are so situated that they
can never utilize any part of the sewer system except the lower
portion of the outlet sewer, and this will be possible only through
costly connections not yet planned.
That the statutes are unconstitutional in that they provide for
no notice of hearing upon apportionment of the assessments; they
direct assessments of all parcels of land according to values fixed
for general taxation purposes irrespective of relation to the
sewer, street frontage, depth or shape; they include improvements
in assessed values, and thereby adjoining lots of equal size are
taxed for different sums. And they are
"of such a character that there is no reasonable presumption
that substantial justice generally will be done, but the
probability is that the parties will be taxed disproportionately to
each other and to the benefit conferred,"
so that such legislative action is "palpably arbitrary or a
plain abuse."
Myles Salt Co., Ltd. v. Board of Commissioners,
239 U. S. 478,
Gast Realty & Investment Co. v. Schneider Granite Co.,
240 U. S. 55, and
Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. Road Improvement District No.
6, 256 U. S. 658, are
cited and relied upon, but we think it clearly appears, upon
examination of those cases in connection with
Wagner v.
Baltimore, 239 U. S. 207,
239 U. S.
217-218,
Houck v. Little River District,
239 U. S. 254,
239 U. S. 262,
239 U. S. 265,
and
Miller & Lux v. Sacramento Drainage District,
256 U. S. 129,
that the allegations of the complaint are insufficient to bring
this cause within the doctrine which plaintiff invokes.
The courts below have upheld that assessment under the
Constitution and laws of the state. We are concerned only with
application of the Fourteenth Amendment.
In
Houck v. Little River District, the owners of a
large area sought to enjoin collection of a tax of 25 cents per
acre levied generally upon lands in
Page 261 U. S. 163
the district to pay preliminary expenses. They alleged that the
lands varied greatly in value, and that no benefits would accrue to
theirs, some of which would be condemned and others damaged. The
judgment of the state courts sustaining a demurrer to the petition
was affirmed here. Speaking through Mr. Justice Hughes, this Court
declared:
"In view of the nature of this enterprise, it is obvious that,
so far as the federal Constitution is concerned, the state might
have defrayed the entire expense out of state funds raised by
general taxation, or it could have apportioned the burden among the
counties in which the lands were situated and the improvements were
to be made.
County of Mobile v. Kimball, 102 U. S.
691,
102 U. S. 703-704. It was
equally within the power of the state to create tax districts to
meet the authorized outlays. . . . And, with respect to districts
thus formed, whether by the legislature directly or in an
appropriate proceeding under its authority, the legislature may
itself fix the basis of taxation or assessment -- that is, it may
define the apportionment of the burden, and its action cannot be
assailed under the Fourteenth Amendment unless it is palpably
arbitrary and a plain abuse. . . ."
"When local improvements may be deemed to result in special
benefits, a further classification may be made and special
assessments imposed accordingly, but even in such case there is no
requirement of the federal Constitution that for every payment
there must be an equal benefit. The state, in its discretion, may
lay such assessments in proportion to position, frontage, area,
market value, or to benefits estimated by commissioners."
In
Miller & Lux v. Sacramento Drainage District,
supra, we said:
"Since
Houck v. Little River Drainage District, (1915)
239 U. S.
254, the doctrine has been definitely settled that in
the absence of flagrant abuse or purely arbitrary action a state
may establish drainage districts
Page 261 U. S. 164
and tax lands therein for local improvements, and that none of
such lands may escape liability solely because they will not
receive direct benefits."
Myles Salt Co., Ltd. v. Board of Commissioners, Gast Realty
& Investment Co. v. Schneider Granite Co., and
Kansas
City Southern Ry. Co. v. Road Improvement District No. 6,
supra, present facts deemed sufficient to show action
"palpably arbitrary and a plain abuse" of power. Here, the
allegations make out no such situation. All lands within the
district ultimately may be connected with some portion of the
sewer, and we cannot say they derive no benefits therefrom, or that
any were included arbitrarily of for improper purposed.
It was unnecessary for the legislature to give notice and grant
hearings to owners before fixing the boundaries of the district so
as to include their lands, and prescribing the method of taxation.
And it is unimportant that the sewer had been completed before the
boundaries of the present district were established.
Wagner v.
Baltimore, supra.
The state courts held that, as the rolls of local assessors are
adopted for taxing property within the district, the right of
owners to be heard as to values is adequately protected, and we
think that, under the circumstances, they can demand no more.
The judgment of the court below is
Affirmed.