1. A federal question which requires analysis and exposition for
its decision is not frivolous, and withstands a motion to dismiss
the writ of error. P.
262 U. S.
716.
2. But a motion to affirm should be granted if the questions on
which decision depends are so wanting in substance as not to need
further argument. Rule 6, § 5. P.
262 U. S.
717.
3. Determination of the judicial question whether a use is
public or private is influenced by local conditions, and this
Court, while enforcing the Fourteenth Amendment, should keep in
view the diversity of such conditions and regard with great respect
the judgments of the courts and the declaration of the legislature
of a state as to what should be deemed a public use in the state.
P.
262 U. S.
717.
4. The construction and maintenance of a tunnel for railroad,
telegraph, and telephone lines, for the transmission of electric
power, and the transportation of water and automobiles and other
vehicles
Page 262 U. S. 711
(Colo.Laws, Ex.Sess., 1922, c. 2, p. 88),
held a public
use warranting the exercise of the state power of taxation through
assessments levied on the private lands benefited by the
improvement to aid in defraying its cost. Pp.
262 U. S. 717,
262 U. S.
720.
5. A tunnel constructed and maintained by a state with the
design of leasing it, at a just rental based on the cost, to a
railroad corporation for operation in the service of the public as
part of its line, and of thus promoting the efficiency of the
railroad as an important common carrier and of preventing its
abandonment, is a public improvement for public purposes. P.
262 U. S.
718.
6. If a proposed improvement is one which a state has authority
to make and pay for by assessments on property benefited, the
legislature may determine by the statute imposing the tax what
lands may be, and are in fact, benefited, and its determination is
conclusive, and cannot be assailed under the Fourteenth Amendment
unless it is a flagrant abuse and so arbitrary as to amount to a
mere confiscation of particular property. P.
262 U. S.
721.
7. Where a Commission, authorized to appraise the benefits to be
assessed on lands to meet the cost of a public tunnel improvement,
adopted a tentative
ad valorem basis, subject to
modification and correction before confirmation,
held that
landowners who did not see fit to avail themselves of their
opportunity to object and be heard could not attack the appraisals
as arbitrary in a suit for an injunction. P.
262 U. S.
722.
72 Colo. 268 affirmed.
Error to a decree of the Supreme Court of Colorado, affirming a
decree of the state district court, which dismissed the complaint,
after full hearing, in a suit brought by landowners to enjoin
proceedings taken for the assessment of their property to defray
costs of a public tunnel improvement.
Page 262 U. S. 712
MR. JUSTICE SANFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
The defendants in error move to dismiss the writ of error or
affirm the judgment.
This is a suit challenging the constitutionality of an act of
the State of Colorado creating a tunnel improvement district
(Sess.Laws Ex.Sess.1922, c. 2, p. 88), and the proceedings
thereunder.
This Act, which is known as the Moffat Tunnel Act, declares
that, to provide an avenue of communication by a transportation
tunnel through the Continental Divide at or near James Peak will
reduce the barrier to commercial intercourse between the eastern
and western portions of the state, facilitate communication in all
seasons, and promote the health, comfort, safety, convenience, and
welfare of the people of the state, and will be of especial benefit
to the property in certain designated boundaries within which such
tunnel is to be located. To that end, it creates "The Moffat Tunnel
Improvement District," a body corporate, comprising all of the
territory thus designated, and being all or portions of nine
counties east and west of the Divide, extending between and
including the City and County of Denver on the east and Routt
County in the northwestern corner of the state, a total distance of
about two hundred and fifty miles. The District is to be managed by
a Board, called the "Moffat Tunnel Commission," which is required
to construct such a tunnel through the Divide, with its equipment
and approaches at about 9,200 feet above sea level, in such manner
that it may be used for standard gauge railroads, telegraph and
telephone lines, the transmission of power, and the transportation
of water, automobiles, and other vehicles.
The Commission is authorized to issue district bonds to the
amount of $6,720,000 to pay for the cost of the tunnel, expenses,
and interest on the bonds during its construction; to maintain the
tunnel, and to contract
Page 262 U. S. 713
with persons and corporations for its use for the specified
purposes, without monopoly by any use, person, or corporation,
until its capacity has been reached at annual rentals apportioned
to the respective values of the separate uses, and constituting a
fair and just proportion of the total amount required to pay
interest on the bonds, provide for their retirement, and maintain
the tunnel, prior users to be reimbursed by subsequent users in an
equitable proportion of the amount previously paid for retirement
of the bonds and interest.
The Commission is authorized to levy special assessments upon
all real estate within the District -- except governmental property
which is exempted -- for the purpose provided in the Act, such
special assessments to be made in proportion to the benefits to
each piece of real estate accruing by reason of the improvements
and in accordance with the rules of apportionment adopted by the
Commission. It may at any time appraise the benefits which will
result to such several parcels of real estate from the organization
of the District and the construction of the tunnel, and, after such
appraisal of benefits, levy special assessments, to the extent of
such benefits upon all such real estate, and may for such purposes
adopt rules providing,
inter alia, for notice and hearing
to all owners affected thereby. And if the revenues from the tunnel
are not sufficient to pay interest due on the bonds in any year,
provide for their retirement, pay expenses and maintain the tunnel,
in order to prevent the occurrence of a deficit, the Commission is
required to levy special assessments sufficient in amount, annually
if necessary, upon all such real estate, in the manner
provided.
It is expressly declared that the special benefits accruing to
the assessable real estate within the district are in excess of the
cost of the improvements and of the assessments provided for
against such real estate.
Page 262 U. S. 714
In each year in which an assessment is made, the Commission is
required to appoint a time and place at which it will hear
objections to the assessments, giving prior notice thereof by
publication in two issues a week apart in a newspaper of general
circulation published in each county. Any real estate owner
claiming that his property has been assessed too highly,
erroneously, or illegally may, before such hearing, file written
objections to such assessment. At the hearing, the Commission shall
hear such evidence as may be offered concerning the correctness or
legality of such assessments, and may modify or amend the same. Any
property owner may appeal from the finding of the Commission as to
such assessments to the district court of the county; but the court
shall not disturb the findings of the Commission unless manifestly
disproportionate to the assessments imposed upon other property in
the district. The findings of the Commission, if not appealed from,
or the findings of the district court in case of an appeal, shall
be final and conclusive evidence that such assessments have been
made in proportion to the benefits conferred upon each tract of
real estate by reason of the improvements, and constitute a lien
thereon until paid.
The Commission, having been duly organized under the Act, fixed
the definite location of the tunnel, adopted preliminary plans for
its construction in such manner as to provide for the various
specified uses, estimated its cost, and resolved to issue district
bonds in the authorized amount to pay for its construction. After
making an investigation and examination of the real estate in the
district, and taking the testimony of a great many witnesses from
all parts of the district, engaged in various kinds of business, it
determined the aggregate value of the real estate within the
district subject to assessment to be $298,544,966 -- mainly in
accordance with the assessed valuations for taxes -- and further
determined, subject
Page 262 U. S. 715
to correction and confirmation after hearing the property owners
affected, that the value of each parcel of such real estate would,
by reason of the organization of the district and the construction
of the tunnel, be increased at least to the extent of fifteen
percent. And it thereupon appraised the benefits to the several
parcels of such real estate at such percentage of their value as
the basis of special assessments to be thereafter made under the
provisions of the Act. It also fixed a time and place at which it
would hear objections filed by any property owner to the appraisal
of benefits thus made, upon evidence and argument, before
confirmation thereof, and gave public notice of such hearing by
publication in the manner specified in the Act. This notice recited
the proceedings which the Commission had taken, including the
appraisal of benefits which it had made as the basis for special
assessments, and stated that any appraisal of benefits found upon
such hearing to be incorrect or inequitable would be modified or
amended, and that, after making all proper corrections, the
appraisals would be confirmed.
Thereupon, before the date set for such hearing, two of the
plaintiffs in error, owning lands within the district, without
filing with the Commission any objections to the appraisal of
benefits, filed their complaint in a district court of the state in
behalf of themselves and all similar landowners, against the
Improvement District and the Tunnel Commission, alleging,
inter
alia, that the tunnel was not intended as a public highway for
the use of the general public, but for the benefit of the Denver
& Salt Lake Railroad, commonly known as the Moffat Road; that
the benefits to their real estate and the other real estate in the
district had been arbitrarily appraised, and that no special
benefits would accrue to their property or other property similarly
situated; that the Act and the proceedings taken and threatened by
the Commission
Page 262 U. S. 716
thereunder violated various provisions of the state constitution
and would deprive them of their property without due process in
violation of the Fourteenth Amendment, and praying that the
defendants be enjoined from proceeding with the enforcement of the
Act and that all the proceedings of the Commission be declared null
and void. The defendants, in their answers, denied these
allegations. The other plaintiffs in error, also owning lands
within the district, who likewise had filed no objections with the
Commission, subsequently intervened as plaintiffs in the
action.
The case was heard by the district court upon the pleadings and
proof. The issues, both of fact and law, including those relating
to the appraisal of benefits, were found for the defendants, and
the complaint was accordingly dismissed.
Upon writ of error taken, the Supreme Court of Colorado
sustained the district court in all respects and affirmed its
judgment. 211 P. 649.
The landowners urge here, as grounds of error, in substance,
that the act and the proceedings taken and permitted thereunder
violate the Fourteenth Amendment in that: (a) the purpose of the
act is not public in the sense warranting the exercise of the power
of taxation, but is essentially private; (b) the act authorizes the
imposition of the entire taxes upon the lands within the district,
without regard to their relation to the tunnel or the benefit to be
derived from it, and, there being no special benefits to such lands
justifying such taxation, such classification is entirely
arbitrary, and (c) the Commission has arbitrarily and unreasonably
adopted an
ad valorem basis for the appraisal and
apportionment of benefits to the several parcels of land within the
district, without reference to the actual benefits to each.
The federal question presented, being one which requires
analysis and exposition for its decision, is not frivolous,
Page 262 U. S. 717
and the motion to dismiss the writ of error is accordingly
denied.
Louisville Railroad v. Melton, 218 U. S.
36, 39 [argument of counsel -- omitted].
The motion to affirm the judgment should, however, be granted if
the questions on which the decision depends are found to be so
wanting in substance as not to need further argument. Rule 6,
§ 5;
Hodges v. Snyder, 261 U.
S. 600, and cases therein cited.
1.
Public Purpose. The nature of a use, whether public
or private, is ultimately a judicial question. However, the
determination of this question is influenced by local conditions,
and this Court, while enforcing the Fourteenth Amendment, should
keep in view the diversity of such conditions and regard with great
respect the judgments of state courts upon what should be deemed
public uses in any state.
Rindge Co. v. County of Los Angeles,
ante, 262 U. S. 700, and
cases therein cited. And like respect should be accorded to the
declarations of the legislative body of the state.
Fallbrook
Irrigation district v. Bradley, 164 U.
S. 112,
164 U. S. 160.
Here, the legislature, familiar with the local conditions, has
declared that the construction of the tunnel will benefit the
people of the state, and both the local court of the state and its
supreme court have held its construction to be for a public
purpose.
It is urged by the landowners that the tunnel, considered as an
isolated transportation unit, will serve no useful public purpose.
This is obvious, but not to the point. It is intended to furnish an
avenue or highway which shall be leased to public transportation
agencies. A structure intended for such use is unquestionably a
public improvement for a public use. Thus, subway tunnels
constructed by municipalities for lease to street railway and rapid
transit lines for use as common carriers are public improvements
for public purposes, for which the power of taxation may be
exercised.
Sun Printing Co. v. City of New York, 152 N.Y.
257, 265;
Prince v.
Page 262 U. S. 718
Crocker, 166 Mass. 347, 361;
Browne v. Turner,
176 Mass. 9, 12;
Larsen v. San Francisco, 182 Cal. 1, 9.
And see, by analogy, as to ship canals,
Cook v. Port
of Portland, 20 Or. 580.
They, however, contend that the tunnel must be deemed for a
private, rather than a public, purpose because it is located so as
to be practically a part of the line of the Moffat Road, and is
intended for its use, the real object of the act being, as
expressed by the Governor, to save this railroad to the people of
the state.
* There is
virtually no denial of this, and evidently this was the motive
which led to the passage of the act and is the primary purpose for
which the tunnel is to be constructed. This, however, is not a
private purpose. The use of the tunnel by the Moffat Road will be
for a beneficial public purpose. This railroad runs from Denver, on
the east of the Continental Divide, to Routt County in the
northwestern corner of the state, a distance of 255 miles. It
crosses the Divide by a circuitous route above this tunnel, with
steep grades and heavy curves. In the winter seasons, this portion
of its line is almost impassable. Its operations result in heavy
losses, and it is now in an embarrassed financial condition and
unable to build the tunnel. Without the use of the tunnel, the
railroad must, it seems, be abandoned, and this avenue of
communication between different portions of the state will be lost.
The use of the tunnel will reduce the elevation, grades, and
curvature of the railroad, shorten its line about
Page 262 U. S. 719
23 miles, and save it large amounts annually. Evidently the
preservation of this railroad, a common carrier of persons and
property, as a means of communication between the eastern and
northwestern portions of the state, is a matter of great public
importance, and a tunnel enabling it to provide quicker and cheaper
transportation during all seasons of the year will greatly promote
the public welfare.
Even if this act specifically directed that the tunnel be leased
to the Moffat Road for railroad purposes (a just rental based on
the cost of constructing and maintaining the tunnel being
provided), as the tunnel would be operated by the railroad as a
public highway for the carriage of passengers and freight, it would
be a public improvement for a public use. The test of the public
character of an improvement is the use to which it is to be put,
not the person by whom it is to be operated.
See Mt. Vernon
Cotton Co. v. Power Co., 240 U. S. 30,
240 U. S. 32. A
subway tunnel constructed by a city under an act authorizing its
construction for the specific purpose of being leased to a
designated rapid transit company is a lawful public improvement for
a public use.
Browne v. Turner, supra, pp. 12, 13. As a
railroad is a highway for public use, although owned by a private
corporation, a state may impose or authorize a tax in aid of its
construction and in furtherance of such public use.
Olcott v.
Supervisors, 16 Wall. 678,
83 U. S.
695-696;
Township of Pine Grove v.
Talcott, 19 Wall. 666,
86 U. S.
676-678;
Wisconsin Railroad v. Jacobson,
179 U. S. 287,
179 U. S. 297;
Donovan v. Pennsylvania Co., 199 U.
S. 279,
199 U. S.
292-293.
"Whether the use of a railroad is a public or a private one
depends in no measure upon the question who constructed it or who
owns it. . . . No matter who is the agent, the function performed
is that of the state. Though the ownership is private, the use is
public. . . . If there be any purpose for which taxation would
Page 262 U. S. 720
seem to be legitimate, it is the making and maintenance of
highways. They have always been governmental affairs, and it has
ever been recognized as one of the most important duties of the
state to provide and care for them. . . . When, therefore, it is
settled that a railroad is a highway for public uses, there can be
no substantial reason why the power of the state to tax may not be
exerted in its behalf."
Olcott v.
Supervisors, 16 Wall. 695,
83 U. S. 696.
"Though the corporation was private, its work was public, as much
so as if it were to be constructed by the state."
Township of Pine Grove v.
Talcott, 19 Wall. 676. The use of a spur track is
nonetheless public because it is located to reach a private
industry whose proprietors contribute to the cost.
Hairston v.
Danville Railway, 208 U. S. 598,
208 U. S. 608.
So here, although this tunnel be designed for lease to the Moffat
Road, it will be a highway for public uses as much so as if it were
operated by the state, and a public improvement for public
purposes.
Furthermore, while the saving of the Moffat Road to the people
of the state seems to have been the prime motive which induced the
passage of the act, it specifically provides for the use of the
tunnel by any and all railroads and other public utilities, to the
extent of its capacity, each paying an annual rental apportioned to
the respective values of the separate uses, and constituting a fair
and just proportion of the total amount required to pay interest on
the bonds, provide for their retirement, and maintain the tunnel.
And the evidence strongly indicates that the tunnel may and will be
used to like advantage by the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad,
extending from Denver to Salt Lake City, with a great shortening
and improvement of its line. It will also serve as a means of
transporting water from the Fraser River on the west of the Divide
to the City of Denver, for telegraph and telephone lines and the
transmission of power, and for the transportation of automobiles
and vehicles,
Page 262 U. S. 721
which are now unable to cross the Divide during several months
of the year. These are all public purposes of much importance.
We conclude that the purpose for which the tunnel is to be
constructed is not private, but public, and such as warrants the
exercise by the the power of taxation.
2.
Classification as to Special Benefits. It is
contended that no special benefits of a direct and immediate
character will accrue from the tunnel to the lands lying within the
district, as distinguished from the other lands in the state, and
that hence the classification made by the act in providing for the
assessments solely upon the lands within the district is entirely
unreasonable and arbitrary. It is well settled, however, that if a
proposed improvement is one which the state has authority to make
and pay for by assessments on property benefited, the legislature,
in the exercise of the taxing power, has authority to determine by
the statute imposing the tax what lands may be and are in fact
benefited by the improvement, and, if it does so, its determination
is conclusive upon the owners and the courts, and cannot be
assailed under the Fourteenth Amendment unless it is wholly
unwarranted and a flagrant abuse and, by reason of its arbitrary
character, is mere confiscation of the particular property.
Spencer v. Merchant, 125 U. S. 345,
125 U. S. 356;
Fallbrook Irrigation District v. Bradley, supra, p.
164 U. S. 174;
Wagner v. Baltimore, 239 U. S. 207,
239 U. S.
218-220;
Houck v. Drainage District,
239 U. S. 254,
239 U. S. 262;
Branson v. Bush, 251 U. S. 182,
251 U. S.
190.
The legislature not only provided for the assessment of the
lands within the district, but specifically declared that the
tunnel would be of especial benefit to such lands and that the
special benefits accruing to them are in excess of the cost of the
tunnel and of the assessments provided for against them.
Page 262 U. S. 722
The district consists of the City and County of Denver on the
east, a strip of land from six to eight miles in width extending
through four counties on both sides of the Moffat Road to the crest
of the Divide, and three entire counties and a portion of another
county, which are traversed and reached by the Moffat Road and
extend to the northwestern corner of the state. In short, the
district includes the lands contiguous to the Moffat Road. The
lands lying in the strip extending from Denver to the Divide are
mainly agricultural lands; those lying to the west of the Divide,
while largely devoted to stock raising, have valuable timber, and
the two counties lying farthest to the northwest have valuable coal
deposits. The testimony in the trial court fairly indicates that
the lands within this district, on both sides of the Divide,
including those owned by the plaintiffs in error, will, generally
speaking, by reason of their proximity to the Moffat Road and the
increased facilities of transportation across the Divide by which
the western counties may be able to market their products to the
east and the eastern counties obtain an outlet to the northwest,
receive special benefits from the operation of the tunnel of a
reasonably direct and immediate character, resulting in increased
value of the lands, in excess of those received by other lands in
the state, and that the legislative classification is, on the
whole, substantially just and reasonable.
The legislature declared that there will be such special
benefits. The trial court, familiar with local conditions, after
hearing evidence on this question, found that there would be such
special benefits and sustained the legislative classification, and
the supreme court of the state has affirmed its action. To the
extent that there may be inequalities in the benefits received by
the several parcels of land within the district, they are to be
apportioned by the Commission in the manner provided by the act,
with a right of appeal to the local courts for the correction of
errors in such apportionments.
Page 262 U. S. 723
And certainly, under all the circumstances, and regarding the
district as a whole, the evidence does not justify us in setting
aside the conclusion reached by the trial court upon the weight of
the evidence, or in characterizing the action of the legislature in
creating this separate district upon which the assessments should
be made as arbitrary, capricious, or confiscatory. The legislative
determination and classification must accordingly be upheld.
3.
Appraisal of Benefits. It is contended that the
Commission arbitrarily adopted an
ad valorem basis of
appraisal for the apportionment of benefits to the several parcels
of land within the district, without reference to the actual
benefits to each. This argument erroneously assumes that the
Commission had finally adopted such an
ad valorem basis
for its appraisal. This is not the case. It had merely adopted a
tentative
ad valorem basis, subject to modification and
corrections, before final confirmation, after the hearing of
objections filed by landowners, of which public notice was given.
These landowners did not seek to have the Commission modify or
correct this tentative basis of apportionment or file any
objections to the appraisal of benefits to their properties.
Presumably, if the tentative appraisal was made on an erroneous
basis, it would have been modified upon a proper showing. Having
failed to object to the tentative
ad valorem basis adopted
by the Commission or to appear before it for the purpose of
obtaining modifications or corrections as to their lands before the
final adoption of such basis, they have here no sufficient ground
of complaint. Where a city charter gives property owners an
opportunity to be heard before a board respecting the justice and
validity of local assessments for proposed public improvements and
empowers the board to determine such complaints before the
assessments are made, parties who do not avail themselves of such
opportunity cannot be heard to complain
Page 262 U. S. 724
of such assessments as unconstitutional.
Farncomb v.
Denver, 252 U. S. 7,
252 U. S. 11.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Colorado was plainly right,
and as the questions presented do not require further argument, the
alternative motion of the defendants in error is granted, and the
judgment is
Affirmed.
* The Governor, in his message to the special session of the
legislature which passed this act, in stating the two matters for
which he had called the session, said:
"Conditions have arisen which threaten the complete abandonment
of a transportation line upon which several counties of the state
depend, and your immediate action authorizing the issuance of bonds
for the construction of a tunnel through the mountain range is
necessary if the Moffat railroad is to be saved to the people of
this state."