1. An act of a state legislature, consistent with the state
constitution, requiring that the cost of a public road improvement
be distributed over private lands according to the benefits they
will respectively receive from it, and determining what lands will
be so benefited and in what amounts, cannot be said to offend the
due process of law clause of the Fourteenth Amendment unless the
determination
Page 266 U. S. 380
is palpably arbitrary, and therefore a plain abuse of power. P.
266 U. S.
386.
2. And only where there is manifest and unreasonable
discrimination in fixing the benefits which the several parcels
will receive can the legislative determination be said to
contravene the equal protection clause of the Amendment.
Id.
3. To justify an assessment of benefits to particular lands, it
is not essential that the benefits be direct or immediate, but it
is essential that they have a better basis than mere speculation or
conjecture. P.
266 U. S.
387.
4. In the case of railway property, the benefits may consist of
gains from increased traffic reasonably expected to result from the
improvement.
Id.
5. A special act, confirming existing assessment and recognized
by the supreme court of the state as a legislative determination of
the land which will be benefited by the improvement and of the
proportions in which they will share in the benefit, must be
treated by this Court as an admissible legislative assessment of
benefits so far as the state constitution is concerned.
Id.
156 Ark. 116 affirmed.
Error to a judgment of the Supreme Court of Arkansas which
affirmed a judgment sustaining a special road improvement
assessment made against property of the plaintiff in error railroad
company. A petition for certiorari was also made here, which the
Court denied.
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents a controversy over the constitutional
validity of an assessment of benefits accruing to railway property
from the improvement of a public road in Sevier County,
Arkansas.
Page 266 U. S. 381
The road reaches from De Queen, the county seat, to the eastern
border of the county, 18 miles. It had been a mere dirt road, not
good in any season, and impassable at times. The improvement
consisted in reducing objectionable curves and grades, installing
modern bridges and culverts, reconstructing the roadbed, putting on
a hard and durable surface, and generally fitting the road for
economical and expeditious rural travel and transportation. To
accomplish the improvement, a road district covering approximately
3 miles of territory on either side of the road was created under a
general law of the state. Section 5399
et seq., Crawford
& Moses' Digest 1921. Money to pay the cost of the improvement,
estimated at $200,000, was to be obtained primarily through an
issue of interest-bearing bonds and ultimately through a special
tax spread over a period of 20 years. The tax was to be laid on all
lands, town lots, railroads, and other real property within the
district in the proportions in which they would be benefited by the
improvement. Assessors appointed by the county court were to assess
the benefits and to set forth in their report the name of the owner
of each parcel, a description of the property, its "present
assessed value" for general taxing purposes, and the amount of
benefits assessed to it. When completed, the assessment was to be
filed in the county court, a time for hearing parties in interest
was to be fixed, and public notice thereof was to be given. The
court was to review the work of the assessors and to equalize,
lower, or raise the assessment of benefits to particular parcels as
justice might require. An appeal could be taken to the circuit
court, which was to give a hearing
de novo in respect of
such objections as were set forth in the affidavit for appeal, and
a further appeal could be taken to the supreme court of the state.
A comprehensive statement of the various steps to be taken in the
proceedings and of their nature is given in
Commissioners, etc.
v. St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co., 257 U.
S. 547.
Page 266 U. S. 382
Within the road district at De Queen are 2 miles of main track,
9 miles of side tracks, a depot, and other buildings which form
part of a railway line, called the Kansas City Southern, which
extends from Kansas City, Missouri, to Port Arthur, Texas. The
assessed value for general taxing purposes of this railway property
within the district was $129,615. The district assessors assessed
it with benefits amounting to $21,270, or approximately 16 percent
of its assessed value. The assessed value of the farmlands and town
lots within the district for general taxing purposes was $897,660.
The district assessors assessed them with benefits amounting to
$448,354, or approximately 54 percent of their assessed value.
Other property in the district, not requiring special notice here,
was assessed with benefits amounting to $40,409. Thus, the
aggregate of the benefits assessed was $510,033. The special tax
amounted to 70 percent of the benefits assessed, or 3 1/2 percent
per annum for 20 years -- the full tax being intended to cover the
bond issue with interest. The portion of the tax laid on the
railway property was $14,899, or $744.45 per annum.
In regular course, the assessment was reviewed by the county
court and confirmed, the court finding that the lands and other
real property in the district would be "greatly benefited" by the
improvement, and that the assessment of benefits was "fair, just,
and equal to all landowners."
Two companies interested in the railway property appealed to the
circuit court, and in the affidavit for appeal assailed the
assessment, insofar as it affected them, on the grounds, first,
that it was purely arbitrary, and therefore in contravention of the
due process of law clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States, because the railway property
neither would nor could receive any benefit from the improvement of
the road; secondly, that it was not in accord with the equal
Page 266 U. S. 383
protection clause of that amendment, because the railway
property, on the one hand, and the farmlands and town lots, on the
other, were assessed with benefits in grossly unequal proportions,
to the detriment of the railway property; and, thirdly, that it was
made in disregard of the commerce clause of the Constitution of the
United States because the benefits assessed to the railway property
were not such as would or could accrue to that property, but were
such as would accrue, if accruing at all, to the interstate
business in which that property was being used, and therefore could
not be made the basis of a special improvement tax without
burdening interstate commerce.
While the appeal was pending in the circuit court, the state
legislature passed a special act (No. 98, approved February 7,
1920) recognizing the creation and boundaries of the district,
approving the plans for the improvement of the road, confirming the
assessment of benefits as sustained by the county court, and
declaring that the assessment "fairly represents the benefits that
will accrue" to the railway property and other tracts in the
district. The companies then took the position that the legislative
confirmation was open to the same constitutional objections that
were made to the original assessment.
A hearing was had in the circuit court at which the companies
assumed the burden of establishing that their objections were well
founded insofar as they turned on matters of fact. Much evidence
was produced on both sides. The greater part was addressed to the
question whether the railway property within the district would
receive any substantial benefit from the improvement. The witnesses
differed pronouncedly. Some expressed positive opinions on the
subject without advancing anything of substance in support of their
opinions. This was true to a greater degree of the witnesses for
the companies than of those for the district. Some of the latter
referred
Page 266 U. S. 384
to and detailed conditions and transactions tending to give
their opinions strong support. Among other things, they testified
that theretofore the lands in the vicinity of the road had
necessarily been put to uses which made only a light contribution
to the tonnage and business of the railway; that the lands were
naturally well adapted to other uses, such as growing fruits and
vegetables, but could not profitably be used for these purposes in
the absence of road facilities for getting the products to places
of shipment expeditiously and without injury from jolting; that,
when plans for the improvement of the road were adopted, fruit
growing and truck farming began to displace the prior uses; that,
at the time of the hearing, which was after one-half of the road
was completed and the rest graded, the new crops were being grown
and sent to distant markets in large and increasing quantities;
that these products were hauled over the new road in motor trucks
to De Queen and Locksburg, those taken to Locksburg being then
forwarded over a short local railroad to De Queen; that all were
there shipped over the railway -- the one in question -- to Kansas
City and other points beyond, and that there was no other railway
leading to available markets. The same witnesses further testified
that the change from the old to the new uses was still progressing;
that other lands tributary to the new road and not cultivated
before were being prepared for cultivation, and that timber and
other heavy products which could not reach the railway before were
being hauled over the new road and shipped out in substantial
volume.
On the question of discrimination, the evidence was meager. The
assessed value of the railway property for general taxing purposes
was conceded to be about one-half its actual value. On the basis of
assessed values, that property was assessed with a much lower
proportion of the total benefits than the farmlands and town lots
were, the proportional relation being that of 16 to 54. There was
some
Page 266 U. S. 385
evidence of instances in which the assessed value of farmlands
and town lots for general taxing purposes was less than one-half
their real value, but there was no evidence that this was general.
Even in the instances named, the benefits assessed were generally
much in excess of 16 percent of one-half the real value. There was
no evidence of an intentional overassessment of benefits to the
railway property or of an intentional under assessment to the
farmlands and town lots. The three assessors testified that they
assessed all property in the same way -- according to the benefits
which, in their judgment, the particular parcels would receive from
the improvement of the road.
The circuit court was of opinion on all the evidence that the
improvement would bring to the railway a very substantial increase
in tonnage and business at De Queen; that this would enlarge its
receipts and net revenue, and thereby materially benefit its
property at De Queen, and that the assessment of benefits to that
property was neither arbitrary nor unreasonably discriminatory, but
just and fair. On that determination of the issues of fact, the
court entered a judgment overruling the objections and upholding
the assessment. The companies appealed to the supreme court of the
state, and it affirmed the judgment. 156 Ark. 116. That court put
its decision on two grounds taken collectively -- one that the
special confirmatory act constituted a legislative determination of
the correctness of the assessment, which could not be overturned
unless found to be obviously arbitrary or unreasonably
discriminatory, and the other that there was ample evidence to
sustain the findings of the circuit court which negatived the
existence of any such error, and that the circuit court's solution
of the conflicts in the evidence was not open to review on
appeal.
The companies brought the case here on writ of error, and
afterwards presented a petition for certiorari, consideration
Page 266 U. S. 386
of which was passed to the hearing on the writ of error. As the
constitutional validity of the special confirmatory act was
directly challenged in the state courts, and sustained by them, the
case is properly here on the writ of error, so the petition for
certiorari will be denied.
The objection based on the commerce clause of the Constitution
has been abandoned, but those based on the due process of law and
equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment are pressed on
our attention.
By a long line of decisions in this Court, it has been settled
that, where the state constitution as construed by the state court
of last resort does not provide otherwise, the legislature of a
state may require that the cost of a local public improvement, such
as the construction or reconstruction of a public road, be
distributed over the lands particularly benefited and charged
against them according to their value, their area, or the benefits
which they will receive; may itself determine what lands will be
benefited, and in what proportions they will share in the benefits,
and may avail itself, for the purposes of that determination, of
any information which it deems appropriate and sufficient,
including such as may be afforded by reports and estimates made in
prior assessment proceedings having the same object. Only where the
legislative determination is palpably arbitrary, and therefore a
plain abuse of power, can it be said to offend the due process of
law clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Spencer v.
Merchant, 125 U. S. 345,
125 U. S.
355-357;
French v. Barber Asphalt Paving Co.,
181 U. S. 324,
181 U. S. 338,
et seq.; Houck v. Little River Drainage District,
239 U. S. 254,
239 U. S. 262,
239 U. S. 265;
Myles Salt Co. v. Iberia Drainage District, 239 U.
S. 478,
239 U. S. 481;
Branson v. Bush, 251 U. S. 182,
251 U. S. 189;
Valley Farms Co. v. County of Westchester, 261 U.
S. 155,
261 U. S. 163.
And only where there is manifest and unreasonable discrimination in
fixing the benefits which the several parcels will receive can the
legislative determination be said to contravene
Page 266 U. S. 387
the equal protection clause of that amendment.
Kansas City
Southern Ry. Co. v. Road Improvement District No. 6,
256 U. S. 658;
Thomas v. Kansas City Southern Ry. Co., 261 U.
S. 481.
To justify an assessment of benefits to particular lands, it is
not essential that the benefits be direct or immediate.
Valley
Farms Co. v. Westchester County, supra. But it is essential
that they have a better basis than mere speculation or conjecture.
Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. Road Improvement District No.
3, supra. In the case of railway property, they may consist of
gains from increased traffic reasonably expected to result from the
improvement.
Thomas v. Kansas City Southern Ry. Co., supra;
Branson v. Bush, supra.
The special confirmatory act was recognized by the supreme court
of the state as a legislative determination of the lands which will
be benefited and of the proportions in which they will share in the
benefits. It therefore must be treated here as an admissible
legislative assessment of benefits so far as the state constitution
is concerned.
The evidence, as before outlined, falls short of showing that
the assessment against the railway property was either palpably
arbitrary or unreasonably discriminatory. The burden was on the
railway companies to overcome the presumption attending the
legislative determination, and this they failed to do, for, under
the evidence produced, it is an entirely admissible view that the
railway property will be substantially benefited by the road
improvement, and that the benefits are fairly assessed as between
that property and the farmlands and town lots. True, the amount of
benefits which will accrue to the railway property is largely a
matter of forecast and estimate; but the same thing is true of the
farmlands and town lots, and also of benefit assessments in
general.
See Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Barber
Asphalt Paving Co., 197 U. S. 430,
197 U. S. 433;
Butters v. Oakland, 263 U. S. 162,
Page 266 U. S. 388
263 U. S. 165.
Forecast and estimate, based on a solid premise of fact and
experience, are not to be confused with mere speculation and
conjecture.
The road in question extends at right angles to the railway
line, a distance of 18 miles into a country well adapted to
supplying large traffic for the railway when the improvement is
completed. Adjacent to the road, as is conceded in the brief for
the railway companies, are 1,587 tracts of farmlands of less than
80 acres and 246 tracts of a larger acreage. The only practicable
route to available markets is through De Queen and over the
railway. These facts, together with the affirmative evidence of
what was undertaken and done in the way of growing new crops and
shipping them out over the railway as soon as the improvement was
well under way, illustrate that there was a real basis for
assessing the railway property at De Queen with substantial
benefits. Had the companies recognized this and devoted themselves
to showing that the amount of benefits assessed to their property
was excessive, instead of attempting to show that it would receive
no benefits whatever, they possibly might have made a better case.
But that course was not taken, and necessarily the state courts
rested their decision on the evidence that was presented. That
evidence fairly admitted of the view, taken in those courts, that
the assessment was not excessive.
The companies make a contention which may be summarized as
follows: assume that the improvement will bring to the railway at
De Queen an increased tonnage and business yielding gross receipts
amounting to $10,000 a year. According to the evidence, one-fourth
of that sum, or $2,500, will be net revenue. This increase in net
revenue must be spread over the entire railway, which is 800 miles
long. The portion assignable to the two miles of main line within
the road district is $6.25. This sum, capitalized on a 6 percent
basis, which gives $104.16,
Page 266 U. S. 389
represents the full benefit to the railway property within the
district.
The contention is faulty in several respects. The increased
traffic will not be carried from one end of the railway to the
other, but only from De Queen to Kansas City. The railway property
within the district includes much more than the 2 miles of main
track. Doubtless, the increased traffic will in a way benefit the
railway as a whole; but the traffic will be appurtenant to the
portion of the railway at De Queen, and will specially enhance the
importance and value of the property there as a part of the
line.
Other contentions are advanced which need not be specially
noticed here because they are shown to be quite untenable in the
decisions before cited.
We conclude that the objections made to the assessment on
constitutional ground are not well taken.
Judgment affirmed.