1. Section 4439-6 of the Laws of Washington, 1923, which
provides a supplemental assessment on the lands within drainage
districts to make up any deficiency resulting from the elimination
or avoidance of any original assessment, does not intend that the
assessment
Page 274 U. S. 176
of any landowner may thus be increased beyond the benefits
derived by him from the improvement. P.
274 U. S.
180.
2. Where part of the land in a special improvement district
fails to pay its assessment and is appropriated and sold, any
deficit thus arising may constitutionally be met by additional
assessments on the lands of the district, provided the law operates
uniformly as against all parts of it and the assessments of the
respective landowners are not to exceed the benefits they receive
from the improvement. P.
274 U. S. 181.
134 Wash. 539 affirmed.
Error to a decree of the Supreme Court of Washington which
affirmed a decree dismissing the petition in a suit brought by a
number of the owners of land within a drainage district to restrain
the making of the improvement and the issuance of bonds to pay for
it.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a writ of error to a decree of the Supreme Court of
Washington. The original action was brought in the Superior Court
of Clarke County, of that state, to have the proceedings in the
organization of diking improvement district No. 3 of that county
declared void because certain portions of the statute under which
the district was formed were unconstitutional, and to restrain the
defendants from taking any steps looking to the construction of the
proposed improvement or the sale by the county of bonds to finance
it. After a trial on the merits, the trial court dismissed the
petition, and an appeal was taken to the supreme court of the
state, where the
Page 274 U. S. 177
decree of the trial court was affirmed. The proposed improvement
was sought to be made under Chapter VI, Title XXVII, Rem.Comp.Stat.
as amended by c. 46 of the Laws of 1923. This law, by §§
4407, 4408, 4410, 4411, 4412, 4414, 4415, 4416, 4422, 4435-1, makes
provision for the establishment of a diking district initiated by a
petition addressed to the board of county commissioners of the
county in which the improvement is located, signed by certain
owners of property to be benefited, the petition to set forth with
reasonable certainty the location, route, and terminal of the dike.
Thereafter, the usual provisions are made for the giving of notice,
the hearing upon the question of the wisdom and public benefit of
the improvement, an estimate of the damage to each landowner which
may be done by the improvement and also of the benefits it will
effect for each, and the total number of acres that will be
benefited. The county commissioners are to have the aid of the
county engineer. The proposed improvement is to be approved by the
state reclamation board. Full provision is made for hearings at
which the damages and the benefits shall be determined and
apportioned to the various landowners, and for appeals to a court
in such determinations. A board of supervisors of the district are
elected who attend to the construction of the improvement. The cost
of the improvement is to be paid by assessment upon the property
benefited, and all the lands included within the boundaries of the
district and assessed for the improvement are to remain liable for
the costs of the improvement until the same are fully paid. One
permitted method of meeting the cost is by bonds. These are not to
be obligations of the county, though they are issued by it.
The object of this particular improvement was to reclaim lands
on the east bank of the Columbia river
Page 274 U. S. 178
which were swampy and subject to overflow at times of high
water. It also had for its purpose the draining of Lake Shillapoo.
The first petition covered 6,500 acres. After the organization of
the district proceeded to the point where bonds were ready to be
sold, it was permitted to remain dormant for three years, when a
second petition was filed with the county commissioners, and
thereafter the district was regularly established, comprising 5,100
acres of land. It was determined that the project should be
financed by the issuing of bonds to run for fifteen years. The
commissioners advertised for the letting of the contract for the
improvement and for the sale of the bonds. On the day before the
date set, the plaintiffs in error began the present action. In the
state court, there were many objections to the validity of the
proceedings, and all of them were decided against the
plaintiffs.
The counsel for plaintiffs in error in this Court concede that
the only point which they can press here grows out of an amendment
to the diking law, § 4439-6 of Session Laws of Washington for
1923, pp. 128, 129, with reference to reassessments. It reads as
follows:
"If, upon the foreclosure of the assessment upon any property,
the same shall not sell for enough to pay the assessment against
it, or if any property assessed was not subject to assessment, or
if any assessment made shall have been eliminated by foreclosure of
a tax lien or made void in any other manner, the board of county
commissioners shall cause a supplemental assessment to be made on
the property benefited by the improvement,
including property
upon which any assessment shall have been so eliminated or made
void, and against the county, cities, and towns chargeable
therewith in the manner provided for the original assessment, to
cover the deficiency so caused in the original assessment."
The italicized words were put in by the amendment in 1923.
It is argued for plaintiffs in error that, by this statute, it
is attempted to give power to the county officers upon
Page 274 U. S. 179
the foreclosure of the assessment upon any property to reassess
the deficit upon the remaining lands in the district, and that this
permits them to ignore the original apportionment and to reassess
lands within the district for the remainder of the cost of the
improvement, the benefit of which inures to other lands in the
district; that this violates the principle that assessments must be
apportioned in accordance with the benefits received, and is not
due process of law. It is said that this complaint is particularly
pertinent to the case at bar for the reason that a large area of
the diking district involved, comprising the bottom of Shillapoo
Lake and contiguous lowlands bordering it, the value of which is
nothing at the present time, and the value of which may continue to
be nothing after the system of improvement is established, for the
reason that it has not been ascertained that the bed of the lake
and the lowlands surrounding it are of such composition as to
permit their use for agricultural purposes even after they are
drained, that, if such lands prove valueless, it follows that the
assessment charges against the same will not be paid, and, by the
reassessment provision, the cost thereof will be reassessed against
the remaining land in the district, which will increase the cost to
such lands far in excess of the benefits received. In answering the
objection that the condition feared has not yet arisen, is
premature, and may never arise, and that such owners can apply for
relief when conditions arise making it necessary, it is said that
the bonds in question, the issuing of which the plaintiffs in error
are seeking to have enjoined, are to be sold under the provisions
of this law with the reassessment feature as a part thereof, and
that they become at once a cloud upon the title of plaintiffs, make
it unmarketable and to that extent tend to confiscate their
property and work a taking without due process of law. It is said
that, if the reassessment feature violates the federal
Constitution, a court of equity should afford relief at the outset
to the landowners within the district.
Page 274 U. S. 180
The Diking Act specifically provides, § 4422, Session Laws
of Washington for 1923, p. 114, that the cost of the improvement
shall be paid by assessment upon the property benefited, said
assessment to be levied and apportioned as thereinafter prescribed.
In
Foster v. Commissioners of Cowlitz County, 100 Wash.
502, the supreme court of the state, in discussing a similar
objection under this act, though it has since been amended in one
respect, used this language:
"Insofar as the question of due process in the charging of the
cost of the improvement to the property benefited thereby is
concerned, counsel's contention is also untenable. Owners of
property within the district are given notice and opportunity to be
heard upon the question of the creation of the district and the
construction of the improvement. When it comes to charging the cost
of the improvement against the several tracts of land within the
district, such charge must be 'in proportion to the benefits
accruing thereto,' and we think the statute also means that no
tract of land can be charged in excess of the benefits accruing
thereto. Owners of land within the district to be charged with any
portion of the cost of the improvement are given notice and
opportunity to be heard upon the question of benefits and the
apportionment of the charge to be made therefor against the several
tracts. Not until all this is done is the assessment finally
levied."
It is said that this language of the Washington court cannot now
be regarded as a limitation to benefits of assessments against any
particular lot of land because of the amendment of 1923 already
referred to by which the supplemental assessments may include
deficits in the total assessments occasioned by elimination or
voiding of previous assessments on the other lands in the
district.
It seems clear to us that there is nothing in this amendment
which changes the rule of construction of the statute as laid down
by the Supreme Court in the
Foster case,
Page 274 U. S. 181
imposing a limitation in favor of the assessment payers against
any supplemental assessment that should exceed the benefits
conferred on each one by the improvement. Supplemental assessments
in providing for the payment for such improvements are recognized
as a legitimate part of the proceeding necessary to raise the money
and to pay bonds issued to meet the cost, and if, in the process of
collection, it shall appear that some of the assessed land fails to
pay the assessment and is appropriated and sold, the distribution
of the deficit thus arising to be included in another assessment is
only meeting the to be expected cost of the improvement. When the
operation of the law works uniformly as against all parts of the
assessment district and results in a higher cost of the improvement
and an increased assessment on all the owners of land who have
paid, it violates no constitutional right of theirs, as long as
their benefits continue respectively to exceed their individual
assessments.
Orr v. Allen, 248 U. S.
35;
Orr v. Allen, 245 F. 486, 498;
Norris
v. Montezuma Valley Irrigation District, 248 F. 369, 373;
Hagar Reclamation District, 111 U.
S. 701;
Fallbrook Irrigation District v.
Bradley, 164 U. S. 112.
Affirmed.