Judges: Maltbie, Avert, Brown, Jennings, Ells
Filed Date: 3/6/1941
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
By its appeal to the Superior Court the plaintiff, as owner of a tract of land abutting the westerly side of North Main Street in Waterbury, sought relief from an assessment of benefits for the construction of a sanitary sewer in the street opposite its property. This consists of a strip of vacant land fronting *Page 618 298.5 feet on the street, with a maximum depth of forty-eight feet at its northerly end and a depth of less than ten feet at its southerly end. An undefined right of passage over it to the street interfering to some extent with the use of the plaintiff's land is appurtenant to the undeveloped adjoining land on the west. The sewer was properly built by the city at a construction cost of $22.31 per foot and serves a large number of houses on both sides of the plaintiff's land. Section 53 of the defendant's charter (Special Acts, 1931, p. 580) provides that there shall be assessed "the sum of two dollars and fifty cents per lineal foot of frontage upon all property abutting upon such sewer . . ." In compliance with the provisions thereof, the defendant's board of commissioners of public works made an assessment against the plaintiff's land for the sewer at the flat rate of $2.50 per front foot prescribed therein, a total of $746.25. These facts are undisputed. The court found that the plaintiff's land was actually benefited approximately $250.
The question to be decided is whether the court erred in its determination that the assessment of $746.25 is valid notwithstanding the total actual benefit to the plaintiff's land from the construction of the sewer is but $250. A municipality desiring to make a public improvement such as the one in this case, can no doubt pay for it from its general funds resulting from taxes levied in the usual way or it can impose some or all of the expense upon property owners who will be specially benefited by the improvement, but if the latter method is followed, the essential basis is the fact that actual benefits have accrued to the property by reason of the improvement. 1 Page Jones, Taxation by Assessment (1909) p. 16. The principle upon which a valid assessment under 53 must rest and the consequent limitations upon the amount properly to *Page 619
be awarded, have been well summed up by this court in these words: "The fundamental principle upon which such assessments are made and justified, is that the owner of the property is ``assumed to be benefited by the improvement to the extent of the assessment; and it is imposed and collected as an equivalent for that benefit, and to pay for the improvement'. Bridgeport v. New York N. H.R. Co.,
In Norwood v. Baker,
Section 155 of the defendant's charter provides that: "Any party who shall feel aggrieved by any act of . . . any department [of the city] may . . . appeal from such action to the superior court . . . [which] may . . . inquire into the allegations and reasons of appeal . . . and may confirm, annul or modify the act appealed from, or make such order in the premises as equity may require, and may allow costs at its discretion." Each of the sections being a part of the charter, in the absence of provision to the contrary, it is clear that 155 provides for an appeal from any assessment made under 53. It was under the provision of 155, authorizing the court to "confirm, annul or modify" the assessment, that the plaintiff's appeal was taken, and under it the court had full authority to modify it to accord with the correct rule above explained. In the absence of an appeal, 53 provides an adequate working rule, but upon an appeal properly taken, as here, the appellant is entitled to relief according to its merits.
There is error, and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
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