
    Haughton v. Southard, Treas., et al.
    (Decided March 28, 1932.)
    
      Mr. Edward H. Bay, for plaintiff.
    
      Mr. Carl J. Christensen, .prosecuting attorney, and Mr. Orion W. Nelson, for defendants.
   Richards, J.

This action was commenced by Albert Haughton for the purpose of enjoining county officials from certifying and collecting an assessment made upon the land of plaintiff, described in the petition, for the construction of intercounty highway No. 21, extending from the west line of the city of Toledo to the Fulton county line, a distance of approximately 15 miles. The improvement was divided by the public authorities into various sections, the only ones involved in this action being known as 1-1 and 1-2. The farm of the plaintiff is the east half of the southeast quarter of Section 24 in Sylvania township, containing 80 acres, and has been owned by him for more than 40 years. It is located nearly two and one-half miles west of the west limits of the city of Toledo, and, before the improvement involved in this action was made, the road lying in front of his land was improved by a good, tar-bound macadam road approximately 20 feet in width. The value of the plaintiff’s land and the improvements thereon, as assessed for taxation, was $16,500, and the assessment made thereon for the improvement is $12,582.81. The total cost of the improvement involved in this action was in excess of $360,000. The plaintiff contends that his farm is not benefited by the improvement, that the assessment was not made according to benefits, was grossly in excess of the benefits, and was inequitable and unjust, and exceeded the percentage of tax valuation that could be assessed on the land.

From a decree in the common pleas court dismissing the petition, the plaintiff appealed.

Counsel agree that the proceedings for making the improvement were duly commenced on June 4, 1925, and that the statutes then in force control, not only as to the making of the improvement, but as to assessing the cost therefor, except in so far as the owner’s rights may be affected by the petitions for the improvement, if they are affected thereby. It is further agreed that the plaintiff signed only one petition relating to the improvement, and that it has no relation to the section involved in this litigation. He owned a small tract of land on the improvement more than a mile east of his farm, near the city of Toledo, which is not involved in this litigation, and the petition related only to that parcel of land.

The important sections of the General Code involved are contained in Page’s Compact Edition of the General Code issued in 1920, and are Section 1214 (107 Ohio Laws, 129), and Section 1198 (106 Ohio Laws, 630). The pertinent portion of Section 1214 reads as follows: “Ten per cent, of the cost and expense of the improvement, excepting therefrom the cost and expense of bridges and culverts, shall be a charge upon the property abutting on the improvement, provided the total amount assessed against any owner of abutting property shall not exceed thirty-three-per cent, of the valuation of such abutting property for the purposes of taxation. Provided, however, that the county commissioners by a resolution adopted by unanimous vote may increase the per cent, of the cost and expense of the improvement to be specially assessed and may order that all or any part of the cost and expense of the improvement contributed by the county and the interested township or townships be assessed against the property abutting on the improvement * #

Section 1214, supra, was of course subject to the limitation that the assessment made upon abutting property to pay for an improvement must not exceed the benefits resulting therefrom to the property, and the section itself contains the limitation that the assessment shall not exceed 33 per cent, of the valuation of the abutting property for taxation. The provision that 10 per cent, of the cost and expense of the improvement, except bridges and culverts, shall be a charge upon the abutting property, may indeed, by a unanimous vote of the county commissioners, be increased, and the county commissioners may, by unanimous vote, order that the entire cost and expense of the improvement contributed by the county and township be assessed against the abutting owner, but such increased assessment must be still subject to the limitation that it shall not exceed the benefits nor the 33 per cent, limitation fixed by statute. The commissioners did in fact increase the assessment to be placed upon the abutting property above the 10 per cent, named in the statute, but they had no authority to go beyond the other limitations mentioned without the consent of the abutting owner. It is conceivable that a case could arise in which the value of all abutting property was such that it could bear the entire cost of the improvement, and the assessment still be within the 33 per cent, limitation, and the property be benefited in an amount equal to or greater than the assessment, but that is not this case.

It is a general principle that statutes- imposing taxes and public burdens must be strictly construed in favor of the property owner, and, if there is ambiguity which raises a doubt as to the intent of the statute, that doubt must be resolved in favor of the property owner on whom the burden is sought to be imposed. Such was the holding of the Supreme Court in City of Cincinnati v. Connor, 55 Ohio St., 82, 91, 44 N. E., 582.

Section 1198, supra, relates to improving an inter-county highway to a greater width than 20 feet when there is filed a petition signed by the owners of 25 per cent, or more of the lineal feet abutting on the highway requesting that the added cost be assessed against the owners, and that the cost not assumed by the commissioners be assessed against the abutting owners. This section cannot militate against the claim made by the plaintiff, for the very good and sufficient reason that he signed no petition relating to the property involved in this litigation. The petition which he did in fact sign related to his other piece of property,, and was almost identical in form with the one in Birdseye v. Village of Clyde, 61 Ohio St., 27, 33, 55 N. E., 169, in which case it was held that the owner signing such a petition was not estopped to contest an assessment, as his property was bound thereby only for the payment of its proper share of a legal assessment, but no further.

Section 1214, supra, provides that a property owner who is assessed for an improvement may file with the county commissioners objections to the assessment, and they have power to correct the assessment. It is conceded by counsel that the assessment in this case was made after the improvement was completed, and the plaintiff duly filed objections to the assessment made against Ms property, which objections were overruled by the county commissioners.

A large amount of testimony was taken on the trial consisting of many hundreds of pages relating to the value of plaintiff’s farm and its adaptability to other purposes. This evidence further shows that his farm is also assessed for the Sylvania avenue extension stone road and a large amount for water line improvements and for a district main sewer.

From the view we take of the case, the rights of the parties must be determined by a construction of the statutes above cited, and, as we construe those statutes, the limit of the assessment which may be lawfully made against plaintiff’s farm is 33 per cent, of its value as fixed for taxation. From the evidence it is apparent that the assessment for this improvement in excess of 33 per cent, of the taxable value of the property would greatly exceed the benefits to the land resulting from the improvement, and would amount to a confiscation of the property. The assessment therefore should be limited to 33 per cent, of the value of the property as listed for taxation.

Judgment and decree for plaintiff.

Lloyd, J., concurs.

"Williams, J., not participating.  