1. Congress, in exercising legislation over property and persons
within the District of Columbia, may, provided no intervening
rights are thereby impaired, confirm the proceedings of an officer
in the District, or of a subordinate municipality, or other
authority therein, which, without such confirmation, would be
void.
2. An Act of Congress approved June 19, 1878, 20 Stat. 166,
entitled "An Act to provide for the revision and correction of
assessments for special improvements in the District of Columbia,
and for other purposes," considered, with reference to the
preceding legislation of Congress and of the legislative assembly
of said District.
Held, 1. that said act was practically a
confirmation of the doings of the board of public works of the
District, touching the improvement of streets and roads and a
ratification of the assessments prepared under an Act of said
assembly of Aug. 10, 1871, as charges upon the adjoining property,
and that it conferred authority upon the commissioners to revise
and correct such assessments within thirty days after the passage
of the act; 2. that such confirmation was as binding and effectual
as if authority had been originally conferred by law to direct the
improvements and make the assessments.
The facts are sufficiently stated in the opinion of the
Court.
MR. JUSTICE STRONG delivered the opinion of the Court.
The facts of this case appear in the bill, the answer, and
the
Page 97 U. S. 688
accompanying exhibits. So far as it is necessary to restate them
now, they are as follows:
In the year 1871, the Board of Public Works of the District of
Columbia, a board constituted under and by virtue of the organic
law of the District, caused to be constructed a sewer in and along
the line of Seventh Street in the City of Washington, extending
from Virginia Avenue to the Potomac River. They also caused the
street and sidewalks to be paved, and curbstones at the gutters to
be set. The work had been commenced by the Corporation of
Washington before the board came into existence, and a contract had
been made by the city with George M. Linville to pave and construct
a sewer along that street; but the work had not been completed,
when Congress, by Act approved Fed. 22, 1871, incorporated the
District and provided for the existence of a board of public works.
The act declared the board should have entire control of, and make
all regulations which they should deem necessary for keeping in
repair, the streets, avenues, alleys, and sewers of the city, and
all other works which might be entrusted to their charge by the
legislative assembly of the District, or by Congress. Under this
authority, the board, when organized, took charge of the work on
Seventh Street, continued Linville as contractor, caused the sewer
to be changed and enlarged, and contracted with Albert Gleason for
paving the sidewalks and setting the curbstones. After the
completion of the work, they made an assessment of one-third of its
cost upon the property adjoining, proportioning it to the frontage;
gave notice of the assessment to the property owners; and the
District was about to proceed in the collection of the assessments
when this bill was filed. The assessments were made ostensibly by
authority of the thirty-seventh section of the organic act of the
District. The clause of that section conferring the authority is as
follows:
"They [the board of public works] shall disburse upon their
warrant all moneys appropriated by the United State, or the
District of Columbia or collected from property holders for the
improvement of streets, avenues, alleys, and sewers, and roads and
bridges, and shall assess, in such manner as shall be prescribed by
law, upon the property adjoining and to be especially benefited by
the improvements, authorized by law
Page 97 U. S. 689
and made by them, a reasonable proportion of the cost of the
improvement, not exceeding one-third of such cost, which sum shall
be collected as all other taxes are collected."
The complainants are property holders along the line of Seventh
Street, adjoining that part of the street where the sewer was
constructed and where the curbstones and the paving were laid.
Their properties are some of those upon which the board of public
works made an assessment of one-third the cost of the improvement,
and they bring this bill for an injunction against the collection
of the sums assessed and against issuing certificates of
indebtedness of their properties. The bill also seeks a decree that
the assessments are illegal and void, and an injunction upon the
District, or the board of public works, against making any payment
for the work done, and upon the contractors against receiving
payment.
In support of the prayer for such relief, the bill charges, 1st,
that the board was not authorized by law to make the improvement
along Seventh Street; 2d, that no law existed at the time when the
assessments were made, prescribing the manner in which the board
should make assessments; 3d, that assessments according to the
frontage of the street were unauthorized and illegal; and 4th, that
in making the assessment, no part of the cost of the improvement
was charged upon school house and church property, exempt by law
from taxation, but that the whole of the one-third of the cost was
charged against the other adjoining property. There are other minor
complaints of the assessment, not, however, needful to be stated.
They assail only its regularity.
We do not propose to inquire whether the charges of the bill are
well founded. Such an inquiry can have no bearing upon the case as
it now stands, for were it conceded that the board of public works
had no authority to do the work that was done at the time when it
was done, and consequently no authority to make an assessment of a
part of its cost upon the complainants' property, or to assess in
the manner in which the assessment was made, the concession would
not dispose of the case, or establish that the complainants have a
right to the equitable relief for which they pray. There has been
congressional legislation since 1872, the effect of which upon the
assessments
Page 97 U. S. 690
is controlling. There were also acts of the legislative assembly
of the District, which very forcibly imply a confirmation of the
acts and assessments of the board of which the bill complains. If
Congress or the legislative assembly had the power to commit to the
board the duty of making the improvements and to prescribe that the
assessments should be made in the manner in which they were made,
it had power to ratify the acts which it might have authorized. And
the ratification, if made, was equivalent to an original authority,
according to the maxim
omnis ratihabitio retro trahitur et
mandato priori aequiparatur. Under the Constitution, Congress
had power to exercise exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever
over the District, and this includes the power of taxation.
Cohen v.
Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264. Congress may legislate
within the District, respecting the people and property therein, as
may the legislature of any state over any of its subordinate
municipalities. It may therefore cure irregularities and confirm
proceedings which without the confirmation would be void because
unauthorized, provided such confirmation does not interfere with
intervening rights. Judge Cooley, in view of the authorities,
asserts the following rule:
"If the thing wanting, or which failed to be done and which
constitutes the defect in the proceeding, is something the
necessity for which the legislature might have dispensed with by
prior statute, then it is not beyond the power of the legislature
to dispense with it by subsequent statute. And if the irregularity
consists in doing some act or in the mode or manner of doing some
act which the legislature might have made immaterial by prior law,
it is equally competent to make the same immaterial by a subsequent
law."
Cooley, Const.Lim. 371. This rule, we think, is accurately
stated.
The question is therefore presented whether the legislative
assembly was empowered by the organic law of the District to commit
to the board of public works public improvements, to make
appropriations for them, and to prescribe the manner in which
assessments should be made, or whether Congress itself has
confirmed the assessments of which the plaintiffs complain.
There is much in the legislation of the District assembly which,
if it does not show a direct ratification of what was
Page 97 U. S. 691
done by the board of public works, at least exhibits an
acquiescence in it and an approval. After the work had been done
upon Seventh Street, an act of that assembly, passed May 29, 1873,
extended the time for payment of the assessments and authorized the
board to issue, and use in the discharge of outstanding
obligations, certificates of indebtedness for work done under its
direction, and chargeable to the private property benefited
thereby. This included assessments for work done or in progress
under existing contracts, and the act declared that such
certificates should be receivable in payment for assessments for
special improvements. The second section directed all certificates
thereafter issued to be deposited with the commissioners of the
sinking fund of the District, and pledged them for the payment of
the principal and interest. The third section extended the time of
payment, and provided that upon default of payment, the property
against which the assessments and certificates existed should be
sold, and the fourth section authorized and directed the
commissioners of the sinking fund to purchase the certificates, on
request of the holders, and collect them on their account. It is
difficult to understand what this act meant if it did not recognize
the validity of the assessments made by the board of public works
and consequently the authority by which the work was done and the
improvements were made.
The action of Congress has been even more significant. Passing
by the Act of March 3, 1875, which gave directions for sales to
collect the assessments for special improvements, in itself
presenting no doubtful implication, the Act of Congress of June 19,
1878, appears to us to have set the matter at rest. That act
peremptorily directed the commissioners of the District
"to enforce the collection, according to existing laws, of all
assessments for special improvements prepared under an act of the
legislative assembly of Aug. 10, 1871, as charges upon the property
benefited by the improvements in respect to which the said
assessments were made."
It also authorized the commissioners to revise such assessments
within thirty days from the passage of the act, and correct the
same, so far as the charges were erroneous or excessive. The
meaning of this act is not to be mistaken. It was practically a
Page 97 U. S. 692
confirmation of what the board of public works had done. It is
not to be conceded that Congress ordered the collection of
assessments which it regarded as illegal, and the permission given
to the commissioners to correct errors and excesses in them by
giving drawback certificates, to be receivable in payment of
assessments, leaves no doubt that the authority of the board to
make them, as they were made, was intended to be recognized. It is
not denied that the act had in view these assessments now assailed
by the complainants, and no such denial could honestly be made. We
are of opinion, therefore, that the assessments have been ratified
by Congress. If there were errors in the manner of making them or
in the amount of the charges, provision was made for correction of
the errors. If the church and school properties should not have
been exempted, and consequently the amount charged upon the
complainants' properties was erroneously increased, the
commissioners were empowered to correct the wrong.
It may be that the burden laid upon the property of the
complainants is onerous. Special assessments for special road or
street improvements very often are oppressive. But that the
legislative power may authorize them, and may direct them to be
made in proportion to the frontage, area, or market value of the
adjoining property, at its discretion, is, under the decisions, no
longer an open question.
In conclusion, we may notice an argument of the complainants,
that the deeds by which the fee simple of the streets of Washington
was conveyed to the United States require the federal government to
pay for grading and improving the streets. In answer to this, it is
sufficient to say no such point was made in the court below and no
such deeds are in evidence or are exhibits in the case. In their
absence, we cannot assume the fact upon which this argument
rests.
Decree affirmed.
NOTE --
National Bank v. Shoemaker, appeal from the
Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, was heard at the same
time as the preceding case, and was argued by Mr. Walter S. Cox and
Mr. William A. Cook for the appellant, and by Mr. Richard T.
Merrick and Mr. T. A. Lambert for the appellee.
MR. JUSTICE STRONG delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is substantially ruled by
Mattingly v. District of
Columbia, supra, p.
97 U. S. 687. The
bill, as in that case, was for an injunction against the collection
of a
Page 97 U. S. 693
special assessment and for the surrender and cancellation of a
certificate of indebtedness for such an assessment. The property
upon which the assessment was laid is in the District of Columbia,
though outside the bounds of the City of Washington. But the
legislative assembly, created by the organic act, had authority to
legislate for the entire District, and the board of public works
had the same authority over the roads of the District as they had
over the streets and avenues in the city. They had, throughout the
District, the same power to make assessments for improvements. The
assessment of which the bill complains was made by the board, and
it was one of those which were confirmed and ordered to be enforced
by the act of Congress of June 19, 1878. The bill of the
complainant cannot, therefore, be sustained.
The decree will be reversed, and the cause remitted with
instructions to dismiss the bill, and it is
So ordered.