Defendant presents this appeal from a judgment, dated November 19, 1970, declaring a special assessment to improve and widen Masonic Avenue from Beaconsfield west to Kelly-Road to be unlawful.
By way of background, it should be noted that the City of Roseville, a growing community of more than 60,000 persons located in the southern part of Ma-comb County, entered into a contract in May of 1964 with the Roseland Shopping Center and Sears, Roebuck & Co., whereby the city agreed that Masonic Avenue from Beaconsfield west to Kelly Road would be repaved with 4 lanes of concrete pavement at its own expense. In accordance therewith, the defendant formed Special Assessment District Improvement No. PD 367 and levied an assessment of $12.37 per front foot against the property within the district.
The plaintiffs, incensed by this action, filed suit on August 7, 1969, for the purpose of having said assessments declared invalid and to enjoin the collection thereof. The main thrust of plaintiffs’ argument was that, while the widening of Masonic Avenue would be of benefit to the city as a whole, no special benefit accrued to them as abutting landowners, and, in fact, the increased traffic on Masonic Avenue was a detriment.
After a trial, lasting for three days, the learned acting circuit judge found in favor of the plaintiffs and granted the relief prayed for.
*172The leading cases on this subject are Fluckey v. City of Plymouth (1960), 358 Mich 447, and Brill v. City of Grand Rapids (1970), 383 Mich 216.
As pointed out by the trial court, the defendant no doubt was anxious to have this mall complex completed. The complex consists of a large Sears store, 55 other retailers, and 4,500 parking spaces, and was built upon land which previously had been occupied by a red barn and dairy farm. Masonic Avenue, which had been a two-lane black-top road, is not a busy commercial thoroughfare.
The court found “that the instant testimonial record mades a stronger case of strikingly like detriment than .was made either in Fluckey or Brill”. We agree.
The defendant attempted to show that the assessments were justified by virtue of an increase in value. The trial court ruled on this item in the following manner:
“Such increase of value can hardly be doubted. The conclusion however does not satisfy our inquiry. The real issue here is whether the pavement widening project stepped up the value of the plaintiffs’ home premises, or whether other factors did. If other factors caused the increase upon which the city depends, the questioned assessments receive no support on account of such expert testimony.
“As in Brill, the experts testifying for Roseville’s allegation of increased value have paid little or no attention to the impact of progressive inflation, a-factor the Supreme Court noted judicially as far back as 1957 when the disease of devalued money had moved only ‘from a crawl to a trot’. (Normand v Thomas Theatre Corp, 349 Mich 50, 61, 62 [1957].)1
*173More important, no such witness has taken into consideration the rather obvious fact that it is the Mall and the business generated thereby, not the widened pavement, which with the course of inflation is the dominant cause of the testified dollar increase of nearby property values. As one of these witnesses conceded, the residential zoned premises on Masonic Avenue — in the vicinity of the Mall — are doubtless due for new zoning, since the already begun devotion of the nearby area to life in recently constructed apartment buildings foreshadows rezoning to allow more and more high level apartment construction and more commercial business around the Mall.”
We have reviewed the lengthy record and find no error.
Affirmed.
Costs to plaintiffs.