delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is ,a bill to restrain the collection of a tax and entry upon the plaintiffs’ lands in pursuance of a plan of drainage established in the mode provided by the laws of Missouri. The grounds on which relief is sought are that § 40 of the Drainage Laws of 1913, under which the plaintiffs’ lands were brought into the drainage district, is contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment, and that the inclusion of their lands was an arbitrary exercise of power for the purpose of making the plaintiffs pay for benefits that they did not share. The District Court found that there was no arbitrary exercise of power, but only a decision upon disputable questions of benefit with regard to land all of which was Missouri bottom land, similar in condition in everything but degree. It upheld the inclusion of the plaintiffs’ land. In view of the constitutional question raised the plaintiffs appealed directly to this Court.
*47
Under the laws of ,the State ,a drainage district was incorporated which originally contained, it is said, 14,400 acres. In a later year, upon petition of the supervisors of the district, the boundaries were enlarged in due statutory form so as to take in nearly 24,000 acres more of adjoining land, including that now concerned. It is not disputed that the original district was lawful in all respects. In general there can be no doubt that a State has power to add more land, that shares the benefit of a scheme, to the lawfully constituted district that has to pay for it, and to do so against the will of the Owner.
Houck
v.
Little River Drainage District,
*48
As to the supposed sinister purpose of those who brought the plaintiffs in, no evidence was given to prove it. That the plantiffs’ land would be benefited has been found by the Circuit Court of Carroll County, Missouri, which made the order, and by the District Court below. We see no reason in the evidence for not accepting their findings. There is another objection to inquiring further. By the law of Missouri the decree of the Circuit Court is final with regard to the territorial extent of the district. The bill further states that the plantiffs have sought redress in the courts of the State without avail. The defendants plead that the plaintiffs sued in a State court to cancel the assessments upon them and to annul the judgment of the Circuit Court; that thereupon the defendants applied to the Supreme Court for a writ of prohibition, and that the court made the prohibition absolute, upholding the constitutionality of the law.
State, ex rel. Norborne Land Drainage District
v.
Hughes,
Decree affirmed.
