217 N.W. 81 | Iowa | 1927
Pony Creek Drainage District was established about 1902, and 1. DRAINS: the improvements constructed. It seems that establish- bonds have been issued, of which $5,000 are ment: outstanding. There have been three clean outs, subsequent and some widening, remodeling, and relocating. exclusion of The average annual expenditure since lands: establishment has been effect. *1044 about $76,000. The evidence is that, to keep up the improvements, work from time to time will be required. Since establishment, various tracts of land have been taken out of the district, by formal or informal action of the board, and new classifications have been made. Defendant Vinton is the owner of land included in the district at the time of its original establishment. He endeavored to obtain drainage into the Pony Creek ditch, of water which it was claimed did not naturally find its outlet that way. His effort was unsuccessful, and he thereupon petitioned the board to have his land excluded from the district. He says:
"The board of supervisors proposed to me that they would take my land out, and I would take the water across the road, and whenever I got drainage, I paid drainage taxes."
The board, without notice to the other landowners, adopted a resolution excluding the Vinton land from the district. Vinton was one of the three members of the board. All three voted for the resolution. The plaintiff owns land in the district. He knew of the action of the board in time to appeal.
I. Defendants urge that plaintiff had a remedy by appeal, and that his remedy by appeal was adequate and exclusive; that he 2. CERTIORARI: therefore cannot resort to certiorari. The when writ action of the board in excluding land from the lies: district, if without jurisdiction, though appeal as reviewable on appeal, may also be reviewed on non- certiorari. The remedy by appeal is not exclusive exclusive when the action complained of is remedy. without jurisdiction. Berkey v. Thompson,
II. Defendants rely on Mittman v. Farmer,
The inclusion of land in a drainage district by original establishment is conclusive unless appealed from. It cannot thereafter be asserted that such land is not benefited by the improvement. Thompson v. Board of Supervisors,
"The classification as finally adopted shall remain the basis of all future assessments for the purpose of said district unless revised by the board in the manner provided for reclassification." Code of 1924, Section 7476; Section 1989-a12, Code Supplement, 1913.
See Code Supplement, 1913, Sections 1946, 1946-a to 1946-e, inclusive.
The drainage law prior, as well as subsequent, to 1904 provided for the issuance of drainage bonds. Code of 1897, Section 1953; Code of 1924, Section 7503. The district after establishment is under the control of the board, whose duty it is to keep the improvement in repair. The board may cause the drains to be enlarged, and the location changed. Code of 1924, Section 7556; Code Supplement, 1913, Section 1989-a21. It is provided:
"The cost of such repairs or change shall be paid by the board from the drainage fund of said levee or drainage district, or by assessing and levying the cost of such change or repair upon the lands in the same proportion that the original expenses and cost of construction were levied and assessed, except * * *" Code Supplement, 1913, Section 1989-a21.
See, also, Code of 1924, Sections 7557, 7558, et seq. Reclassification is provided for. Code of 1924, Sections 7492, 7494, 7562, and preceding statutes there referred to. See Code Supplement, 1913, Section 1946-a et seq. Provision is made for annexation of additional lands. Code of 1924, Section 7549 etseq., and citations to previous statutes. Also for the establishment of a new district, to include a former one. Code of 1924, Sections 7554, 7555, and antecedent laws. The fact that these statutes, elaborate as they were when first enacted, and more so by amendment, make no provision for excluding lands from a district *1046 after final establishment, is significant of the intention of the legislature.
A drainage district is a co-operative enterprise. The improvements, frequently very large and valuable and expensive in maintenance, are constructed in reliance upon the liability of all the lands within it to contribute, not merely to the original cost, but to upkeep. Long-time obligations are incurred. In many cases, the ditch is of such a character that it will become valueless in a comparatively short time unless repairs are made. Many drains require almost continuous repair and improvement. The landowners are protected from unjust taxation originating in new conditions by the provision which the law makes for reclassification, for including other lands, and for the establishment of a new district. If the board may take out one tract, it may take out another. Each exclusion will furnish excuse for others. Supposed favoritism to one taxpayer will be urged as a reason for equivalent action in alleged justice to another. Changes in boards will bring changes of sentiments and of favorites. Original physical conditions influential in the establishment of the district may be eliminated and forgotten, and present conditions may seem to call for exclusion of land that was originally greatly benefited. The legislature might well have considered that injustice was more likely to result from denial than from granting to the board the power of post-establishment exclusion.
It is, we think, apparent, without further elaboration, that the board of supervisors was wholly without power or jurisdiction to exclude the lands in question from the district; that its order now under review is void. The writ of certiorari was properly sustained, and the judgment is — Affirmed.
EVANS, C.J., and De GRAFF, ALBERT, and WAGNER, JJ., concur.