117 Minn. 369 | Minn. | 1912
Proceedings for the construction of a drain, under chapter 230, p. 303, Laws 1905, the result of which, if constructed,.would drain the water, from three meandered lakes. The petition was duly presented to the board of county commissioners, and, after due proceedings in accordance with the statutes, ivas granted. An appeal was taken to the district court on the ground that the lakes sought to be drained were not within the class of lakes which are authorized by the statute to.be drained, and therefore that the order of the commissioners was without authority of law and unauthorized. After a trial in the district court without a jury, findings were made in harmony with the claim of appellants, and the order of the county board was reversed. Petitioners appealed from an order denying a new trial.
• The assignments of error present the question whether the findings of the trial court are so clearly against the- evidence as to justify a reversal of the order denying a new trial. A question in reference to the sufficiency of a remonstrance filed in opposition to the drain, referred to in the assignments of error, was'not seriously pressed on the argument, and we dispose of it with the remark that no ground for reversal is there presented. The sole question is whether the findings are against the evidence.
Section 1 of chapter 230, p. 303, Laws 1905, provides for the drainage of wet' and overflowed lands, upon conditions prescribed by the act, and among other things authorizes the widening or deepening of any stream or watercourse, and the lowering or draining of any lake, whether meandered or not, when necessary to the public welfarAand 'the accomplishment of the purposes of the proposed drainagé project, with this qualification:
“Aiid provided, further, that no meandered lake shall be drained tinder'the Authority of this act, except in case such lake is normally shallow and grassy and of ‘a marshy character, or except in case such meandered lake is no longer of sufficient depth and volume to be capable of any beneficial public use of a substantial character for fishing, for boating or public water supply.” .
The trial court found that the lakes in- question did not come within the elass of lakes authorized to be drained; in other words, that they were not normally shallow and grassy and of a marshy character, or no longer suitable for any beneficial public use. A careful consideration of the record leads to the conclusion that the findings should be sustained.
As we understand the situation, there are six different lakes which will be affected by the drain, if constructed. They constitute a chain of lakes, which in former years, and perhaps at present in times of high Avater, Avere connected by natural outlets or drains running from one to the other. The upper three lakes are sought to be entirely drained by deepening the channel between them, thus permitting the waters thereof to flow into the lakes below. It is not intended to entirely drain the three lower lakes, but petitioners do ask for the deepening of the outlets thereof to such an extent as to provide for the passage of the surplus waters from the upper lakes.
The evidence upon the question whether the upper lakes are grassy
No particular effect is to be given the findings of the board of county commissioners upon this particular question. The matter came to the district court for trial de novo, and the questions presented were there to be tried and determined as though originally at issue therein.
Order affirmed.