156 P. 610 | Wyo. | 1916
The Bench Canal Drainage District is a Drainage District organized for the purpose of draining certain lands in Big Horn county, under the provisions of Chapter 95, S. L. 1911, entitled, “An Act for the formation and organization of drainage districts, and conferring certain powers thereon.” The organization of the district appears .to have been proceeded with under the provisions of said chapter, the
The objections of plaintiffs in error to the approval and confirmation of said report, as contained in the remonstrance, are, in substance, that their lands were included within the district by said report; that neither said Neff, Mullen, Redmon, Olson, Hodson, Ahlgrim or Stearns were signers to the petition for the organization of said district, but that their lands were brought into said district by said commissioners, and that each and all of the tracts belonging to said last mentioned remonstrators were dry lands and
1. That by its provisions and especially under Sec. 74 thereof, the remonstrators are, and each of them can be deprived of their property without due process of law.
2. That their private property can be and is sought to be taken for private use without consent of the owner and without due compensation.
3. That their private property can be and is sought to be taken for private use without just compensation.
4. That these remonstrators who are brought into and whose lands are included in such drainage district are compelled to submit any objections they may have to having their lands assessed in such drainage district to the Court or Judge, while other persons subsequently brought in have a right to have such issue determined by a jury.
In order to fairly and, if we can, clearly present the questions raised, it will be necessary to refer at some length to the statute and to quote the sections particularly involved. The organization of a drainage district is initiated by a petition, filed in the district court, signed by a majority of the adult owners of land within the district representing one-third in area of the lands in'said district to be reclaimed or benefited, or by the adult owners of more than one-half of the lands in said district, stating their desire to construct drains, ditches or levees across the lands of others, for the promotion of the public health or welfare, and the drain
“Sec. 39'. As soon as may be after the confirmation of the said preliminary report, or within such time as the court may direct, said commissioners shall proceed to have all necessary levels taken and surveys made, and shall lay out said proposed work, make a map thereof and plans, profiles and other specifications thereof, and report in writing to the court.
“Sec. 40. First: Whether the starting point, routes and termini of the proposed work and the proposed location thereof, as- in the petition contained, are in all respects proper and feasible, and, if not, shall report such as are most proper and feasible.
*153 “Sec. 41. Second: If it be found necessary to change the boundaries of said proposed district, as by them previously fixed, they shall report said proposed change, and, if possible, shall report the names, residence and postoffice addresses of the owner or owners of all lands affected by said change in boundaries, but no such change in boundaries shall be made as to deprive the court of jurisdiction;, provided, however, that if the owners of lands adjacent to the district petition to have their lands brought in to the district such may be considered the same as original petitioners in making changes of boundaries.
“Sec. 42: Third: What lands within the district, as by them reported will be injured by the proposed work, if any, and they shall therein award to each tract, lot, easement or interest by whomsoever held, the amount of damages which they shall determine will be caused to the same by the proposed work.
“Sec. 43. Fourth: What lands within the district as by them reported will be benefited by the proposed work and they shall assess against each tract, lot and easement by whomsoever held the amount of benefits which they determine will be caused to the same by the proposed work. The benefits so assessed are herein referred to as 'assessment of benefits.’
“Sec. 44. Fifth: They shall also determine and report to the court the total amount, as near as they can determine, that said proposed work will cost, which .cost shall include all incidental expenses, the reasonable cost of organizing said district, the costs of proceeding and all probable damage to lands, both within and without the district, together with a reasonable attorney fee for the petitioners, which cost will hereinafter be referred to as ‘cost of construction.’
“Sec. 45. If the cost of construction of any particular part of the work so proposed to be done should be assessed upon any particular tract or tracts, lot or lots of land, or upon any corporation or corporations, the commissioners shall so specify, and in their report they shall fix and deter*154 mine the sums which should be assessed against said tracts, lots and corporations, and assess such sum against said tracts, lots and corporations.
“Sec. 46. And if any corporation would, in the judgment of said commissioners, derive special benefits from the whole or any part of such proposed work, the commissioners shall so report and assess those benefits and assess against the same its proportionate share of the costs of said proposed work. The word ‘corporation’, wherever in this act contained, shall be construed to include: (1) Railroad companies. (2) Other private corporations of all kinds. (3) Towns. (4) Cities. (5) Villages; and (6) Other drainage districts.
"Sec. 47. They shall apportion and assess the part of this ‘cost of construction,’ not assessed as above, against the several benefited tracts, lots and easements in said drainage district, in proportion to the benefits which they have assessed against the same, by setting down opposite each tract, lot or easement, the sum which they assess against the same for construction. The assessments which together make up the cost of construction, as above defined, are herein referred to as ‘assessments for construction.’
“Sec. 48. Sixth: The commissioners shall further report to the court the probable cost of keeping said proposed work in repair after it is completed.
“Sec. 49. Seventh: They shall include in their said report, said map, plans and other specifications, and file the same with their report.
“Sec. 50. The commissioners shall not be confined to the points of commencement, routes or termini of the drains or ditches, or the number, extent or size of the same, or the location, plan or extent of any levee, ditch or other work, as proposed by the petitioners, but shall locate, design, lay out and plan the samé in such manner as to them shall seem best, to promote the public health or welfare, and to drain, or to protect the lands of the parties interested with the least damage and the greatest benefit to all lands affected*155 thereby. And any plan proposed by the commissioners, may, on the application of any person interested, on the hearing hereinafter provided for, or on the application of the commissioners, be altered by the court, by written order, in such manner as shall appear to the court to be just.
“Sec. 51. If the commissioners find’ that the proposed district, as described in the petition filed, will not embrace all of the lands that will be benefited by the proposed work, or that it will include lands that, will not be benefited and are not necessary to be included in said district for any purpose, .they shall extend or contract the" boundaries of the proposed district so as to include or exclude all such lands, as the case may be; and the boundaries adopted and reported by them, may, upon the hearing of their report, as hereinafter provided, upon their application, or that of any person interested, be altered by the court in such manner as shall appear to be just; provided, that the alteration of boundaries as aforesaid shall not have the effect of so far enlarging or contracting the proposed district as to render such petition void or dismissable. Said Report shall be filed with the clerk of the court.”
Section 52 provides, upon filing of said report the court shall make an order fixing the time and place when and where all persons interested may appear and remonstrate against the confirmation of the report; and requiring notice of the time and place of such hearing. Sections 53, 54 and 55 provide the manner of service of such notice. Section 56 provides, if the court finds that the report requires modification it may be referred back to the commissioners for that purpose.
“Sec. 57. If there be no remonstrance, or if the finding be in favor of the validity of the proceedings, or after the report shall have been modified to conform to the findings, the court shall confirm the report and the order of confirmation shall be final and conclusive, the proposed work shall be established and authorized, and the proposed assessments approved and confirmed, unless within thirty days an appeal*156 be taken to the Supreme Court, the said order of confirmation shall also fix the commissioners’ bond.”
Section 63 provides for payment of assessments in installments ; and Section 64 makes assessments a lien on the land.
“Sec. 74. If in the first assessment for construction the commissioners shall have reported to the court a smaller sum than is needed to complete the work of construction, or if in any year an additional sum is necessary to pay the interest on lawful indebtedness of said drainage district, further or additional assessments on the land and corporations benefited, proportioned on the last assessment of benefits which has been approved by the court, shall be made by the commissioners of said drainage district under the order of the court or presiding judge thereof without notice,' which further or additional assessment may be made payable in installments as specified in Section 63 hereof, and shall be treated and collected in the same manner as the original assessments for construction confirmed by the court, in said drainage district.”
The last quoted section was amended by an act approved March 5, 1915, by which the words “without notice” were omitted and “Notice of hearing of the application for such additional assessment shall be published at least once each week for three consecutive weeks in one newspaper published in each county in which said lands, or any part thereof, within said district are situated,” is inserted at that place in the section.
“Sec. 85. Whenever any drained lands outside a drainage district are receiving the benefits of the drains of said district, by direct or indirect, natural or artificial connection therewith, the commissioners of said district may report said facts to the court and ask that said lands, describing them, be brought into said district and assessed for the benefits by them received from the drains, ditches or levees of said district.
“Sec. 86. Upon the filing of said report the court shall order the owners of such lands to be notified of the filing*157 of said report and the contents thereof, and shall require such owners to show cause at a time and place therein fixed, not' less than twenty days thereafter, why their said lands should not be brought into said district and assessed for said benefits.
“Sec. 87. At the time and place fixed for hearing said report any of said land owners may appear and remonstrate against the confirmation of said report. -All remonstrances shall be in writing, verified and shall set forth the facts on which they are based. All issues arising on said report shall be tried by the court without a jury.
“Sec. 88. If the court shall find that said .lands or any of them are receiving the benefits of any such drain, ditch or levee, the court shall so find in writing and shall order said lands to be annexed to and made a part of said district and benefits to be assessed against the same by the commissioners of said district.
“Sec. 89. Said order shall be final and conclusive unless appealed from (to) the Supreme Court within thirty days from the date of entry thereof.” (The, word “to” above inclosed in brackets is not in the printed Session Laws but is in the enrolled act.)
“Sec. 90. Said commissioners shall, after the time for appeal is past, assess against each parcel, tract and easement of and in said annexed lands reasonable and just benefits, and shall assess against said lands for construction and repairs such sum as shall he just. If lands similarly situated and «benefited are found in said district the annexed lands shall be assessed a like sum of benefits and damages as said lands in the said district to which they are sought to be annexed, and a sum for construction of said work which shall be equal to all sums assessed for the complete construction of the drainage system in the district to which they are sought to be annexed against lands having the same assessment of benefits in said district.
“Sec. 91. The commissioners shall file their said report and assessments in court. The court shall by order require*158 said owners to show cause at a time and place therein fixed, not less than twenty days after the service of said order, why said report and assessments should not be confirmed. And on the hearing on said order to show cause if a jury trial is demanded the court shall frame issues on benefits and damages and impanel a jury or adjourn the hearing thereon until some term of court when a jury is in attendance and take the verdict of a jury on such issues. All other issues arising on said report shall be tried by the court. The court shall order all necessary amendments of said report and make written findings of fact and when said report is amended shall by order confirm the same.”
Neither the petition for the organization of said district, nor the preliminary report of the commissioners has been brought up, and we assume, as it is not controverted, that the preliminary report was made and duly approved, and that it was finally and conclusively determined on the hearing on said report that the proposed work was necessary or would be of utility in carrying out the purposes of the petition; that the proposed work would promote the public health, or the public welfare; that the total benefits of the work would exceed the costs thereof together with the damages resulting therefrom.
It is from the order of the court confirming the report, as modified and amended, provided for by Sections 38 to 51 inclusive, that this proceeding is brought; and upon the issues presented by the remonstrance the court found against the remonstrators; the finding being as follows: “The court finds that the establishment of said drainage system will materially benefit the land of all the land owners within the boundaries of the same and will make such lands more valuable in the general market; that the removal of the ■boggy and seeped areas by the proposed drainage system will relieve the said lands of a burden; that the public health and public welfare will be promoted by the establishment of said drainage system and that the establishment of said drainage system will increase the value of all the lands within*159 said drainage district. The court further finds that the objections and remonstrances of each and all remonstrators herein named should be overruled and dismissed and that the original and supplemental reports, except in so far as the same have been heretofore modified by the court and also the amended report of the said commissioners of the said The Bench Canal Drainage District, should be in all things approved and confirmed.” An order was entered accordingly. While there is a conflict in the evidence as to whether or not the lands of the remonstrators would be benefited by the establishment of the system, we are satisfied that there is sufficient evidence to support the findings of the district court and that we should not disturb these findings. It is contended that the court erred in admitting in evidence the testimony of an engineer who had testified on a former hearing and was absent at the time of the hearing of the issues here in question. But if that evidence be excluded we are of the opinion that the findings are sufficiently supported by the other evidence before the court. Therefore, if the statute does not violate constitutional provisions, the judgment should be affirmed.
It is earnestly contended by the plaintiffs in error that Section 74 does so because after the first assessment for construction has been made and approved, additional assessments, if necessary to complete the work, may be made without notice, and thus their property may be taken without an opportunity to be heard and without due process of law. We do not think that contention is tenable. The report which the statute requires and which was made and confirmed by the court, and on the hearing of which all parties interested had notice and opportunity to be heard, definitely determined and fixed in detail the work to be done; fixed the starting points, routes and termini of the drains and ditches, with maps, plans and specifications for each; and on such hearing any interested person had an opportunity to be heard as to the best, cheapest and most feasible system which should be adopted; and the court is not confined to*160 the plans proposed by the commissioners, but may on such hearing alter the same in such manner as shall appear to be just. Upon that hearing the kind and amount of work to be done is definitely determined and fixed, and each tract benefited is to bear its proportionate part of the cost thereof. The amount of benefits to each tract is also determined at such hearing, but the exact cost of construction is not determined. But if the first estimate and assessment should prove insufficient to complete the work we see no reason why other assessments should not be made without notice so long as the total assessments are less than the adjudged benefits. All parties have had their day in court on the questions of whether or not a drainage district should be established; what system should be adopted; the points of commencement, routes and termini of the drains, ditches or levees; the plans and specifications of the work to be done; the amount each tract will be benefited and the proportionate amount of the cost of construction each tract shall bear. Having been given the right to be heard on those questions, and it being determined that the work shall be done, what difference can it make whether the cost is assessed at one time or several times? And what objection could be urged against subsequent assessments, if the first was insufficient to complete the work, that could not and should not have been presented and determined on the hearing? We confess we can see none so long as the total assessments are less than the benefits. The case of Sterritt v. Young, et al., 14 Wyo. 146, 82 Pac. 946, 4 L. R. A. (N. S.) 169, 116 Am. St. Rep. 994, is cited by counsel for plaintiffs in error as decisive of the question now being considered. But that case is not in point. In that case the statute made no provision for notice, while in the present case, as above shown, the land owner had notice and an opportunity to be heard on all questions affecting his rights. We are of the opinion that Section 74 of the act does not contravene Sec. 6, Article I of the Constitution, viz: “No person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due.process of law.” Or Sec. 32*161 of said Article, viz: “Private property shall not be taken for private use unless by consent of the owner, except for private ways of necessity, and for reservoirs, drains, flumes, or ditches on or across the lands of others for agricultural, mining, milling, domestic or sanitary purposes, nor in any case without due compensation.” Or Sec. 33 of said Article, viz: “Private property shall not be taken or damaged for public or private use without just compensation.” (Stone v. Little Yellow Drainage District, 118 Wis. 388, 95 N. W. 405.) However, as above .stated, the section was amended in 1915, after the hearing in the district court, so as to provide for notice in case of such additional assessments, but whether that fact would affect the rights of these remonstrators need not be decided as we hold that without such amendment the statute was not unconstitutional.
It is further contended that Chapter 95, S. L. 1911, violates Section 34, Article I of the Constitution, viz: “All laws of a general nature shall have a uniform operation,” in that those whose lands are included in the commissioners’ report or are brought in prior to the hearing of said report are required to submit to the decision of the court without a jury trial, while those brought in thereafter are entitled to a trial by jury as provided in Sections 85 to 91 inclusive. But the parties are not in the same situation. Those brought in after the report of the commissioners has been confirmed or after the system has been completed have had no opportunity to be heard on any of the questions determined on that hearing. They have had no opportunity to be heard as to the necessity for, or the kind, character, extent or cost of the system, but are asked to contribute to the cost of a system airead}'- established in which they had no voice. The lands thus brought into the district are such as were not deemed at the time to be benefited, but are thereafter discovered to be so, and which benefits may not have accrued or have been discovered or apparent until long after the completion of the work. But the commissioners are required to assess against such land “a sum for construction
The only remaining question is that of costs. The court adjudged the costs occasioned by the trial of the issues raised by the remonstrators against them. It is claimed that there is no statutory provision for taxing costs against them in this proceeding. It is true that there is no such provision in said Chapter 95, S. E. 1911; and if authority therefor is not found in Chapter 304, Comp.' Stat. 1910, they should not have been so taxed. That chapter provides for taxing costs in certain actions, and Section 4647 of the same provides, “In other actions the court may award and tax costs, and apportion them between the parties, on the same or adverse sides, as may be adjudged to be right and equitable.” We are of the opinion that this case comes within the provisions of that section, and that the word “actions” as therein used applies to such adversary proceedings as those in this case. Upon the filing of a remonstrance issues are joined and a trial had as in a civil action. Under a statute of Missouri allowing a change of venue in a “Civil Suit,” it was held in State ex rel. Kochtitzky v. Riley, 203 Mo. 175, 101 S. W. 567, 12 L. R. A. (N. S.) 900, that a pro-deeding to incorporate a drainage district and establish its boundaries is a “civil suit” within the meaning of that statute. In Bass et al. v. Elliott et al., 105 Ind 517, 5 N. E. 663, it was held that the statute providing for a change of judge in civil actions was applicable in a drainage proceeding. (See also Schmied v. Keeny, 72 Ind. 309; Folmar v. Folmar, 71 Ala. 136; In Matter of Bradley et al., 117 Ia. 472, 91 N. W. 780.) The court found that the remonstrators had no just grounds in fact or in law to object to the confirmation of the report
We have, perhaps, quoted more at length from the statute than necessary; but the case being one of considerable public interest and involving the constitutionality of the entire drainage district statute, we believed our conclusions would be the better understood by doing so.
We find no prejudicial error in the record, and therefore, the judgment is affirmed. Affirmed.