192 Iowa 471 | Iowa | 1921
I. A somewhat detailed statement of the record is essential to a full understanding of the questions to be decided upon this appeal. The Goose Lake Drainage Ditch was established by the board of supervisors' of Clinton County in 1895, and constructed at a cost of approximately $10,997.87. In course of time, the ditch became filled with earth and debris, and on April 21, 1919, the board of supervisors directed the county auditor to advertise for bids for reopening, deepening, enlarging, and widening the ditch. The auditor immediately caused notice to be published, and on May 5, 1919, the bid of the Clark Construction Company was accepted by the board, and on June 2d, a contract was entered into, for the cleaning,
The grounds of the objections urged by plaintiffs were, in substance, that the proposed assessment exceeded the benefits conferred ; that at least part of appellants had contributed a designated sum to defray the expenses of the private ditch, and asked that the amount so contributed be credited upon the assessment; and that some of the lands proposed to be assessed were not assessed for the original cost of the improvement. The plaintiff Petersen objects upon the further ground that he did not consent to the use of the private ditch, and that the board of
Before proceeding to a discussion of the propositions relied upon by appellants for reversal, it may be well to make a brief historical and general statement bf the drainage laws of this state. The first enactment of the legislature seeking to provide a system of drainage for lands rendered untillable by swamps, overflow, etc., appears as Chapter 2, Title X, of the Code of 1873. The twenty-sixth general assembly amended Chapter 2, Title X, of the Code of 1873, by adding what are now Sections 1975 to 1989, inclusive, of the Code of 1897, by authorizing counties in any case where the United States may have undertaken or might thereafter undertake the building of a levee along or near the bank of a navigable stream forming a part of the state boundary, to aid in procuring the right of way and in maintaining the levee and in providing a system of internal drainage made necessary or advisable by the construction of such levee, whenever, in the judgment of the board of supervisors, the work-would be conducive to the public health, convenience, or welfare. This act was amended by Chapter 83, Acts of the Thirty-first General Assembly, and Chapter 93, Acts of the Thirty-second General Assembly. Chapter 2, Title X, of the Code of 1873, as amended, appears under the same chapter and title in the Code of 1897.
On January 12, 1904, this court announced its decision in Beebe v. Magoun, 122 Iowa 94, holding that Section 1946, Chapter 2, Title X, Code, 1897, in so far as “it authorizes the estimation of benefits to lands not abutting on a ditch, and through which it is not to be excavated, and the levy of taxes accordingly for such improvement without notice to the owner, is a clear and palpable invasion of the fundamental law forbidding the taking of private property without due process of law."
Whereupon, Section 1946 was amended so as to' overcome the constitutional objection thereto, and Sections 1946-a to 1946-e, inclusive, 1913 Supplement, were enacted by the thirtieth general assembly, which also enacted Chapter 68, which is found in Chapter 2-A, Title X, of the Supplement, providing that:
“The provisions of this act shall be construed as an inde
This section as quoted above is as amended by Chapter 84, Acts of the Thirty-first General Assembly. So that our statute contains two chapters relating to drainage, and providing two methods whereby agricultural lands requiring it may be drained. The legality of the original establishment of the old Goose Drainage Ditch is frankly conceded by appellants.
We come now to a consideration of the propositions upon which appellants rely for reversal. The principal contentions of counsel, as we understand them, are: (a) That the character of the improvement is that of original construction, and not repair work; (b) that same could not be undertaken under either Chapter 2, Title X, or Chapter 2-A, Title X, of the Code, without filing a petition and otherwise complying with the law relating to the establishment of drainage ditches or districts; (c) that the notice to bidders was fatally defective, and did not comply with the requirements of Section 1989-a8, Chapter 2-A, Title X, of the Code Supplement; (d) that, if the improvement be classified as repair work, the board of supervisors wholly failed to follow the procedure prescribed, and therefore the board of supervisors did not acquire jurisdiction to receive bids, to enter into a contract for the work, or to lay an assessment upon the lands of plaintiffs for any portion of the cost thereof; (e) that the tax was laid upon only about half of the land assessed for the cost of the original improvement, and that same should have been based upon the original classification, as required by Section 1946-b, Code Supplement, 1913; (f) that, under Section 1984 of the Supplement to the Code, the board of supervisors could not levy an annual assessment against plaintiffs’ lands in excess of 50 mills on the dollar; (g) that, as the board of supervisors acted wholly without authority, and in excess of its jurisdiction, the alleged assessment against the lands of plaintiffs is wholly void, and therefore the collection thereof may be enjoined.
“When any levee, ditch, drain, or change of direction of any watercourse shall have been located and established, as provided in this chapter, or when it shall be necessary to cause the same to be repaired or reopened, the auditor shall appoint three persons, one of whom shall be a competent civil engineer, and two who shall be resident freeholders of the county, not living within the township or townships where the improvement is or is to be located, and not interested therein or in a like question, nor related to any party whose land is affected thereby, who shall within twenty days after such appointment personally inspect and classify as ‘dry,’ ‘low,’ ‘wet/ or ‘swamp’ all the land benefited by the location and construction of the improvement, or the repairing or reopening of the same, and shall make an equitable apportionment of the cost, expenses, cost of construction, fees, and damages assessed for the construction of any such improvement, or of repairing or reopening the same, and make report thereof in writing to the board of supervisors and file the same with the county auditor, who shall immediately thereafter fix a time for hearing objections thereto before the board of supervisors. * # * When the day set for hearing has arrived, the board of supervisors shall proceed to hear and determine all objections made and filed to said report, and may increase, diminish, annul, or affirm the appointment made in said report or any part thereof, as may appear to the board to be just and equitable, which apportionment shall be assessed among the owners of the land along or in the vicinity of such improvement and to be benefited thereby, in proportion to the benefit to each of them, and levied upon the lands of the owners so benefited in said proportions, and collected in the same manner as other taxes are levied and collected for county purposes.”
No petition of a majority of the property owners residing in Clinton County and owning land abutting upon the proposed improvement and asking that the ditch be repaired and re
The proceedings of the board of supervisors reveal that the nature and character of the proposed' improvement were variously, and perhaps carelessly, stated in its proceedings. For example, the resolution directing the auditor to publish notice for bids stated the purpose to be “to reopen, deepen, enlarge, and widen the ditch. ’ ’ The notice of the auditor to bidders used the words “for deepening and widening.” The resolution of the board accepting bids recited that it was for “repairing and reopening.” The contract for the work was “for cleaning, deepening, and widening. ’1 The resolution of the board directing the auditor to appoint appraisers used the words “repairing and reopening.” The commission issued by the auditor to appraisers stated that the proposed improvement was the deepening and widening of the ditch. The undisputed evidence, however, is that the original ditch was carefully staked out, and that all excavations made under the contract for cleaning, deepening, and widening the ditch were made inside of the stakes. No testimony was introduced tending to show that the excavation extended below the grade of the original improvement. It is true that a change was made in the course of the ditch, but this was done upon the petition of plaintiffs, except Petersen, and was for the purpose of avoiding expense, and perhaps because it
Before, the change in the course of the ditch was made, upon the petition of appellants, the engineer reported that the ditch was filled with earth and debris, which would be difficult and expensive to remove. As the record fails to show that the original ditch was widened or deepened, or that anything more was done than to repair and reopen the same, we cannot hold that the authority conferred by Section 1946 of the Code was not properly observed and carried out by the board of supervisors. The board manifestly, while using too many words, always had the repair and reopening of the ditch in mind.
Whether the provisions of Section 1946-b, requiring all future levies for the improvements referred to in the preceding sections to be apportioned on the basis of the original classification, are applicable, we are not called upon at this time to decide. Code Section 1947 provides that:
“An appeal may be taken to the district court from the order of the board of supervisors in fixing the assessment upon lands, in the same manner appeals may be taken in the location of roads, and within the same time. But on such appeal it shall not be competent to show that the lands assessed were not benefited by the improvement.”
If an improper classification were adopted, or if lands properly assessable were omitted from the levy, or if the as