140 Ark. 541 | Ark. | 1919
Joe Schmidt brought this suit against Drainage District No. 17 to recover damages for land taken and injured by said district.
In his complaint he alleges that he entered certain lands under the homestead laws of the United States and was in possession thereof prior to the creation of Drainage District No. 17; that he has complied with the laws of the United States in regard to the entry of said lands and in due time will receive a patent to said lands from the United States. It is also alleged in the complaint that the draináge district entered upon said lands and destroyed timber thereon and also took a part of said lands for the purpose of constructing a drainage ditch. The complaint also alleges that the board of directors of the drainage district failed to view and assess the damages to his lands as provided by section 9 of Act 103 of the Acts of 1917. The court sustained a demurrer to the complaint and the complaint was dismissed. The case is here on appeal.
The drainage district was organized under Act 103 of the Acts of 1917. See Acts of 1917, page 485. Section 9 of the act provides for the assessment of benefits. The section in part is as follows:
“The board shall also assess all damages that will accrue to any land owners by reason of the proposed improvements, including all injury to lands taken or damaged ; and where they return no such assessment or damages as to any tract of land, it shall be deemed to be a finding by them that no damage will be sustained.”
The section further provides for a hearing in the county court by the owner of real property who feels himself aggrieved by the assessment of benefits.
Section 10 provides that any property owner may accept the assessment of damages in his favor made by the board; or acquiesce in their failure to assess damages in hisjravor, and shall be construed to have done so unless he gives to the board, thirty days after the assessment is filed, notice in writing that he demands an assessment of his damages by a jury, etc.
It is also insisted that the plaintiff had entered the lands as a homestead under the laws of the United States and had not yet received a patent thereto and for this reason that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer.
It follows that the judgment must be affirmed.