State Ex Rel. Ashby v. Medicine Creek Drainage District

224 S.W. 343 | Mo. | 1920

The State at the relation of the Prosecuting Attorney of Livingston County, brought this proceeding against the Medicine Creek Drainage District and the board of supervisors of said district, for a mandatory injunction requiring the district to build and maintain bridges upon certain named public highways in Livingston County at all points where said highways were, or were about to be, intersected by the drainage ditches of said district. Relator prevailed in the trial court, and the district has duly appealed.

The Medicine Creek Drainage District was organized in 1916, under the Act of 1913 authorizing the incorporation of drainage districts by a decree of the circuit court. [Laws 1913, pp. 232 to 267.]

I. Appellant contends that the Act of 1913 does not place upon drainage districts the burden of building bridges over ditches across public highways, and insists that that expenseStatutes, shall be borne by the county. *647

Many, if not all, of the questions presented have been decided in this court in other cases, but since those decisions were rendered, the statutes relating to drainage districts have been amended in certain particulars, with the result, as relator claims, that those decisions do not now control. In 1913 the Legislature repealed Article I of Chapter 41, Revised Statutes 1909, and various amendments thereto, and substituted the Act of 1913 in lieu thereof. The Drainage Statute of 1909 had been construed by this court upon the proposition here involved in three cases, and in each instance we had held that the law imposed the burden of building bridges over drainage district ditches upon the county. [State ex rel. v. Chariton Drainage Dist., 252 Mo. 345; State ex rel. McWilliams v. Little River Drainage Dist., 269 Mo. 444, and State ex rel. Caruthers v. Little River Drainage Dist., 271 Mo. 429.] How far these decisions are now controlling authority in this case, depends upon the materiality of the changes made by the Act of 1913 in the statute law on this topic as it stood in 1909. It hence becomes necessary to compare the two statutes and note the changes which have been made, and then to determine the effect of those changes. The general purpose of the two statutes was the same, and many of the sections of the drainage laws of 1909, supra, have been carried into the Act of 1913 with the same headings and with little or no change in verbiage — a fact which facilitates comparison. We will confine our comparison strictly to the topic in hand, to-wit, bridges. The first section of the statutes of 1909 relating to bridges is Section 5503, which is as follows:

"All bridges in said district across any drain, ditch, canal or excavation, shall be built according to, and in compliance with the plans, specifications and orders made or approved by the chief engineer of the district. Any owner of land within the district may, at his own expense and in compliance with the terms and provisions of this section, construct a bridge across any drain, ditch, *648 canal or excavation in said district, The board of supervisors shall, wherever necessary, at the expense of the district, construct a convenient roadway or crossing over and across any levee or embankment in said district."

The 1909 statutes then provide for the appointment of a board of supervisors, and by Section 5511 for the appointment of a "board of engineers" for each district, after which Section 5511 proceeds as follows:

"The said `board of engineers' shall make a complete topographical survey of the said district and submit the same to the board of supervisors with maps and profiles of said survey and a full and complete plan for drainage and reclaiming the lands in said district from the overflow of or damage by water, or floods; and also, the physical characteristics and location of any right of way, roadbed, bridge or bridges and other property or improvements in said district belonging to or under the control of any railroad company; and shall also report the location of any and all public highways which may be crossed by the right of way of any ditch, levee or other improvement planned for said district, together with the estimated cost of bridges and approaches across said highway and made necessary by reason of the aforesaid improvements and drainage."

The pertinent portion of the next section relating to bridges (Sec. 5513, R.S. 1909), omitting matter not material to this question, is as follows:

"Said board of supervisors shall also have the power to construct or enlarge or cause to be constructed or enlarged, all bridges that may be needed in or out of said district across any drain, ditch, . . . public highway or railroad right of way . . . and, further, shall have power to remove any bridge . . . in or out of said district, which may be in the way of any drainage . . . works . . . of said district. . . . All bridges contemplated by this section shall be built according to and in compliance with the plans, specifications and orders made or approved by the chief engineer of the district: *649 Provided, however, that if such bridge shall belong to any corporation, or be needed over a public highway, or right of way of any corporation, the secretary of said board of supervisors shall give such corporation notice.

. . . A failure to construct or enlarge such bridge within the time specified in such order shall be taken as a refusal to do said work by said corporation, and thereupon the said board of supervisors shall proceed to let the work of constructing or enlarging the same at the expense of the corporation for the cost thereof."

The substances of these sections has been incorporated into the Act of 1913.

In each of the three cases above cited, it will be noted that it was held that the cost of building bridges over public highways in or out of drainage districts, was imposed upon the county in which the bridge was located. In the first case (State ex rel. v. Chariton Drainage District, 252 Mo. 345)Corporation. this court construed Section 5513, supra, to impose the cost of building bridges upon the county, not because of any plain and pointed statement in the statute to that effect (for the statute contains no such statement), but because of the proviso in that section to the effect that "if such bridge shall belong to any corporation, or be needed over a public highway," then the bridge shall be built by or at the expense of such corporation. A county is a public corporation, of course (14 C.J. 74), and upon that idea the decision in the Chariton Drainage District case is plainly based. That decision was handed down July 10, 1913. The opinion affirmed the judgment of the lower court. It is argued that when the General Assembly of 1913 met it was a matter of common knowledge that under the drainage laws as they then stood, the cost of building bridges made necessary by the cutting of drainage ditches, was imposed upon the counties, because counties were corporations within the meaning of that word as used in the drainage laws. Thereupon the General Assembly of 1913 undertook a revision *650 of the drainage laws. In so doing it adopted as Section 30 of the Act of 1913 all that part of Section 5513, supra, beginning with the words, "All bridges contemplated by this section," thence to and including the words "twenty days actual notice of the time and place of letting such work." A few slight changes in verbiage are made, but none which affects the question here involved. The Legislature then added the following clause, which did not appear in the statutes of 1909, to-wit:

"Within ten days after a dredge boat or any other excavating machine shall have completed a ditch across any public highway, a bridge shall be constructed and maintained over such drainage ditch where the same crosses such highway; Provided, however,the word corporation as used in this section shall not apply tocounties."

Whether or not the General Assembly took cognizance of the decision of the Macon County Circuit Court in the Chariton Drainage District case, 252 Mo. 345, may admit of speculation, but that the addition to the drainage laws of the words last above quoted sweeps away the foundation upon which the decision of the Chariton Drainage Drainage District case was based, so far as the question here involved is concerned, is too plain for controversy. This amendment affects the decisions above cited in the Little River cases (269 Mo. 444 and 271 Mo. 429) in the same way, and to the same extent. Hence it becomes necessary to determine in the light of this amendment, upon whomCommon Law, now rests the burden of bridge building under the Act of 1913. At common law, that burden would rest upon the individual whose acts made the building of the bridge necessary. [Rex v. Lindsey, 14 East, (Eng.) 317; Rex v. Kerrison, 3 M. S. (Eng.) 526; Penn. Railroad Co. v. Irwin, 85 Pa. 336; Richardson Co. v. Drainage Dist., 92 Neb. 776.] Numerous authorities to the same effect are collated in an exhaustive note upon the case last cited, in 31 Am. Eng. Ann. Cases (1914A), page 550. *651

As construed in the Chariton Drainage District case, supra, and in subsequent decisions, Article 1 of Chapter 41 (Drainage Statutes, R.S. Mo. 1909) the law imposed what this court felt to be a hardship upon the counties, but one which we could not avoid. Thus in the Chariton case, FARIS, J., speaking for this court, said:

"While it is regrettable that a studied effort seems to have been made to render this drainage statute vague and ambiguous upon the point of where the burden of bridge building lies and while the view we have heretofore taken and are now again forced to take, is fraught with hardships in this and in other single instances, we can only repeat that the remedy lies with the Legislature and not with us. We construe the law; we do not make it." [269 Mo. l.c. 463.]

The vexatious vagueness of which the learned jurist there spoke is still as annoyingly persistent in the Act of 1913 as before. It seems that it would not have been a difficult matter to incorporate into this act a line saying in plain terms either that the county or the drainage district must build and pay for bridges, but that has not been done. We must construe the act as we find it.

Seeking the legislative meaning, then as in duty bound, as Job sought the grave, "diligently and with tears," we come to considerations which may be summed up thus: The drainage law as found in the Statutes of 1909 permitted a construction which placed the duty of building bridges over drainage ditches upon the counties. The trial courts so construed it — and correctly so construed it, as we held in the Chariton case, supra. This was felt to be a hardship, as was said by FARIS, J., in the paragraph which we have quoted. This paragraph though written subsequent to the Act of 1913, no doubt voiced a sentiment which had prevailed under the old law. The construction which caused this hardship was based, as we have said, upon an interpretation of the word corporation, as used in the drainage statute, as a word which included counties. The Legislature revised *652 the law and in substance and almost literally reenacted the section which had been so construed. But in doing so, the Legislature said very clearly, that "the word corporation asused in this section shall not apply to counties." By this rule of construction we are bound, and if counties are not corporations within the meaning of that section, then there is no authority in the Act of 1913 for imposing the burden of the building of bridges upon counties. But Section 30 of the Act of 1913 provides that the bridges must be built. In the absence of a statutory declaration otherwise, the obligation to perform that duty would rest upon the drainage district under the common law, as we have said.

But Section 30 of the Act of 1913 contains a further clause, not found in the old law: "All drainage districts shallDamages. have full authority to construct and maintain any ditch or lateral provided in its `plan for reclamation' across any of the public highways of this State, withoutproceedings for the condemnation of the same, or being liable fordamages therefor." If the duty of building and maintaining bridges across drainage ditches intersecting public highways devolves upon the drainage district to which such ditch belongs, then the wisdom and justice of this exemption from damages is apparent, for the building and maintenance of the bridge is a reparation of the damage inflicted by the digging of the ditch. But if the counties must build such bridges, then by this provision, the Legislature has conferred upon drainage districts an immunity which, so far as we are advised, it has granted to no other person, either natural or corporate. That one who, for his private ends, should dig a ditch across a public highway, would thereby incur a civil liability to the county for damages, seems quite plain. That the Legislature might properly fix the measure of damages in such a case, at the cost of building and maintaining a suitable bridge over such ditch, seems equally plain. But that the Legislature could, under Section 46 of Article 4 of our Constitution, *653 grant to certain classes of persons, natural or corporate, the right to dig innumerable ditches across the public highways of the State, and at the same time confer immunity from damages therefor, is a matter which might well be doubted, but which, though argued in the briefs in this case, we do not think it necessary to decide. The obvious purpose of the Legislature in saying in the Act of 1913 that counties should not, under that act, be considered to be corporations, was to relieve counties of the burden of building bridges over drainage ditches intersecting public highways. Since counties are not required to build these bridges, the drainage districts must do so. Furthermore, it seems essentially just that the burden of building bridges made necessary by the digging of drainage ditches should be borne by drainage districts. Drainage districts are, in a sense, public enterprises, and they have, very properly, been greatly encouraged in this State, but, in the last analysis, the benefits which flow from them are chiefly enjoyed by those who own the lands which the ditches drain. It is a matter of common knowledge that thousands of acres of once worthless swamp lands in this State have been transformed by these agencies into farming lands of the most extraordinary productiveness and value. The area of a drainage district may, and commonly does, form but a small fraction of the total area of the county or counties in which the district lies. In the instant case, it appears that the total area of the Medcine Creek Drainage District is but three per cent of the total area of Livingston County. Why should ninety-seven per cent of the lands of that county be taxed for the construction of bridges which are made necessary only by reason of a scheme for the improvement of the other three per cent? As a matter of abstract justice, it would seem that those for whose benefit the ditch is dug, should build the bridges thus made necessary. Upon this point we affirm the holding of the trial court. *654

II. Appellant asserts that the Act of 1913 nowhere confers upon drainage districts power to levy taxes or disburse funds for bridge building. To this contention we cannot agree. A contrary purpose is apparent in the act itself.Taxes for Bridges. Section 2 provides that the subscribers to the initial articles of agreement shall, in writing, "obligate themselves to pay the tax or taxes which may be assessed against their respective lands or other property to pay the expenses of organizing and of making and maintaining theimprovements that may be necessary to effect the reclamation of said lands."

Section 14 requires the commissioners provided for by the act, to "estimate the cost of works set out in `the plan for reclamation,' which estimates shall include the cost of property acquired for rights of way, holding basins and other works anddamages."

Section 18 empowers the supervisors to "levy a tax . . . to pay the costs of the completion of the proposed works andimprovements as shown in said `plan for reclamation,' and in carrying out the objects of said district."

Section 19 provides for the levy of a maintenance tax.

Section 26 empowers the supervisors "to construct or enlargeor cause to be constructed and enlarged any and all bridges thatmay be needed in or out of said district across any drain, ditch,. . . or public highway."

Section 30, from which we have heretofore quoted extensively as to matters pertinent in this case, is specifically devoted to bridges, and is naturally and properly to be construed, under the provisions of the Act of 1913, as imposing the duty of building bridges upon the district, as we have pointed out in a preceding paragraph.

Without prolonging this opinion unduly by a discussion of each section of this act, it will suffice to say that Sections 42, 43, 47 and other sections not herein specifically enumerated, contain additional grants of authority, *655 which in conjunction with those above mentioned, vest in the board ample power to build bridges, and for that purpose to levy taxes and disburse funds, as well as to do many other things. The Legislature can hardly be accused of parsimony in its grant of power to drainage districts, no matter what else may be said of this act. We rule this point against appellant.

III. Appellant claims that the general subject of building bridges is, by Article 3 of Chapter 102 of the Revised Statutes of 1909, confided to the counties, and that for that reason the Act of 1913 cannot be interpreted to impose the dutyException. of building a bridge upon a drainage district. The same contention was made and overruled in the Chariton case, supra, l.c. 362, wherein we said:

"It is a well known rule of statutory construction that `where there are two acts and the provisions of one apply specially to a particular subject, which clearly includes the matter in question, and the other general in its terms, and such that, if standing alone it would include the same matter, and thus conflict with each other, then the former act must be taken as constituting an exception to the latter or general act, and not a repeal of the former.' [State ex inf. v. Amick, 247 Mo. 271, l.c. 292 and cases cited.] It is perfectly clear from reading Section 5513 of Article 1 of Chapter 41, Revised Statutes 1909, and Article 3 of Chapter 102, that the provisions of the former apply specially to those bridges which the board of engineers of drainage districts finds are necessary to be constructed in public highways where they cross ditches or canals of a drainagecompany, and by whom they must be built and paid for and that said Article 3 is general in its provisions governing the construction of bridges generally throughout the country, as well as the expenditure of the revenues of the county therefor, and is sufficiently broad, if standing alone, to embrace bridges to be constructed in public highways and across ditches of a drainage company; and if the former *656 is not to be construed to be an exception to the latter, then there would be a clear conflict between them; but since both acts stand in pari materia, we must interpret them together, according to the rule before stated, and when so done the legislative intention is clear, and we must hold that said section 5513 is an exception to the general provisions contained in Article 3 of Chapter 102, Revised Statutes 1909, and therefore, are not in conflict with each other, as contended for by counsel for respondents." [State ex rel. v. Chariton Drainage District, 252 Mo. 345, l.c. 363-364.]

The portion of Section 5513 referred to in the above excerpt has been reenacted as a part of Section 30 of the Act of 1913. We adhere to the ruling announced in the Chariton case.

IV. Appellant calls our attention to the fact that the judgment in this case provides that the bridge required to be built by appellant shall "be approved by the County engineer of Livingston County." The Act of 1913, Section 30, providesAccording to that "all bridges contemplated by this act . .Engineer's Plan. . shall be built according to . . . plans, specifications and orders made or approved by the chief engineer of the district." In this particular the judgment of the trial court is erroneous. But we are not compelled to reverse and remand this cause merely for the correction of this error. We can and will enter the proper judgment here. [Sec. 2083, R.S. 1909; State ex rel. v. Trust Co.,209 Mo. 473.]

Appellant also presses upon our attention certain questions relating to procedure. We do not regard them as being vital. Particularly in matters of this sort, it is well to disregard technical distinctions — the "tithes of mint, anise and cummin" — and give heed to "the weightier matters of the law." It is better to drive at once to the heart of this case and decide it upon the merits, rather than to let the decision rest on more or less futile matters of procedure. We have considered *657 appellant's contentions relating to these matters, but we are not impressed by them, nor do we think it necessary to discuss them separately.

The conclusion of the whole matter is that the judgment below should be so modified as to require the appellant to construct the bridges in said judgment mentioned according to and in compliance with the plans, specifications and orders made or approved by the chief engineer of the appellant district, and said judgment should be further modified by omitting the provision therein requiring the approval of such bridges by the county engineer of Livingston County.

With these modifications, the judgment is affirmed. All concur.

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