1 S.D. 62 | S.D. | 1890
Appellant brings this appeal to reverse the order of the circuit court dismissing and setting aside the writ of certiorari previously granted by the said court upon the affidavit of Pardon S. Phinney. The object of the writ was to bring before the court, for review, the proceedings of the artesian well commissioner for the county of Hughes, in establishing a certain artesian well in Dry Run township, in said county, and of the board of assessment, in making certain assessments for its construction. Before any return was made in obedience to the writ, respondents appeared, and moved the court to dismiss said writ, for the reasons: (1) Relator has a plain, adequate and speedy remedy by appeal. (2) The acts complained of were purely ministerial in character, and not subject to" review by this writ. (3) Relator in its affidavit has stated no adequate cause for the issuance of the writ, in this: that no act in excess of jurisdiction by defendants is shown. The court granted the motion, and made its order dismissing the writ, and from such order the appeal is taken.
As before observed, the first question must be considered and determined under the provisions of the law of 1887. Section 2097, Comp. Laws, being of the law of 1887, provides that,
The language of this statute is comprehensive and positive, and, as it is not claimed that this proceeding or any other was brought within the time therein limited, it is controlling, and we must hold, under it, that all inquiry as to the establishment of the well is now foreclosed and barred. This is emphatically a statute of repose, and while these facts, if properly brought before the court within the time allowed for their review, must have defeated and vacated such order, it was undoubtedly competent for the legislature to limit the time within which such attack might be made, aad to declare, as it has, that after the
We think the claim of appellant’s counsel that Sections 2115 and 2116 — from the latter of which the above quotation is made —are designed to, cover only the matter of assessments, and that the certiorari therein provided for can only be brought after such assessments are made, is not sustained by a careful study of this act. Under Section 2112, the commissioner, upon making his final order establishing the well, proceeds to “give not less than sixty days’ notice of the time and place of letting.” Such notice must also state the time and place when and where his assessments may be reviewed, which assessments he must announce at the time and place of such letting, (Section 2115,) and they are “thereupon” subject to review and cor rection. Within 10 days after this review before the well commissioner any person aggrieved thereby may appeal; but all those proceedings are distinct from and independent of the certiorari provided for in the latter part of Section 2116, and must necessarily occur long subsequent to the bringing of the certiorari. The certiorari must be initiated within 10 days after the order establishing the well, but the announcement of assessments, and their review, cannot be had until at least 60 days after such order establishing the well. It is very evident that the legislature intended that the legality of the well should be firmly established before any assessments should be made, and so provided that within 10 days from its establishment its legality might be inquired into and determined, upon certiorari but, if not so challenged within that time, “its legality should not thereafter be questioned;” and this intention is strongly emphasized by the closing provisions of said Section 2116, “that when such proceedings are brought the commissioner shall postpone the letting of contracts and all other proceedings until after the determination of the court.” But for this statute of limitation the facts herein stated would present the case of an inferior officer assuming to perform an act which he was only authorized to perform after the occurrence of some prerequisite ,or condition precedent, as in the case of Dartmouth Sav. Bank
The next question to be examined is, did the board of assessment exceed its jurisdiction in making the assessments set out in the affidavit upon which this writ was issued? Section 14, C. 14, Laws 1889, provides for a board of assessment, to be composed of the chairman of the board of county commissioners, the county treasurer, and the well commissioner, of which board the county clerk shall be the clerk; subject however, to the provisions of Section 18 of the same act, which are that none of such officers shall be qualified to act on said board of assessment, whose lands are to be directly assessed. In case any member of such board is disqualified, his place shall be filled by the sheriff of the county, or in case the sheriff is so disqualified, by the county coroner. The affidavit upon which this writ issued states that the well commissioner, Stough, was so disqualified, and did not sit on said board, but that Wells, chairman of the board of county commissioners, and Green, county treasurer, were not disqualified, and that Guthrie, sheriff, was qualified; that on the 25th day of July there was a meeting of persons claiming to be such board of assessment, and that such board was then and there composed of Green, county treasurer