133 Iowa 527 | Iowa | 1907
The proceedings for the establishment of the drainage district including plaintiff’s lands was instituted in 1893. Notice was given in 1894 to the plaintiff and all other owners of lands of the pendency of the proceed: ings, and that at a future date named objections to the establishment of the drainage district might be made; and subsequently the board of supervisors by resolution established the proposed drainage district, including therein the lands of plaintiff. In 1895 the tax complained of was levied, payable in annual installments, and a considerable part thereof has already been paid by plaintiff and other landowners.
The contention of appellant is that the proceeding was under Code, sections 1939-1951, inclusive, relating to the levying of taxes on abutting property or other property in the vicinity directly benefited thereby' for the expense of the construction of a public ditch, and that proceedings for the assessment of taxes under these sections of the Code have been held to be unconstitutional for the reason that no provision is made therein for notice to the owners of the property in the vicinity which are to be assessed as benefited by the improvement. See Beebe v. Magoun, 122 Iowa, 94; Smith v. Peterson, 123 Iowa, 672. It is clear, however, that the proceeding as described more fully in defendant’s answer was a proceeding under Code, section 1952, for the establishment of a drainage district. Conceding this proposition for the purpose of the argument, counsel for appellant maintains that there is the same defect in that section as in the preceding sections with reference to the matter of notice, and that, as no notice to the landowners whose property is to be included in the proposed district is provided for, the whole proceeding was invalid. That section directs that
The theory of these cases seems to be that where the proper board authorized to make a public improvement, under color of right, proceeds to do so, the property owner having knowledge of the proceedings cannot allow the improvement to proceed without objection and afterwards on account of some defect or irregularity in the proceedings question the validity of the tax. In this case appellant not only had knowledge of the construction of the ditch, but he had notice of the proceedings preliminary to the establish
The court rightly overruled plaintiff’s demurrer to defendant’s answer, and the judgment in favor of the defendant is affirmed.