137 Iowa 660 | Iowa | 1907
The board of supervisors of Buena Yista county in special session February 21, 1906, for the consideration of the amount of damages to be awarded in drainage district No. 4, decided “ that the cost of construction and the amount of damages awarded is excessive and is a greater burden than should be properly borne by the land benefited by the said improvement; therefore the prayer of the petitioners is denied.” The board had adjourned to this date after full hearing of petitioners and those filing protests about two weeks previous, when there had been a finding that it had
The test to be applied is whether the tract of a particular owner will be affected by- the improvement, and to aid the board in the establishment of the district the engineer is ■required to return such only and to state how, and in what manner, the different tracts will be affected. This return of the engineer is the basis of all subsequent proceedings. The allegations of the petitions may be and usually are partisan and not scientifically accurate. The return of the engineer, however, is the report of a disinterested expert, and so highly esteemed by the law that it, rather than the petition, determines upon whom notice shall be served; and when no claim for damages is filed, and there is no controversy with' any landowner as to whether his land shall be included within the district,, the supervisors may, if deemed advisable, locate and establish the same in accordance with the recommendation of the engineer, if “ they shall find such improvement conducive to the public health, convenience or welfare or to the public benefit or utility.” Section 5, chapter 68, Acts 30th General Assembly.
The law contemplates the establishment of the district as returned by the engineer, save as changed by the board of supervisors upon the protest of some landowner that his land has been improperly included within the proposed district or that lands of others have been improperly excluded. And where there is no appeal therefrom, the order of the board of supervisórs, based thereon, establishing the district, is conclusive that all the lands included therein will be benefited by the improvement. Section 6 of said act authorizing the appointment of the commissioners and directing the classification and assessment of the lands expressly so provides, and this court has upheld this provision on the sole ground that the landowner has had an opportunity to be heard on the return of the engineer as to whether his land shall be included in the district. Oliver v. Monona County, 117 Iowa, 43.
This evidence leaves no doubt as to the interpretation which should be given his return. lie neither reported nor intended to report that each particular tract described by him would be affected by the improvement, nor how, nor did he undertake to express his opinion from a survey actually made that all the lands by him described should be in the district. It-is possible that the tracts remote from the ditch will be affected in some way by it, but it does not so appear from the report nor from the evidence adduced. But the benefits which will be enjoyed by all citizens alike are not those for which land may be assessed. Section 2 of the act provides that the petition shall describe lands “ subject to overflow or too wet for cultivation.” Under section 2 the engineer “shall make a full and complete description of all lands which in his opinion will be affected by said improvement or improvements.” Then the commissioners subsequently appointed “ personally inspect and classify all the lands benefited by the location and construction of such levee or drainage district, or the repairing or reopening of the same, in tracts of forty acres or less according to the legal or recog