Harker v. Board of Supervisors
Harker v. Board of Supervisors
Opinion of the Court
Appellees question the sufficiency of the objections filed to cover all those now urged. But a number of the objections or issues relied upon by appellant as to including his lands in the district are so closely connected that they may be stated in a general way, and substantially as appellant states them, as follows: .
Should lands he included in a drainage district establishment simply because it is in the natural watershed of the district ?
Should lands be -included in a drainage district establishment because by nature their surplus waters are discharged onto other lands which it is desired should be drained ?
Where lands by nature discharge their waters upon servient estates below, should such lands be included in a drainage district establishment for the benefit of such servient estates below?
2. Appellant says that, as to the fact situation, the case of Zinser v. Board of Supervisors, 137 Iowa 660, “is practically decisive of this case, except that, in that case, the decision was against the whole establishment because it was an attempt of servient owners to obtain aid from dominant estates, while in this case, we do not ask that the whole establishment be overthrown, but we ask that the plaintiff’s lands which are included for the benefit of servient estates below be excluded from the district, and the Zinser case is authority therefor.”
In the Zinser case, the board had denied a petition praying for the establishment of a drainage district, and on appeal the district court reversed the board, and this court reversed the district court, on the ground that the report of the engineer did not show that the proposed scheme for the reclamation of land from surface water was practicable. In Laurence v. Board of Supervisors, 151 Iowa 182, at 192, we said of that case that it is authority only for the proposition that the board of supervisors is not bound to establish a drainage district until it has before it
It appears that waters from appellant’s lands drained over the lower lands in the district; that, at the line between plaintiff’s land and that below, it is flat, - and the plat shows that there is some swamp land there, although appellant and another witness say it is not swamp, but wet. Appellant made tile drains upon his lands and emptied the waters into an old well, and the evidence is that it soaked away in the gravel. Appellees say that this would come up on the lower lands. Appellant admits that a .part of his land is flat, about a quarter of a mile wide and a mile and a quarter long, that he desires to drain. The plat shows tlie drainage of this land to be over the lands of the others within the district. Appellees contend that it would not be fair to others to permit appellant, to build a dike on his lands and hold the water back and permit it to soak through onto theirs. The lands of appellant and others in the district are described in the record. The nature of the ditches and the outlet, the effect of establishing a district and of including appellant’s lands, are described.
It will serve no useful purpose to set out the testimony,
3. All constitutional questions argued have, we think, been determined before, and we ought not to take the time or space to reargue or restate the holdings.
“And by fixing such new day for hearing and by adjourning said proceedings to said time, the board of supervisors shall not be held to have lost'jurisdiction of the subject matter of said proceeding, nor of any parties so previously served with notice.”
■The argument is, in substance, that, the board having called a hearing and adjourned the same without date, and thereafter changed the plans of the proposed district affecting those to be induded, they should show a new notice to interested parties, and that a failure to do so is a loss of jurisdiction in the board to proceed further. We do not understand the record as appellant claims it to be. There were some changes in the district after it was first established; but, when it was finally established, a previous notice had been given to the appellant, and, as before stated, appellant had set out additional objections. -From an examination of the record, we think appellees have fairly stated the record bearing on this question, and perhaps we are justified in setting out the record somewhat
The petition for the district was filed July 31, 1909. August 2, 1909, the board appointed an engineer to examine the proposed district and make report. On September 6th following, the engineer filed his report recommending the establishment of the drainage district and including the lands of appellant within the district. This was duly approved by the board the next day, and notice ordered. Notice was given, and the time set for hearing under the notice was November 1, 1909. Before the hearing, various objections were filed as to the location of the drains, and also claims for damages, among which was that of a railroad company for $100,000, and one of a town lot company for a like'amount. Appellant’s objections were filed October 16th. These objections were, in substance, that appellant could drain and dispose of the water from his lands in another direction, discharging it directly into the general course of natural drainage by another way than that proposed in District 53, and at the same time he notified the board that, if the existing conditions on his premises were such that they constituted an actual nuisance or menace to the public health, he would, upon the service of notice, at once abate the same. The Drainage Record shows that, on November 1, 1909, after listening to the various statements of the persons interested in the district, it was the opinion of the board that a further examination of the proposed improvement should be made and further report made to the board, but it was found that the petition was sufficient in siib stance and form, and that the drainage district would be a public health convenience and welfare and a public utility, and, claims for damage háving been filed, the board desired a further report on said matter. A new engineer was appointed, who was directed to make further survey and inspection of the district and make report on or before De
“42. That the statute is not law; it is where law leaves off and where tyranny begins. That it is not law in that it does not conform to reason; that the statute is too broad to be constitutional; that it does not impose limitations sufficient to constitute a valid act.
“43. That the statute gives the official or board of supervisors too much power in industrial affairs. That it is as important that the state and industry be kept separate as it is that the state and church be kept separate.
“44. That actual necessity knows no law and may justify anything is no reason why something that conduces toward a good thing should be seized on to override constitutional rights.
“45. In free governments, men hold their land under constitutional safeguards like life and liberty; in absolute forms, by precarious and uncertain tenures,” and so on.
On June 6th following, the board met and ordered the appointment of appraisers to act upon the new damage claims filed by the owners of the additional lands, and on June 15th, the damage claims filed as additional having Deen disposed of and withdrawn, the record shows that the board proceeded to hear all parties objecting to the establishment of the district, and, .after said objections were given consideration, further consideration was continued until June 19, 1911, on which date appellant filed a further paper with the auditor and board, demanding a further hearing on that day; and on that date, the board also made the order including the additional lands in the district, according to the report of the engineer, and adding them to the district. June 29th, the engineer made a further supplemental
The proceedings seem to have been prolonged, and may have been somewhat irregular. No cases are cited by appellee, but we find that the authorities provide that appellant has the burden of showing that the district was improperly established, and, in order to justify interference by the court, must show clearly either that the board acted without jurisdiction or that they have abused the powers conferred upon them. Mittman v. Farmer, 162 Iowa 364; Mapel v. Board of Supervisors, 179 Iowa 981.
Gray v. Anderson, 140 Iowa 359, may perhaps have some bearing at this point. It is there held that, where one who has had proper notice of a proceeding for the assessment of costs and damages is bound to take notice of the subsequent proceedings in that respect contemplated by the, statute, the adjournment of the board to a subsequent date for further consideration does not deprive it of jurisdiction.
In the instant case, final notice was given, and appellant appeared and filed his objections, and was given an opportunity to be heard, and thereafter the district was finally established. Under such circumstances, we think he may not now complain.
It should have been said that, as the district was first proposed, the outlet to the district was to be in the gravel pit belonging to the railroad and the town lot company, which claimed that they took their ice supply from the gravel pit and that the drainage would injure their ice sup-ply. The engineer at first thought this claim of these companies without merit, but afterwards it was thought there was some merit in the claim, and it appeared that, by including the additional territory, an outlet could be secured which would do away with these claims.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.