Bloomquist v. Board of Supervisors

188 Iowa 994
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 13, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 188 Iowa 994 (Bloomquist v. Board of Supervisors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bloomquist v. Board of Supervisors, 188 Iowa 994 (iowa 1920).

Opinion

Evans, J.

The drainage improvement under consideration was made to and upon a former drainage improvement, and consisted of cleaning, deepening, and widening an open ditch, formerly constructed, and of converting a substantial portion of the same into a covered tile drain. It involved no change of the boundaries of the former district or of the line of location of the former drain. It did, however, appropriate more land for the widened ditch and the increased berms. The former district was known as No. 3, of Hardin County; and known also in the record as the Dougan district. It was originally established in 1909. The drain consisted of an open ditch, 9 miles long. The original improvement proved inadequate in depth, in many places, to afford adequate outlet for its watershed. Upon presentation of a petition by one of the property owners whose land was situated near the upper end of the drain, the present improvement was inaugurated. Appropriate resolution of necessity and notice and hearing were had, and the improvement ordered, and contract let. The improvements were completed in 1916. The original drain was 48,500 feet in length, divided into 485 stations, of 100 feet each. These stations were numbered from the outlet up. For the first 80 stations, no new work was required. From Station 80 to Station 351, the ditch was deepened, on an average, between 3 and 4 feet. From Station 351 to Station 485, there was a similar average of deepening. This latter section also was converted into a covered tile drain. The size of the largest tile was 28 inches, which was gradually reduced to 20 inches at the upper end. The cost of the improvement was nearly double the cost of the original improvement, and amounted to over $80,000. Three fourths of the cost was incurred in the upper section, where the tile was laid. This section was two and one-half miles in length, extending from Station 351 to 485. The plaintiffs’ [997]*997lands are not contiguous to this section of the drain, but are located near the lower end.

The opening argument before us is made by the plaintiffs, and their appeal is presented therein.

I. On December 28, 1916, a hearing was had in the matter of the assessments of benefits, pursuant to notice by the board. At such hearing, the plaintiffs appeared, and presented objections to be hereinafter set out. In response to such objections, a few minor changes were ordered by the board. In other respects, the objections were overruled, and the proposed assessments were confirmed.

!■ JuowaWenon tppe»tment on While the appeal of plaintiffs was pending in the district court, the plaintiffs filed an amendment to their petition, which was in the nature of additional objections. This amendment alleged certain illegalities ^ie proceedings of the board, in that the commissioners appointed by the board never, in fact, qualified or acted as such, and that they did not, in fact, inspect the lands nor classify the same, nor did they make the purported report which was acted upon at the hearing of December 28th; that the board adopted a resolution on September 1, 1916, whereby it was ordered that the assessment of benefits for the new improvement should be in the same proportion as that adopted in the construction of the original improvement; that, in obedience to this resolution, the plat of the proposed assessments was prepared by mere computation by one of the commissioners, and was presented as the report of the commissioners; that the board, therefore, had no power or jurisdiction to act upon suCh report or to confirm such proposed assessments; and that the action of the board was null and void. The prayer is that the assessments against plaintiffs be canceled in toto, as a nullity.

To grant the prayer of this amendment to petition would necessarily result in a remand of the case to the [998]*998board of supervisors for further proceedings. The first question confronting plaintiffs is whether the objections thus raised by this amendment are available to them, or whether they waived such objections by failing to make them at the hearing before the board. The objections actually presented to the board and by it considered were as follows;

“As grounds for their objections, they' state that the assessment is illegal, inequitable, and unjust, for the reason that the land attempted to be assessed for the purpose of the alleged improvement is not, in fact, benefited.

“Second. That the assessment attempted to be levied against the parcels of land belonging to these objectors is unjust and inequitable, because it is a larger assessment, in proportion to the benefit received, than other lands similarly located.

“Third. The assessment is inequitable, illegal, and unjust, for the reason that the land sought to be assessed is not, as a matter of fact, benefited by the proposed improvement, and the proposed improvement does not afford the land of these objectors an adequate outlet.

“Fourth. That the assessment is inequitable, illegal, and unjust, for the reason that a lárge portion of the land belonging to these objectors cannot be tiled into the open ditch constructed across their land, for the reason that the said open ditch is not of sufficient depth to afford the land an adequate outlet for tile.”

The original petition filed in the district court by the plaintiffs on their appeal was predicated wholly upon the foregoing objections, presented to the board. We think it clear that such objections do not afford a basis for the amendment to the petition. The case illustrates the substantial importance of the statutory requirement that objections to be relied upon shall be made, in the first instance, before the board itself. If this had been done with the directness of specification which appears in the amendment [999]*999to- the petition, it is to be presumed that the board would have taken appropriate action thereon. The opportunity for such action should have been presented to it. To reserve objections so vital, and to present them for the first time on appeal, is the very practice w'hich the statute aims to prevent. To permit it, could only result in a disastrous circumlocution of appellate procedure. It must be held, therefore, that the objections made in plaintiffs’ amendment were waived by the failure to incorporate the same in the objections before the board, unless the jurisdictional character of the alleged illegalities be such that they could not be waived, or could not be cured by waiver.

2. Dbains : waiver by landowner of Illegal procedure by the board. Assuming, for the moment, that the action of the board, thus set forth, was irregular and illegal, could the illegality be cured by the party adversely interested? The board had complete jurisdiction of the subject-matter: that is, of the drainage proceeding. The illegality complained of was one wdiich the board itself could have readily cured by correcting its procedure. The power of the plaintiffs to waive correct procedure was quite co-extensive with the power of the board to correct its procedure. If the illegality defeated the jurisdiction of the board in any sense, it was a jurisdiction of the res, and not of the subject-matter.- It was, therefore, subject to waiver by the party adversely affected, and his consent to jurisdiction was thereby implied. In re Appeal of McLain, 189 Iowa — .

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