Bohannon v. Camden Bend Drainage District

208 S.W.2d 794, 240 Mo. App. 492, 1948 Mo. App. LEXIS 283
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 9, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 208 S.W.2d 794 (Bohannon v. Camden Bend Drainage District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bohannon v. Camden Bend Drainage District, 208 S.W.2d 794, 240 Mo. App. 492, 1948 Mo. App. LEXIS 283 (Mo. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

*494 BLAND, J.

This action is brought to enjoin respondents from constructing and maintaining a ditch, and from lowering the level of a private lake, or otherwise interfering with appellants’ property, and from carrying out a certain plan of reclamation. Defendants, respondents here, filed a motion to dismiss said action on the ground that the petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against defendants, and failed to state a claim upon which any relief may be granted. The motion was sustained by the trial court. From the judgment thereupon rendered in defendants’ favor, plaintiffs appealed.

In substance, the 'allegations of plaintiffs ’ petition are as follows:

The petitioners are the owners, respectively, of the tracts of "land in Ray County, Missouri, described; part of each of these tracts extends under Sunshine Lake, and the remainder of the tracts are contingent thereto. The Caiiíden Bend Drainage District is a public corporation, created, organized and existing under and by virtue of an Act of the Legislature of the State of Missouri relating to Organizations of Drainage Districts by Circuit Courts, Article I, Chapter 79, R. S. Mo. 1939. Said Drainage District was incorporated by decree of the Circuit Court for Lafayette County, Missouri, and entered of record. The defendants Stover, Seward, Hilliard, Rogers and Stover are supervisors of the District, defendant Myers is the chief engineer, and defendant Gray is the contractor for said district. Defendant Myers has prepared a plan of reclamation for the district, which has been approved and adopted by the supervisors and is to be *495 carried into execution by defendant Gray, contractor; defendant Gray has entered into a contract with the district for the performance of the work therefor, and said plan has been filed in the same court where this action is instituted and is part of the proceeding’s of said district. That pursuant to said plan defendant Gray, at the direction of said supervisors and said engineer, is now constructing a ditch in said district in accordance with said plan, which ditch would drain the water from Sunshine Lake.
Sunshine Lake is a natural body of water several hundred acres in area. Many cabins and other improvements have been constructed by plaintiffs on their lands along the east bank of said lake for the accommodation and use of customers of the plaintiffs and for the plaintiffs; that such customers use such improvements for boating, swimming, fishing, hunting and other recreational activities; that said riparian lands are especially adapted’ to such use, and plaintiffs have constructed said improvements for such purposes, and have beautified the lake shore owned by them with shrubbery and trees, and have constructed docks, ovens, and other improvements for their use and for their customers; plaintiffs have dedicated the same for business purposes as a business enterprise and for their own comfort, convenience and pleasure.
Said district did not include the swamp, wet and overflowing lands or lands subject to overflow, nor did the Articles of Association and petition for decree of such incorporation include the whole of the area of such contiguous swamp lands subject to overflow. The said lands of plaintiff are more subject to overflow than the lands within the boundaries of said district, and are contiguous to the land described in said Articles of Association set forth in the petition for decree of incorporation, and in the decree. By reason of the failure to include plaintiffs’ said lands within said district, said district did not include a majority of acreage of the whole area of the contiguous body of Said swamp lands as provided in Section 12324, R. S. Mo. 1939 (quoted).
In accordance with the said purported plan filed in the same court and the operation thereof by the defendants they intend to take and will take through the construction and operation of said plan, water from said private lake, thereby depriving plaintiffs ’of their property without due process of law.
As a result of said purported plan plaintiffs’ said land will be used by the district as a holding basin and for other works as set out in the plan; that the source of the water for said lake has always been a water shed several miles north and northwest thereof, and during rainy seasons the water flowing from said water shed will enter said lakebed in greater volume than can *496 be drained therefrom under the plan, in that ditches and culverts provided by the plan are insufficient to carry water from the lake as fast as, during such seasons, will enter said lake, and water therefrom will be impounded upon plaintiffs’ said lands, which will thus be used by the district as a holding basin. Said lake is being converted thereby from a useful and beneficial property to a holding basin.
Pursuant to Section 12336, R. S. Mo., 1939, it was necessary for the commissioners appointed by the court to view the premises and determine the value of all the land and other property within or without the district to be used for rights-of-way, holding basins and other works set out in said plan, and to assess the amount of benefits and damages, if any, accruing to each parcel of land according to ownership by reason of carrying out and putting into effect said plan of reclamation. The commissioners appointed by this court did not determine such value of the land owned by plaintiffs to be used as a'holding basin, or other works as set out in the plan, and did not assess the benefits or damages to plaintiffs’ lands, all in direct violation of said statute.
Upon the filing of' the Report of the Commissioners for said district it became incumbent upon the clerk of the Circuit Court of Lafayette County, Missouri to publish notice thereof once a week for three consecutive weeks in some newspaper published in Ray County, Missouri, wherein plaintiffs’ said lands are situated, which notice is for the purpose of apprising plaintiffs of the filing of said Commissioners’ Report as to the value of lands to be taken by said district for rights-of-way, holding basins for the district, and the assessments of benefits or damages accruing to plaintiffs’ said lands. Said clerk failed to give notice to plaintiffs of the filing of the Report of the Commissioners, and plaintiffs were, therefore, never given legal notice of the filing of said report as provided by Section 12337, R. S. Mo., 1939.
Defendants, contrary to Section 12353, R. S. Mo., 1939, are attempting to take and use plaintiffs’ said lands for rights-of-way, holding basins and other works of the district without first having their damage thereto assessed, and the value thereof appraised, and without paying plaintiffs damages accruing thereby, and without paying plaintiffs the value of such lands so being taken; that said acts of defendants are unlawful and in violation of said section.
Defendants, in carrying out said plan and opening a ditch from said lake to Missouri River will lower the level of said lake below its natural and normal level, and will drain water therefrom to the great damage of plaintiffs, and will render said land and improvements of the plaintiffs useless and of little or no value.

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Bluebook (online)
208 S.W.2d 794, 240 Mo. App. 492, 1948 Mo. App. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bohannon-v-camden-bend-drainage-district-moctapp-1948.