Bonnewell v. Lowe

104 P. 853, 80 Kan. 769, 1909 Kan. LEXIS 159
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedOctober 9, 1909
DocketNo. 16,178
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 104 P. 853 (Bonnewell v. Lowe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bonnewell v. Lowe, 104 P. 853, 80 Kan. 769, 1909 Kan. LEXIS 159 (kan 1909).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mason, J.:

By order of the township trustee two ditches theretofore constructed under the drainage statute (Gen. Stat.,1901, §§2535-2550) were repaired, and the cost was apportioned among the landowners benefited. One of these, L. K, Bonnewell, disputed the validity of the charge made against him, refused to pay it, and brought an action to prevent the amount being certified to the county clerk and placed upon the tax-roll. He was denied relief, and prosecutes error.

The defendants maintain that the proceeding should be dismissed because the acts sought to be enjoined have already been performed and therefore there is nothing against which the injunction prayed for can now operate, if allowed. They rely for support in this contention upon City of Alma v. Loehr, 42 Kan. 368, where it was said: “The function of a writ of injunction is to afford preventive relief; it is powerless to correct wrongs or injuries already committed.” That case was obviously well decided, for the act performed, as in Knight v. Hirbour, 64 Kan. 563, was of such a character that the court could not compel its undoing, and an order directed to that end- would necessarily have been fruitless. But the reason quoted was too broadly stated. In a proper case a mandatory injunction may [771]*771be issued. (Railway Co. v. Billings, 77 Kan. 119; 16 A. & E. Encycl. of L. 342, 343.)

“Where defendant has fully completed the act sought to be restrained, after the filing of the bill but before the issuance of any order or decree, the court has power to compel by mandatory injunction the restoration of the former condition of things.” (22 Cyc. 742.)

Here the charge against the plaintiff has been entered upon the tax-roll, but no such change of conditions has taken place as to prevent the court by proper order from restoring the parties to their original status. A judgment in favor of the plaintiff, by declaring the tax illegal, would nullify the effect of its entry on the roll. In a case cited in support of the text just quoted it was said:

“Complainant had prayed for an injunction, which had not been secured, but after the court had acquired jurisdiction, if the collector enforced payment of the tax that fact would not constitute any defense to the bill, but the money was collected subject to the power of the court to compel the collector to refund it or submit to such other decree concerning it as might be equitable. A party filing a bill for an injunction may fail to procure a preliminary injunction, but any act after the court has acquired jurisdiction will be subject to the power of the court to compel a restoration of the status or to enforce such other relief as may be proper.” (New Haven Clock Co. v. Kochersperger, 175 Ill. 383, 395.)

The validity of the assessment against the plaintiff is attacked upon the ground that the proceédings under which the ditches were originally constructed were void for these reasons, which will be considered in order: (1) The ditches were not located in conformity with the routes described in the petitions on which they were respectively based." (2) The record shows no> finding that such ditches were necessary. (3) No part; of either ditch is located upon the plaintiff’s land..

The statute (Gen. Staff 1901, § 2538) provides that upon a petition of owners of land adjacent to the line [772]*772of a proposed ditch being filed with the township clerk, “setting forth a substantial description of its proposed starting-point, route, and termination,” and upon certain conditions being fulfilled, the trasteé shall locate and establish such ditch “as substantially conforms with the route described in the petition.” One of the petitions here involved (the one to which the first objection applies with the greater apparent force) asked that a ditch be dug “in the direction most feasible,” along a route described thus: ‘.‘From a point on the north line of said section 5, about 40 rods east of the northwest corner thereof, in a southwesterly direction, through said section 5 and 6 to the Arkansas river.” The ditch actually constructed began on the west side of a road between sections 5 and 6, ran southwest for about half a mile, then turned to the southeast and ran a little over a mile to the river, passing through sections 6, 7 and 8, but not touching section 5. The ditch was also extended a quarter of a mile northwest from the bend. The plaintiff claims that this course did not “substantially conform” with the proposed route, and that the extension northwest from the angle was in reality a separate ditch, not supported by any petition whatever.

The departure from the route indicated in the petition was considerable, but we think not sufficient to devest the trustee of jurisdiction. A lateral ditch draining a part of the land embraced in the original plan was not necessarily an independent project requiring a separate petition. The statutory requirement of substantial conformity clearly implies that the ditch constructed need not follow absolutely the route indicated. Of a somewhat similar provision it was said, in Kinne v. Bare, 68 Mich. 625:

“It is not contemplated . . . that the petition for the drain should contain an accurate description of the termini and route of the proposed drain. It could not be well done without the petitioners first went to the expense of a survey, in order to determine the feasi[773]*773bility of the route. This the law does not require.' What it contemplates is that the termini and route shall be approximately described for the information of the drain commissioner; and it is left for him to ascertain and determine the practical route and termini.” (Page 627.)

And in Donnelly v. Decker and others, 58 Wis. 461:

“The objection that the ditch varied materially from the line fixed in the petition is disposed of in Neis v. Franzen, 18 Wis. 537 [a road case]. The supervisors had the right to make any suitable variation from such line, in their discretion, so that they did not so far depart from the line in the petition as to be materially another and different line.” (Page 476.)

(See, also, 14 Cyc. 1031, and cases there cited.)

The trustee is authorized to order the construction of a ditch only in case he finds it to be necessary and that it is demanded by or will be conducive to the public health, convenience and welfare. The clerk is required to make a full and complete record of the proceedings. Here the record of the establishment of one of the ditches fails to recite any finding with respect to the necessity of the proposed improvement. The plaintiff invokes the rule thus stated in 14 Cyc. 1043:

“Many of the statutes provide that all of the findings of the board of commissioners or trustees shall be reduced to writing and entered of record by the clerk of the board; and a drain is not legally established in the absence of such written record showing the action of the board, and also showing the existence of one of the statutory grounds requisite for -the establishment of a' drain.”

This rule, however, does not apply to the present case, for our statute does not in terms require a formal declaration by the trustee that he finds the ditch to be necessary, and in the absence of such requirement the order for its construction sufficiently implies such a finding.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 P. 853, 80 Kan. 769, 1909 Kan. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonnewell-v-lowe-kan-1909.