Bushnell v. Mississippi & Fox River Drainage District

111 S.W.2d 946, 233 Mo. App. 921, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 56
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 4, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 111 S.W.2d 946 (Bushnell v. Mississippi & Fox River 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
Bushnell v. Mississippi & Fox River Drainage District, 111 S.W.2d 946, 233 Mo. App. 921, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 56 (Mo. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

*925 McCULLEN, J.

— This action in mandamus was instituted by appellants in the Circuit Court of Clark County, Missouri, to compel the respondent drainage district and the members of its board of supervisors to levy a tax to pay a judgment that had been previously rendered against said drainage district in favor of appellants. After a trial, the court quashed the alternative writ which it had theretofore issued and denied a peremptory writ. The claimants took an appeal to the Supreme Court. That court held it did not have jurisdiction and transferred the cause to this court. [See Bushnell et al. v. Mississippi & Fox River Drainage District (Mo.), 102 S. W. (2d) 871.]

The cause was submitted to the trial court upon an agreed statement of facts which constitutes the only evidence in the case. It appears from the agreed statement of facts that respondent district was duly incorporated as a drainage district on October 8, 1915, under the provisions of the Laws of Missouri, 1913, page 232, et seq., which, with subsequent amendments, is now Chapter 64, Revised Statutes Missouri, 1929, section 10743, et seq.; that the organization of said drainage district was undertaken and the legal proceedings in connection therewith were had in the Circuit Court of Clark County, Missouri. The individual respondents herein are the duly elected and qualified supervisors of said drainage district. It further appears that the district adopted a plan for reclamation; that commissioners were appointed to assess the benefits and appraise the damages and their report was duly filed in said court; that numerous objections were filed to said report, and in the year 1920 the report was apparently lost from the files of the court; that no order was ever entered in any court approving or disapproving the report mentioned; that on November 8, 1915, the board of supervisors levied a uniform tax *926 of fifty cents per acre on the land in the- districts to pay expenses incurred in organizing the district, assessing benefits and damages, and to pay other expenses necessary to be incurred, as provided by the statutes of Missouri; that the major portion of said tax was collected and paid out, but that a number of landowners in the district failed and refused to pajr said tax and that some of said taxes have never been collected by the district; that no suit has ever been prosecuted in behalf of the district against said delinquent taxpayers; that no drainage works or structures of any kind have been made or erected in said district;'that no assessment or ascertainment of damages has ever been made and that the district has never been dissolved by order of any court.

It further appears from the agreed statement of facts that on July 31, 1929, appellants Bushnell and McCann were employed as engineers by the district through its duly elected and acting board of supervisors under a written agreement to prepare plans and specifications and perform engineering services in connection with a proposed amended plan of reclamation and proceedings to extend the boundaries of the district, which amended plan required entirely new surveys of the district and included hundreds of additional acres of land; that on August 29, 1929, E. W. McManus was duly employed as attorney for the district by the same board of supervisors under a written contract of employment; that pursuant to their contracts of employment, Bushnell and McCann, as engineers, and McManus, as attorney, performed services for the district, said services consisting in general of making surveys and preparing plans for an amended plan of reclamation and for enlarging the boundaries of the district, and legal services in connection therewith. These parties also paid out money for expenses. The amended plan of reclamation was never approved or carried into effect. The petition for the enlargement and changes was denied by the Circuit Court of Clark County.

The agreed statement of facts further shows that on October 27, 1931, the drainage district, through its board of supervisors, entered into a compromise settlement with Bushnell and McCann whereby the board agreed to pay and Bushnell and McCann agreed to accept $4000 in full for their services; that the board also made a compromise settlement with McManus whereby the board agreed to pay and McManus agreed to accept $2000 in full for his services. Subsequently, McManus assigned to appellants herein all his claim under said compromise agreement and thereafter appellants brought suit in the Circuit Court of Clark County pleading said compromise settlements and the assignment. After due notice to all parties interested, judgment was duly entered on April 5, 1932, in said court in favor of appellants herein as plaintiffs in said suit, and against the drainage district as defendant therein, for the sum of *927 $6000 with, interest and costs, the judgment being based upon the compromise agreements. It further appears that thereafter payment having been refused, plaintiffs’ caused an execution to be issued, which was returned unsatisfied, the drainage district having no funds with which to pay said judgment; that appellants made demand upon the board of supervisors to levy an assessment to satisfy their judgment and that the demand was refused. Thereupon this suit in mandamus was instituted to compel the drainage district and its board of supervisors to levy and collect an additional and sufficient tax to pay appellants’ judgment.

Appellants contend that the judgment in their favor, upon which this proceeding in mandamus is based, is conclusive as to every matter which was offered or could have been offered to sustain or defeat the demand on 'which their claim was based; that a judgment being a debt of the highest form operates as a merger and bar of all included claims; that respondent drainage district is a municipal corporation, and that mandamus is the proper remedy to recover on the judgment against it. They further contend that where a guasi munieipal corporation has the power to enter into contracts for services or materials, there is an implied power to levy and collect and pay over funds necessary to pay the agreed price therefor.

Respondents contend that appellants are conclusively presumed to know that public agents such as drainage districts and their board of supervisors have only such power to levy taxes as is expressly given by statute. Respondents further contend that no tax can be levied against the landowners in the respondent drainage district above fifty cents per acre until after the report of the-commissioners appointed by the circuit court assessing benefits and damages upon a hearing, after due notice to the landowners, has been approved; that the only authority and right to impose or levy any drainage tax exists by reason of a statute so providing; that absent such positive statute, no such right exists and that there is no statute authorizing the levying of a tax such as is sought by appellants herein.

Appellants argue that since there is no charge of irregularity of any kind whatsoever made against the judgment which appellants obtained against the respondent ■ drainage district or against the compromise settlement agreement upon which the judgment is based, respondents are precluded from setting up the want of power to levy the additional tax sought by appellants to pay such judgment.

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Related

State ex rel. Powell v. Capps
381 S.W.2d 852 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1964)
State Ex Rel. Phillip v. Public School Retirement System
262 S.W.2d 569 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1953)
Diekroeger v. Jones
151 S.W.2d 691 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1941)
Johnson v. Riverland Levee Dist.
117 F.2d 711 (Eighth Circuit, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.W.2d 946, 233 Mo. App. 921, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bushnell-v-mississippi-fox-river-drainage-district-moctapp-1938.