Byron v. Mayfield Creek Drainage District

267 S.W. 191, 206 Ky. 309, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 347
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 19, 1924
StatusPublished

This text of 267 S.W. 191 (Byron v. Mayfield Creek Drainage District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byron v. Mayfield Creek Drainage District, 267 S.W. 191, 206 Ky. 309, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 347 (Ky. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Drury, Commissioner

Affirming.

A demurrer was sustained to appellants’ petition in the lower court. This is an action commenced in the G-raves circuit court by appellants by which they seek to perpetually enjoin the board of drainage commissioners of Graves county, Kentucky, and the secretary of said board from issuing bonds on behalf of the Mayfield Creek Drainage District in Graves county, Kentucky, and to enjoin Ed. Gardner, treasurer of the board, from selling an issue of bonds to raise money to pay for constructing a drainage ditch from Mayfield, Kentucky, to Boaz station in the same county, which drainage district has heretofore by appropriate proceedings, been established and incorporated into a body corporate as a drainage district by orders and judgment of the G-raves county court, and has proceeded to the point where all benefits to the lands, and other property, and the value of all lands to be taken for the right of way, and all damages to adjacent lands have been appraised and the report of the board of appraisers filed and confirmed by the court, and the contract awarded for the construction of the improvements according to the plans for reclamation, which has also been approved and confirmed by the court.

This is an independent action seeking to enjoin the officers in charge of the Mayfield Ureek Drainage District from performing their duty under the law, as directed by the judgment and decree of court establishing the district.

[311]*311Appellants attempt in this independent action to nullify all that lias been done by the court in establishment and organization of said Mayfield Creek Drainage District, and ground their suit on the following alleged facts:

First, because the original petition was not signed by twenty-five per cent of the landowners, nor by the owners of twenty-five per cent of the lands in the territory sought to be incorporated into said district.

Second, because the court delayed the appointment of a board of viewers for a period of two years after the ex parte petition was filed and the bond for costs was ex-, ecuted.

Third, because the court by the judgment establishing the Mayfield Creek Drainage District, did not embrace all the territory sought by the petitioners to have been incorporated into the district, but established a district restricted to only a part of said territory, which eliminated portions of the territory described in the petition from the drainage district as same was established.

There is no contention that the appellants or any landowner for or on whose behalf they seek relief was not before the court. The record conclusively establishes the fact that appellants and every person owning land in the district were properly and legally before the court. Neither of the appellants filed any exceptions whatever to the original report of the board of viewers. However, numerous landowners did file exceptions, and the record in the proceedings show that the identical questions now attempted to be raised by the appellants were raised by certain of the exceptors to the original report of the board of viewers in the Graves county court, in -which court the proceeding was commenced. On a trial of these exceptions in the county court, they were overruled. No appeal was prosecuted to the Graves circuit court from the judgment overruling these exceptions, by the exceptors in their own right nor by any other landowner who might have done so. Although appellants did not personally file any exceptions to the original report of the board of viewers, such exceptions when filed by one landowner raising any one jurisdictional question inured to the benefit of every landowner who desired to take advantage of such issue, and any one being a party to the proceeding, could have prosecuted an appeal from the Judgment overruling such exceptions. [312]*312They did not prosecute any appeal, but as did all other landowners, they acquiesced in the .decision and judgment of the Graves county court, and by their failure to prosecute an appeal therefrom, they are concluded by that judgment.

The statute under which the proceedings were had, whereby the Mayfield Creek Drainage District was established, provided for an appeal from the judgment of the court establishing the district to any landowner considering himself aggrieved. Any one having failed to avail himself of the remedy by appeal, is deprived of any other remedy.

As stated by appellants in their brief, the proceeding to establish the Mayfield Creek Drainage District was commenced by only seven landowners on June 14, 1918. The only law relating to drainage then in effect was chapter 132, Acts of 1912. That law did not then require a petition to be signed by twenty-five per cent of the landowners nor by the owners of twenty-five per cent of the land in the territory sought to be organized as a drainage district. It simply provided that one or more landowners could commence the proceeding by filing a petition with the clerk of the county court, containing certain allegations, and executing a bond to be approved by the clerk. Section 2, chapter 132, Acts of 1912, subsection 2, section 2380, Kentucky Statutes.

By the provisions of this section, the only thing the petitioners are required to do, or can do to set the judicial machinery in motion to establish a drainage district, is to file a petition containing the allegations made essential by that section of the statutes, with the clerk of the county court, and execute bond as required. When the petitioners have done this, it becomes the duty of the county judge to act and to appoint a board of viewers. The petitioners cannot control the county judge as to how or when he will perform his duty, but the failure of the county judge to act promptly can in nowise affect the. rights of the petitioners.

It is conceded that in actions generally, where there are plaintiffs and defendants, or where any character of process is required to be issued by the clerk, .such action is not in legal contemplation commenced, until process is issued and in good faith placed in the hands of an officer to be executed, or a warning order made, if the adverse party be a nonresident, but su'ch rule has no ap[313]*313plication to a proceeding to establish a drainage district under the provisions of chapter 132, Acts of 1912. That act not only contains the substantive law relative to the establishment and organization of a drainage district, but also contains the rules of procedure.

“As this is purely an ex parte proceeding, and none of the landowners are affected or intended to be brought before the court until after the viewers have made and filed their report we conclude, etc.” Lee v. Phelps, 191 Ky. 219, 230 S. W. 44.

The petitioners could not cause nor require the clerk to issue any sort of process at the time they filed the petition and executed bond, but section 4 of Acts of 1912 provides that after the report of the board of viewers has been filed as provided for in section 3, the clerk shall issue process against all landowners named in both the petition and the viewers’ report. This shows conclusively that appellants’ contention that it was necessary for the petitioners to do more than file their petition and execute bond as required by section 2 of this act is untenable, and that the rule regarding the issuing of process in other actions has no application whatever in an ex parte proceeding to establish a drainage district.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Board of Drainage Commissioners v. Lang
218 S.W. 736 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1920)
Handley v. Graham
219 S.W. 417 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1920)
Lee v. Phelps
230 S.W. 44 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1921)
Illinois Central Railroad v. McAdoo
248 S.W. 520 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
267 S.W. 191, 206 Ky. 309, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byron-v-mayfield-creek-drainage-district-kyctapp-1924.