Catron v. Deep Fork Drainage Dist. No. 1

1913 OK 94, 130 P. 263, 35 Okla. 447, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 607
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 11, 1913
Docket2935
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1913 OK 94 (Catron v. Deep Fork Drainage Dist. No. 1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Catron v. Deep Fork Drainage Dist. No. 1, 1913 OK 94, 130 P. 263, 35 Okla. 447, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 607 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

*448 TURNER, J.

On December 7, 1908, there was filed in the office of the county clerk of Oklahoma county a petition praying for the establishment of a drainage district, to be known as Deep Fork Drainage District No. 1, and located in Oklahoma county, pursuant to Comp. Laws 1909, secs. 3043 to 3077, inclusive. Thereafter bond was filed and notice given, and the district duly established. Upon the coming in of the report of the viewers, appointed to assess the benefits and damages, exceptions were filed thereto by plaintiff as to the amount assessed against certain lands belonging to him and the damages allowed for right of way, alleging that the latter were inadequate and the former excessive for certain reasons therein set forth. Thereafter the same came on to be heard; whereupon the board, without objection, struck out the amount allowed for damages, confirmed the assessment of benefits, assessed the same against the land, and plaintiff appealed to the district court. There, on August 26, 1910, the cause coming on to be heard, the court, without objection, the question having been eliminated before the board, dismissed the matter of damages and proceeded to try the question of the assessment of benefits; whereupon plaintiff demanded a jury trial, which was by the court refused. Pie then moved to require the defendant to first produce its evidence, contending that the burden of proof was there, which was overruled, and exceptions saved on both points. Then, after hearing the evidence and being duly advised, the court found the issue in favor of defendant, and ordered that the assessments of benefits theretofore made by the board of viewers and confirmed by the board of county commissioners be confirmed, and that the clerk of the court certify to the county clerk of the county judgment to that effect, and that there be entered upon the assessment roll of Deep Fork Drainage District No. 1 the assessment of benefits theretofore confirmed by the county commissioners against the lands of plaintiff. After motion for a new trial filed and overruled, plaintiff brings the case here, and assigns that the court erred in refusing to allow him a jury trial upon the question of benefits.

*449 The point is not well taken. While “all questions” made by plaintiff’s exceptions are, by statute, directed to be heard and determined by the board, “either or any” of certain questions only are thus authorized to be heard and determined on appeal therefrom to the district court, and among them the very question for the determination of which a jury trial was invoked by plaintiff. By Comp. Laws 1909, sec. 3050, the return of the reviewers must state:

“ * * * The names and residences of the owners that will be benefited, damaged, or condemned by or for the improvements, and the damage or benefits to each tract of forty acres, or less, and make separate estimate of the cost of location and construction, and apportion the same to each tract in proportion to the benefits or damages that may result to each.”

Section 3051':

“Any person whose lands are affected by the proposed improvement may, on or before the day set for hearing before the commissioners, file exceptions to the apportionments made by, and the action of the viewers, upon any claim for compensation or damages. The commissioners may hear testimony and examine witnesses upon all questions made by such exceptions, and for that purpose may compel the attendance of witnesses and the production of other evidence, and its decision upon each of the exceptions shall be entered of record. * * * Any person aggrieved may appeal from the order of the commissioners, and upon such appeal there may be determined either or any of the following questions: 1st. Whether just compensation has been allowed for property apportioned. 2nd. Whether proper damages have been allowed for property prejudicially affected by the improvements. 3rd. And whether the property for which an appeal is prayed has been assessed more than it will be benefited, or more than its proportionate share of the cost of the improvements.”

Concerning procedure, section 3058 provides:

“The district clerk shall docket said appeal, in the district court, styling the appellant as plaintiff, and the drainage district, giving its name and number, as defendant, and the cause shall stand for trial and be heard and determined as other appealed cases are tried in the district court. After the appeal is heard and determined in the district court, the district clerk shall return the original papers filed in his office by the county clerk, together with a transcript of the proceedings held in said cause in the district court, including a certified copy of the finding, *450 verdict, judgment or decree of said court; the district clerk shall also return an itemized statement of the costs accruing on the appeal, and such cost shall be paid as hereinbefore provided. The commissioners shall thereby cause such entry to he made on their record which may be necessary to give effect to the judgment of the district court.”

Comp. Raws 1909, sec. 1690, further provides:

“From all decisions of the board of commissioners upon matters properly before them, there shall be allowed an appeal to the district court by any person aggrieved.”

And section 1693:

“All appeals thus taken to the district court shall be docketed as other causes pending therein, and the same shall be heard and determined de novo”

■ — -showing that this appeal is to be tried de novo and “as other appealed cases are tried in the district court.”

Section 0784a reads:

“A trial is a judicial examination of the issues, whether of law or fact, in an action.”

Section 5785:

“Issues of law must be tried by the court, unless referred. Issues of fact arising in actions for recovery of money or of specific real or personal property shall be tried by a jury unless a jury trial is waived or a reference be ordered as hereinafter provided.”

Section 5786:

“All other issues of fact shall be tried by the court, subject to its power to order any issue or issues to be tried by a jury, or referred as provided in this Code.”.

We are therefore of opinion that, as the issues involved in the assessment of benefits to the land in question were not “issues of fact arising in actions for recovery of money, or to recover real or personal property,” but were “other issues of fact,” the court did not err in overruling plaintiff’.s request to try them to a jury, as the court was required, by section 5786, to try them himself, subject to his power to order the same tried to a jury, as therein set forth.

Nor does article 2, section 19, of the Constitution, which provides, “The right of trial by jury shall be and remain inviolate, * * * ” protect plaintiff in his right to a trial by jury in this *451 case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 94, 130 P. 263, 35 Okla. 447, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/catron-v-deep-fork-drainage-dist-no-1-okla-1913.