Christensen v. Agan

230 N.W. 800, 209 Iowa 1315
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 14, 1930
DocketNo. 39631.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 230 N.W. 800 (Christensen v. Agan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christensen v. Agan, 230 N.W. 800, 209 Iowa 1315 (iowa 1930).

Opinion

Kindig, J.

The three appeals taken from the action of the Mills County supervisors to the district court by the respective plaintiffs and appellants, Chris Christensen, B. E. Lincoln, and Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company, a corporation, were consolidated for trial purposes. Each appeal presents the same issues and facts. Consequently, one opinion is sufficient to cover all three of them.

There are involved here, generally speaking, appellants’ complaints: First, because the supervisors did not establish the drainage district petitioned for by them; and second, because the supervisors hired attorneys and engineers, and assessed the expenses therefor to the appellants. For a proper understanding of those issues, a preliminary statement of facts is essential.

Pony Creek in Mills County, flowing in a general southwesterly direction, empties into the Missouri River. This creek is an intermittent stream, and goes dry during certain portions of the year. Immediately to the east of the creek is a range of precipitous and abrupt hills, the drainage from which flows to the west, carrying silt and deposit on the level lands into the stream beyond. Keg Creek, in 1878, flowed northwesterly into Pony Creek. It being a live stream, it is said by appellants that the waters from Keg Creek caused a sufficient flow after they entered Pony Creek to wash the debris and silt from the channel. Then, in 1879, the waters of Keg Creek were diverted from the former course, and caused to flow into what is known as Watkins Ditch (an improvement in the Watkins Drainage District), thus entering Pony Creek near the Missouri River, and thereby depriving the last-named creek of the active waters which it previously received from the first-named creek several miles farther up the stream.

In 1902 or 1903, the Pony Creek Drainage District was established, and the main ditch therein extended from the northeast to the southwest, and finally emptied into Watkins Ditch. See Lincoln v. Moore, 196 Iowa 152, and Vinton v. Board of Supervisors, 196 Iowa 329. Appellants became dissatisfied with *1318 tbe drainage situation within the Pony Creek district, and on or about August 1, 1927, duly filed their petition for the establishment of a new drainage district. Among the improvements contemplated in the new ditch was a proposed Pony Creek *1319 lateral, to empty into an extension of Watkins Ditch. According to the petition, 10,939.4 acres of land are embraced within the proposed new district. Two drainage districts are already in existence. As before suggested, they are the Pony Creek and Watkins. A plat showing those ditches and the proposed new district with the suggested lateral appears herewith.

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Related

In Re City of Des Moines
35 N.W.2d 571 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1949)
Lowden v. Iowa State Commerce Commission
294 N.W. 749 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
230 N.W. 800, 209 Iowa 1315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christensen-v-agan-iowa-1930.