City of Highland Park v. Royal Oak No. 7 Storm Sewer Drain District

16 N.W.2d 106, 309 Mich. 646
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1944
DocketDocket No. 56, Calendar No. 42,777.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 16 N.W.2d 106 (City of Highland Park v. Royal Oak No. 7 Storm Sewer Drain District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Highland Park v. Royal Oak No. 7 Storm Sewer Drain District, 16 N.W.2d 106, 309 Mich. 646 (Mich. 1944).

Opinion

Btjtzel, J.

The City of Highland Park filed a bill of complaint against Boyal Oak No. 7 storm sewer drain district (Oakland county), Oakland county, its drain commissioner, and its board of supervisors. Of the bonds issued by Boyal Oak No. 7 storm sewer drain district, plaintiff owns $65,000 face value and certain defendants who have joined the plaintiff in this appeal own an additional $85,000 face value. The bill of complaint recites the .history of the undertaking by means of which a sewer was built under the drain law. It sets forth the nature of the conduits that were built and the claim is made that no facts were disclosed in the record of the original proceedings indicating that the purpose of the structure was other than that of a drain as provided by *648 law. The bill further shows that the entire issue of bonds amounting to $191,000 was sold to a brokerage house and the moneys used exclusively for the building of the drain, acquisition of rights of way, engineering and other incidental expenses, and that the improvement remains in use at the present time and will for many years serve the district. The bonds were issued in 1928.

The bill of complaint refers to the case of City of Highland Park v. Oakland County Drain Commissioner, 300 Mich. 501, where it is stated that the proceedings to establish the drainage district in question were instituted on June 3, 1927, under Act No. 316, Pub. Acts 1923, as amended by subsequent acts but which only authorized the construction of drains. Forty-one thousand dollars of principal as well as some interest was paid on the drain bonds so that there remains $150,000 and interest outstanding and unpaid. Plaintiff admits in its bill that it is impossible for it and the defendant bondholders to sue upon their bonds but alleges that equitable grounds exist for recovery of the full amount of the unpaid bonds or some substantial part thereof from the drain district, or for other relief. Appellants claim fraud on the part of the drain commissioner and in the recitals in the bonds because it was concealed from all prospective purchasers that the project would primarily serve as a sanitary sewer. They allege that the improvement is of value to defendants. They ask that the drain commissioner be ordered by mandatory injunction to levy'upon all lands in the drain district and against the village of Oak Park taxes of sufficient amount to enable the drainage district to discharge the indebtedness, or in lieu thereof, that an account he taken of the cost of such features and parts of the improvement so as to determine what it would have cost if the improvement *649 had been properly designed simply as a storm drain, and that each of the outstanding bonds be reformed to state such amount of principal as would properly represent l/191st of such cost and a decree for such amount be binding upon defendant drain district. As an alternative it asks that the drain district be decreed to be trustee of the property known as the Eoyal Oak No. 7 storm sewer drain, its rights of way and all parts and equipment thereto, to be held in trust for plaintiff and the bondholder defendants, and that said trust be enforced either through transfer of the property to bondholders or through the imposition of an equitable lien in their favor for the sum of $150,000 and interest thereon at the rate of 5 per cent, per annum since May 1, 1940.

Defendant appellees appeared specially and moved to dismiss. They set forth that by. adjudication of the. court no such valid drain district exists (see City of Highland Park v. Oakland County Drain Commissioner, 300 Mich. 501, and cases therein referred to), and they further set forth that in the absence of a valid drain district, defendants Oakland county, its board of supervisors and drain commissioner have no jurisdiction or custody over any physical assets connected with the structure and, therefore, appellants are not entitled to the relief- sought. They assert that as no valid drain district was created, no officers were guilty of fraud; that the duties of the drain commissioner were purely statutory and it was not the present incumbent of the office who practiced the alleged fraud complained of. Defendants claim that if the storm drain district does not exist, it cannot be sued, and the court is without jurisdiction. They further claim that the taxpayers, mortgagees and owners of land from whom plaintiff seeks payment are not before the court; that plaintiff is guilty of laches; that *650 the court is without power to establish a drain district and, if it had the power, the proper parties are not before the court; and that the bill of complaint does not state a cause of action against any of the defendants.

A motion to dismiss was granted without the talcing of testimony. While, as a general rule, on a motion to dismiss allegations well pleaded must be assumed to be true, nevertheless when attention is called to City of Highland Park v. Oakland County Drain Commissioner, supra, involving the same subject matter before the same court, the decision in that- case as far as it governs the facts alleged is final. There, cannot be a rehearing under- the guise of a new bill of complaint. The lower court stated:

‘£ This court is forced to the conclusion that there is no such entity in existence as Royal Oalc No. 7 Storm Sewer Drain District and without it there can be no liability against other defendants who, it follows as a matter of course, do not have custody, control or jurisdiction of the physical assets involved. This conclusion is based upon the many expressions of our Supreme Court, pointing to complete lack of jurisdiction from the beginning in the following cases:

££ £An entire want of jurisdiction,’ £No jurisdiction,’ ‘The proceedings are void for want of jurisdiction.’ (Township of Lake v. Millar, 257 Mich. 135.)

‘ ‘ ‘ The petition as filed conferred no jurisdiction on the commissioner to take action,’ ‘All subsequent proceedings were without authority and void. ’ (Kinner v. Spencer, 257 Mich. 142.)

“ ‘The acts of the drain commissioner were without warrant in law.’ (Village of Oak Park v. Van Wagoner, 271 Mich. 450.)

“‘We think the proceedings void,’ ‘The" drain commissioner was without jurisdiction.’ (Meyering Land Co. v. Spencer, 273 Mich. 703.)

*651 “Null aud void, wholly without authority, _ All proceedings thereunder are void. (Detroit Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. County of Oakland, 284 Mich. 130.)

“The relief sought in paragraph 1 of plaintiff’s prayer cannot be granted in view of the holding in City of Highland Park v. Oakland County Drain Commissioner, 300 Mich. 501, because if it were illegal and unconstitutional to levy a tax to pay the bonds, it would be just as illegal to levy taxes to pay a judgment such as sought here.

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Bluebook (online)
16 N.W.2d 106, 309 Mich. 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-highland-park-v-royal-oak-no-7-storm-sewer-drain-district-mich-1944.