Detroit Trust Co. v. Dingman

289 N.W. 118, 291 Mich. 170, 1939 Mich. LEXIS 775
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1939
DocketDocket No. 76, Calendar No. 40,600.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 289 N.W. 118 (Detroit Trust Co. v. Dingman) 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
Detroit Trust Co. v. Dingman, 289 N.W. 118, 291 Mich. 170, 1939 Mich. LEXIS 775 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

*172 North, J.

In this case plaintiffs seek injunctive relief by way of restraining defendants from assessing and collecting taxes imposed on plaintiffs’ properties for the construction of a drain in the township of Grosse lie, Wayne county, Michigan; and also to compel repayment to plaintiffs of taxes and assessments heretofore paid by them for the construction of the drain. Decision turns on whether these drain assessments were imposed upon plaintiffs’ properties without warrant of law. After a hearing on the merits the circuit judge entered a decree restraining the future collection or reassessment of these drain taxes. This result was reached on the theory that the structure was not a drain, but instead it was a sanitary sewer which the drain commissioner had no jurisdiction to build. Defendants have appealed.

The controlling question is whether the construction involved in this case was in good faith laid out and built as a drain or whether in fact it was conceived and constructed a sanitary sewer. This structure is known as Grosse He tile drain No. 4 and is located on the island of Grosse He situated in the Detroit river. The island is approximately 7% miles long and 1% miles wide. The assessment district consists of 217 acres. A large portion of'the area is platted. The drain lies along Bellevue avenue, a distance of approximately nine-tenths of a mile exclusive of a 12-inch lateral at the upper end which extends to the property of the Grosse He Golf and Country Club. At its easterly end it empties into a diversion chamber and septic tank located near the east end of Bellevue avenue and practically adjacent to the Detroit river. From this point and extending in a westerly direction for a distance of 2,094 feet the construction is of monolithic concrete; but as the drain extends westerly the barrel is decreased in *173 size from 33 inches to 12 inches, the portion of larger capacity being constructed of two-ring brick and segmental block sections. The main portion of the drain is below the surface of the street at depths varying from about 22 feet at the outlet to approximately 14 feet at the point from which the lateral extends to the Grosse lie Golf and Country Club property. There are numerous connecting laterals, and provision is made for connections in front of the respective properties along which this construction extends. There are 13 catch basins located along Bellevue avenue and three special inlets into which the flowage of three ditches is received. For the most part the soil drained is a heavy yellow clay under which there is a stratum of blue clay. ‘ ‘ The topography is not rugged but rolling and covers an area that is largely wooded.”

"While it appears from the record that the lay of the land in the locality of this drainage district afforded somewhat of a natural drainage, still there is in this record persuasive testimony of facts and circumstances indicating the need of construction for drainage. The proceedings which led to the consummation of this structure were started by an application for laying out and designating a drainage district in December, 1927. That there was a public sense of the need for drainage prior to the filing of this application is indicated by the fact that in April, 1927, at the Grosse He township meeting the following resolution was passed:

“"Whereas, the township of Grosse He has no definite plans for the proper drainage of the island, it is of vital importance that a study be made for the proper laying out and platting of the future drains and sewer system of the island.
“Therefore, be it resolved by the electors, taxpayers and citizens of the township now assembled *174 at this annual meeting that the township board be instructed and empowered to take such steps as they deem necessary to have formulated a definite plan for the future drains and sewer system of this township.
“It was moved and supported that the sum of $250 be voted by this meeting to be used to defray cost of such a preliminary study or survey.”

And the minutes of an earlier meeting of the township board, August 20, 1926, disclose the following:

“And due to report made to the township board relative to poor drainage conditions on Bellevue avenue, it is the sense of the board that Bellevue is badly in need of a new drain. The supervisor explained that three different plans could be used, a drain commissioner ’s plan, a county plan and a township plan for construction. * * * Carried.”

As noted above in December, 1927, the statutory number of landowners made application for the laying out and designating a drainage district for the proposed Grosse lie tile drain No. 4. Thereafter a petition dated June 16,1928, was addressed to the county drain commissioner asking that this drain and its laterals be located and constructed. Among the signers of this petition the names of 11 of the plaintiffs appear. No question is raised about the regularity of the proceedings which led to the construction of the Grosse He tile drain No. 4. It was completed at a cost of $85,329.61; and a court order was secured which permitted the issuance of drain bonds in the amount of $85,000. Assessments were regularly levied for the costs of this drain. These assessments extended over á period of years. Some of the plaintiffs have paid part of the assessments; other installments are past due and unpaid. The work was initiated and completed under Act No. 316, *175 Pub. Acts 1923, as amended by Act No. 365, Pub. Acts 1925. *

In stressing their contention that this structure is a sanitary sewer rather than a drain, appellees point out the uncontroverted fact that the raw sewage from the improved properties along the line of the drain, including those that formerly used the Smedley sanitary sewer, is discharged into this drain; and they also stress that as a part of this structure provision was made for a septic tank or settling tank. But in this connection it must be borne in mind that even prior to Act No. 318, Pub. Acts 1929 (which authorized the laying of sewers as well as drains by county drain commissioners), there was a provision in the .statute from which it conclusively appears the legislature contemplated drains might be constructed for the purpose and with the intent that they should also serve as a means of disposing of ordinary sewage. In part the statute reads:

“Any county drain may be used for sewage disposal by any city, village or township for which it shall be available. * * # Disposal plants, filtration beds and other mechanical devices as will properly purify the flow of any drain may be constructed and become a part of any established drain, the cost of construction therefor to be paid for in the same manner as other drainage costs as in this act provided. Such plants, beds or devices may be described in the petition for the location, establishment and construction of drains, * * * or in the application for the laying out of a drainage district. Petitions for the construction of such plants, beds and devices for use on any established drain may be filed by the same persons and shall be received and all proceedings *176

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Related

City of Highland Park v. Oakland County Drain Commissioner
2 N.W.2d 479 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1942)
Bloomfield Village Drain Dist. v. Keefe
119 F.2d 157 (Sixth Circuit, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
289 N.W. 118, 291 Mich. 170, 1939 Mich. LEXIS 775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/detroit-trust-co-v-dingman-mich-1939.