Erickschen v. County of Sibley

170 N.W. 883, 142 Minn. 37, 1919 Minn. LEXIS 558
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 14, 1919
DocketNo. 21,078
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 170 N.W. 883 (Erickschen v. County of Sibley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Erickschen v. County of Sibley, 170 N.W. 883, 142 Minn. 37, 1919 Minn. LEXIS 558 (Mich. 1919).

Opinion

Lees, C.

On January 26, 1916, sixteen landowners of Sibley county petitioned the county board to establish and construct a drainage ditch. The petition states that wet lands along the route of the ditch require drainage to make them valuable for agricultural purposes, and that on such lands there are stagnant waters which give off offensive odors and breed disease.

The route of the ditch and its point of beginning and termination are set forth as coinciding with “old County Ditch No. T of said county, [39]*39which has now become nearly extinct.” Appellant and six other landowners filed written objections to the granting of the petition, on the ground that it was proposed thereby to drain Washington lake, a meandered body of water which might not be drained under the statutes of the state. The county board, on November 38, 1916, made an order granting the prayer of the petition. Under the provisions of G. S. 1913, § 5589, an appeal from the order was taken and the proceedings carried to the district court where a trial was had in August, 1917, before the court without a jury. Findings were made to the effect that the proposed ditch runs through and crosses Washington lake, which is a government meandered lake; that it will drain it in part, and that, prior to the filing of the petition and at the time of the trial, it was normally shallow and marshy and lacking in sufficient depth or volume to be of any substantial public use for fishing, boating or water supply. The order was that the action of the county board “insofar as it enables partial drainage of the lake” should be affirmed.

Appellant moved for a new trial, specifying as one of the grounds therefor that the court’s decision was not warranted by the evidence and was contrary to law. His motion was denied and he appealed. It is the view of the court that but two questions need be considered in disposing of this appeal.

The first is whether appellant is entitled to a reversal because of alleged jurisdictional defects and omissions in the petition, and, if that is ruled against him, the second is whether affirmance of the order of the county board was justified by the evidence and the law applicable’thereto.

1. Counsel for appellant insist that the petition is fatally defective in that it does not set forth that drainage of a meandered lake is proposed. We do not find any statutory provision requiring this to be done. Section 5535, G. S. 1913, appears to be the only statute on the subject, and the petition conforms to its requirements. We are of the opinion that it was sufficient to invest the county board with jurisdiction over the proceeding. State v. Watts, 116 Minn. 326, 133 N. W. 971; Sorknes v. Board of Co. Commrs. of Lac qui Parle County, 131 Minn. 79, 154 N. W. 669; Asquith v. Engstrom, 133 Minn. 113, 157 N. W. 1004.

It is probably true that when one of the purposes of a drainage proceeding, in the picturesque language of counsel for appellant, is to “as[40]*40sault a lake,” notice of the designs of the petitioners might well be required to be set forth in the petition. But we are dealing with a statute which has no such requirement and' cannot read into it something its plain language does not import. Furthermore a petition setting forth the beginning, route and terminus of a drainage ditch, as required by the statute, must inevitably disclose the fact that a lake will be affected if the course of the ditch as described extends through it as was the case here, and appellant’s objections filed with the county board indicate that the scope and purpose of the proceedings were known to him and the others who signed them.

2. The second question is the vital one in this case. The appeal to the district court presented but one issue triable by that court. It. had jurisdiction only to determine whether Washington lake was such a lake as could be drained, as it would be drained, if the petition was granted. Mundwiler v. Bentson, 128 Minn. 69, 150 N. W. 209.

On appeals to the district court from administrative boards vested with jurisdiction to act in matters involving the exercise of legislative judgment and discretion, the court is limited to the inquiry of, whether or not the action of the board was arbitrary, oppressive, without evidence to sustain it, or contrary to law. Brazil v. County of Sibley, 139 Minn. 458, 166 N. W. 1077; Hunstiger v. Kilian, 130 Minn. 474, 153 N. W. 869, 1095.

In passing upon the petition in the case at bar, the county board was not merely required to decide whether the public would be benefited by granting the petition and draining the lands mentioned therein. There was presented for its decision the additional question of whether Washington lake was in fact á lake of a character answering the description of meandered lakes which may be drained under chapter 300, p. 425, Laws 1915.

The latter question was judicial and not legislative in character, and on appeal from the county board to the district court that question was triable de novo, and the findings are to be given the same weight as findings of fact in cases originating in that court. Madsen v. Larson, 117 Minn. 369, 135 N. W. 1003; State v. Nelson, 136 Minn. 272, 159 N. W. 758, 161 N. W. 576.

We have considered the evidence in the light reflected by the legisla[41]*41tion of the past 50 years upon the policy of the state as to the preservation of its inland waters. By chapter 40, p. 70, Laws 1867 (now section 8949, G-. S. 1913) it was made a criminal- offense to drain a meandered lake. By chapter 139, p. 196, Laws 1883, the county commissioners were authorized to permit adjacent landowners to drain shallow, grassy lakes not over four feet deep. By chapter 257, p. 478, Laws 1897, all meandered lakes having an area of over 160 acres and deep enough for beneficial use for fishing, fowling, boating or furnishing water for domestic, municipal or agricultural purposes, wer-e declared to be public waters. Chapter 230, p. 303, Laws 1905, as amended by chapter 300, p. 425, Laws 1915, provides that a meandered lake might be drained in part or in whole, if it has become normally shallow and of a marshy character, or is no .longer of sufficient depth or volume to be of any substantial public use for fishing, boating or water supply. If only part of it is to be drained, the county board had power to cause dikes or dams to be constructed to hold the water at ordinary high water mark in that part of the lake not drained. This is the controlling statute in the ease before us.

This legislation points to a settled policy designed to preserve inland waters which afford recreation to the public as well as waters susceptible of use for commercial purposes. With this policy this court has been in full accord. Lamprey v. State, 52 Minn. 181, 53 N. W. 1139, 18 L.R.A. 670, 38 Am. St. 541; Witty v. Board of Co. Commrs. of Nicollet County, 76 Minn. 286, 79 N. W. 112; Madsen v. Larson, 117 Minn. 369, 135 N. W. 1003; State v. Korrer, 127 Minn. 60, 148 N. W. 617, 1095, L.R.A. 1916C, 139. Drainage laws are sustained on the theory that the state is exercising its police power, the right of eminent domain, or its taxing power, either to protect public health, promote the public welfare, or to reclaim waste lands and make them suitable for agricultural uses. Lien v. Board of Co. Commrs. of Norman County, 80 Minn. 58, 82 N. W. 1094. Meandered lakes belong to the state in its sovereign capacity in trust for the public, and if such a lake is drained .it amounts to the destruction of one public right for the sake of another public use. Witty v. Board of Co. Commrs.

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

Related

In Re Application of Baldwin to Vacate Lake Street
15 N.W.2d 184 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1944)
Petraborg v. Zontelli
15 N.W.2d 174 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1944)
In Re Establishment of Judicial Ditch No. 75
215 N.W. 204 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1927)
Sellen v. County of McLeod
205 N.W. 625 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1925)
Bloomquist v. Sanders
202 N.W. 496 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1925)
Jensen v. County Board
198 N.W. 455 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1924)
Sundquist v. Fraser
191 N.W. 931 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1923)
State ex rel. Westergaard v. District Court
174 N.W. 522 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 N.W. 883, 142 Minn. 37, 1919 Minn. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erickschen-v-county-of-sibley-minn-1919.