Fargo v. Aaseth

137 N.W. 608, 30 S.D. 79, 1912 S.D. LEXIS 214
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 137 N.W. 608 (Fargo v. Aaseth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fargo v. Aaseth, 137 N.W. 608, 30 S.D. 79, 1912 S.D. LEXIS 214 (S.D. 1912).

Opinions

CORSON, J.

On the 5th day of August, .1909, a -petition, signed by P. J. Conklin and about 50 others living in Yankton and in Clay counties, S. D., was filed with the boards of county commissioners of said counties, praying that a drainage ditch -be established, commencing near the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad track some two or three miles west of Gayville, and extending generaly in a southeasterly course south of said railroad track through Yankton and Clay counties to the Vermillion river. A copy of the -petition so filed with the board of county commissioners of Yankton county was forwarded to the state engineer, as required by section 1 of chapter 102 of the Laws of 1909, relating to drainage. The appellants herein, and certain other owners of land -along the line of the said' proposed ditch, opposed the construction of the same and filed a remonstrance. Notwithstanding the favorable report of the engineer employed by the county commissioners to report on the feasibility of the project, the objections of the remonstrants were adopted by the boards, and they severally refused to grant the petition of the petitioners. From the order so made by the county commissioners denying the petition, the petitioners took an appeal to the circuit court' of Yank-ton county. Upon the trial of the case by the court without a jury, the order of the hoards was reversed, and the court, after finding the facts as to the preliminary proceedings, found as follows:

“(4) That thereafter the McDaniel-Trimmer Company became, or was succeeded by the Missouri Valley Engineering Com[93]*93■pany, and under and in pursuance of said contract made a careful and complete survey of the territory proposed to be affected by the Yankton-Clay county ditch. Said territory consists of a wide, flat tract of land of about 30,000 acres, lying between the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad on the north and the Missouri river on the south, in Yankton and Clay counties. *
* * The general slope of said tract of land is southeasterly, and the ground, generally considered, is very flat, rising gradually toward the Missouri river. The main line of said proposed drainage, as surveyed and recommended by said engineering company, commences at a point 1,132 feet west of the southeast corner of section 4, township 93 north, range 54 west, and runs in a generally southeastern direction to1 the Vermillion river; the total length of the main ditch being 17.38 miles.
“(5) The court finds that said entire tract of land is low, wet land, and the general slope thereof is in a southeasterly direction toward the Vermillion river along the line of said proposed main drainage ditch; that in rainy seasons large portions of the land which will be affected by said drainage ditch cannot be advantageously cultivated because of excessive moisture, and that water stands in what is termed the Gayville slough, near the town of Gayville, and at other places the year around; that such water becomes stagnant, so much so that at times green scum forms upon it, and water commonly stands in the cellars of houses in the town of Gayville and elsewhere in the territory which will be affected by said proposed drainage.
“(6) The court finds that the construction of -said main drainage ditch, as described in the report of said Missouri Valley Engineering Company, will furnish, a satisfactory outlet for such lateral drains as may he necessary to completely and effectually drain the tract of land hereinbefore described, and that such main drainage ditch will be conducive to the public health, convenience, and welfare, and is necessary and practicable for draining agricultural lands.
“(7) ' The court further finds that the portion of the land along the -main line of said proposed drainage system lying in Yankton county, if drained at all, must be drained through Clay county to the Vermillion river substantially along the lines of said proposed drainage ditch, and that no part of the land which will [94]*94be affected by said proposed drainage system can be drained directly into the Mis-ouri river ini times of high water, when 'drainage is most needed. * *

From the foregoing findings of fact,-the court found as conclusions of law:

“(i) That the Yankton-Clay County Drainage ditch, as in the foregoing findings generally described, and as more particularly described in the report of the survey of the Missouri Valley Engineering Company in said findings referred to, should be established, and should be constructed under the direction of the county commissioners of said counties, acting conjointly. ■
“(2) The appellants herein are entitled to judgment establishing said! drainage ditch and reversing the order or resolution of the boards of county commissioners of Yankton and Clay counties, from which the appeal hereinbefore referred to was taken-; and said 'judgment should direct the county commissioners of Yankton and Clay counties to proceed with the construction of said drainage ditch in the manner required by the law ’relating to and prescribing the procedure of the county commissioners subsequent to the establishment of a drainage ditch. Let judgment be entered accordingly.”

From the judgment of the -circuit court so entered, an appeal was taken to this court by Fargo, Jet-ley, junker and Lund, the four appellants named herein.

[1] Upon the case being -called for trial in the circuit court a motion to -dismiss, the appeal was -made ‘by the respondents therein, on the ground that the -orders appealed from- were not judicial; that they were official and not appealable; and that the court w-a-s without jurisdiction to entertain an appeal from said orders. This motion was denied by the -court, and its -denial is made ground for the first, second, and twenty-fifth assignments of error.

Section 9 of chapter IQ2, Laws -of 1909, amending section 12 of chapter 134, Laws of 1907, among other things, provides: “An -appeal will lie upon any final order or determination of a board of county commdmssioners establishing or denying the 'proposed -drainage * * * to the -circuit court of the county in which said drainage is located, by any -one deeming -himself aggrieved by any such order or determination.”

[95]*95It is contended by the appellant that the provisions in the law allowing an appeal from the decision of the 'board of county commissioners is unconstitutional, for the reason that the action of the board of county commissioners is administrative and not judical, and that their decision contains matters of discretion and administrative matters- that are not subject to review -by appeal; and for the further reason that section 6 of chapter 2i of the state Constitution of this state, adopted in 1906 provides that the Legislature “may provide for the organization of drainage districts for -the drainage of land for any public use, * * * and may vest the corporate authorities of counties, town-ships and municipalities with the power,” etc.

It is contended, -however, by the respondents on this appeal that this is not an open, question in this -court, as this court decided, in re Sorenson Drainage Ditch, 131 N. W.

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Fargo v. Aaseth
141 N.W. 393 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
137 N.W. 608, 30 S.D. 79, 1912 S.D. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fargo-v-aaseth-sd-1912.