Fetzer v. Johnson

15 F.2d 145, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2825
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 7, 1926
Docket7102
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 15 F.2d 145 (Fetzer v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fetzer v. Johnson, 15 F.2d 145, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2825 (8th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

LEWIS, Circuit Judge.

In 1912 appellant, William Fetzer, a citizen and resident of Illinois, purchased and still owns nine negotiable coupon bonds of $1,000.00 each, payable to bearer, issued of date August 14, 1911, by Mineo Drainage District No. 2, Grady county, Oklahoma. Each bond recites that it is one of a series of bonds issued for the purpose of paying the cost of a system of drainage known as Mineo Drainage District No. 2 of said county, and in anticipation of the collection of the installments of a special assessment duly levied upon lands within said district and benefited by said improvement, in. strict compliance with chap *146 ter 30 of the Session Laws of Oklahoma for the years 1907-08, as amended, and pursuant to an order of the board of county commissioners of said Grady county duly made and entered of record; that the bond is payable solely out of the proceeds of the special assessment for the benefits heretofore legally levied on the lands to be benefited and out of no other fund whatsoever; that all acts, conditions and things required to be done in locating and establishing said drainage district and in making and levying said assessment against lands benefited thereby and in the authorization, execution and issuance of this bond were and have been legally had, done and performed; that the total amount of bonds issued on account of said drainage district does not exceed the assessment so levied therefor and unpaid at the time said bonds were issued, or any legal limitation thereof, and for the performance of all of the covenants and stipulations of this bond and of the duties imposed by law upon the county of Grady for the collection of the principal and interest of said assessment and the application thereof to the payment of this bond and the interest thereon, and for the levying of such other and further assessments as are authorized by law and may be required for the prompt payment of this bond and the interest thereon, the full faith, credit and resources of said county are hereby irrevocably pledged. Fetzer received interest semi-annually on his bonds, evidenced by' coupons attached to them, until some time in 1915, when payments ceased and he brought this bill in equity on May 29, 1922, its purpose and the relief sought being hereinafter stated.

On November 12, 1915, E. B. Johnson, one of the appellees here, brought a suit in the state district court for Grady county against the treasurer of that county, whose duty it was to 'collect the assessments levied on lands in the drainage district and sell lands delinquent in payment of those assessments? to restrain him from further collection of assessments on Johnson's lands in the district and to enjoin him. from selling Johnson’s lands because of delinquencies. The gravamen of Johnson’s complaint in his suit against the county treasurer was that the board of county commissioners, in organizing the district in the early part of 1911, acted without jurisdiction because the petition presented to that board on January 2, 1911, did not describe the lands to be benefited or affected by the proposed drain, and for that reason, and others which he stated, all of the proceedings before the board, including the assessments made by it against his lands, were void. The county treasurer in his answer put in issue and resisted the claims of Johnson; but in December, 1916, that court entered a decree perpetually enjoining the treasurer from collecting any assessments on the lands of Johnson and adjudged that they were illegal and invalid and ordered that they be cancelled, vacated and set aside. An appeal was taken from that decree to the state Supreme Court and the decree affirmed on September 9,1919, in Mulligan, County Treas., v. Johnson, 77 Okl. 68, 186 P.242. The court said:

“The assessments enjoined in this proceeding were levied for the payment of bonds issued- in behalf of a drainage district in Grady county. The drainage district was created under section 3046, Comp. Laws of 1909, and the decisive question is whether the commissioners had jurisdiction; the petition failing to describe the drainage district, so the aggregate acres might be ascertained from an examination of the petition.”

The court relied on the case of Coyle v. Board of Commissioners of Kay County, 38 Okl. 370, 132 P. 1113, in holding that the petition filed under section 3046 must describe the district so the aggregate acres therein might be ascertained from it, and that a failure in that respect was fatally defective and the board of commissioners was without jurisdiction to proceed. It was also held that the court’s ruling in Board of Commissioners of Rogers County v. Lipe, 45 Okl. 685, 146 P. 713, was not in point, because, it is said, the case arose under different statutes; but the only difference was an amendment (Laws Okl. 1910, c. 79) of section 3046 changing petitioners from a percentum of the owners to a specified number of owners. The Coyle Case, supra, was decided by the state Supreme Court on May 9, 1913, which, it will be observed, was after Fetzer purchased the district bonds. But before considering that ease it will be necessary to give attention to the statute under which the district was organized. It is referred to in the briefs as sections 3045 to 3057, Snyder’s Compiled Laws 5-909 OMahoma, some of them as amended by OHahomo Laws 1910. We summarize them.

Section 3045 grants to the commissioners of any county power, at any regular meeting thereof, to cause ditches, drains and nonnavigable water "courses within the county to be constructed, straightened, widened, altered or deepened when the same shall be conducive to public health or where the same will be of public utility, or a benefit *147 to agricultural interests or to the soil of lands affected thereby, or when necessary to drain any lots, lands, or the soil thereof, and for that purpose to form one or more drain or improvement districts, and to designate each of said districts by name. It gives the commissioners exclusive jurisdiction to hear and determine all contests and objections to the creation of such district and of all matters pertaining to the same.

Section 3046 provides that before the commissioners shall establish any drain or improvement district there shall be filed with the county clerk of such county a petition signed either by 15 per cent, of the owners or by the resident owners of 15 per cent, of the aggregate acres of land to be benefited or affected by such drain or other improvements and to be assessed for construction thereof, “setting forth the necessity therefor with the general description of the proposed drain or other improvements, the starting point, route and terminus thereof, and whether it is desired to issue bonds and other evidence of indebtedness to meet the expense of such improvements; provided, that in the event it is found that the lands to be embraced within said drain or improvement district shall be benefited by such drainage or improvements as herein provided, and will benefit the public health, or will be of public utility and benefit, then the commissioners shall have power to order said improvements without additional petitions; otherwise it shall require the signatures either of fifty' per centum of the owners or of the resident owners of fifty per centum of the aggregate acreage to be affected or benefited by such drain or improvements.” It requires the petitioners to give a bond for the payment of costs.

Section 3047.

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

Related

City of Clinton, ex rel. Schuetter v. First Nat. Bank
39 F. Supp. 909 (W.D. Oklahoma, 1941)
Salt Lake County v. Utah Copper Co.
93 F.2d 127 (Tenth Circuit, 1937)
Phipps v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
91 F.2d 627 (Tenth Circuit, 1937)
Sovereign Camp, W. O. W. v. Gillespie
87 F.2d 944 (Eighth Circuit, 1937)
Vaughan v. John C. Winston Co.
83 F.2d 370 (Tenth Circuit, 1936)
Brown-Crummer Inv. Co. v. Town of North Miami
11 F. Supp. 73 (S.D. Florida, 1935)
Brown-Crummer Inv. Co. v. Paulter
70 F.2d 184 (Tenth Circuit, 1934)
Boynton v. Moffat Tunnel Improvement Dist.
57 F.2d 772 (Tenth Circuit, 1932)
Superior Oil Corp. v. Matlock
47 F.2d 993 (Tenth Circuit, 1931)
Jackson v. Harris
43 F.2d 513 (Tenth Circuit, 1930)
Seay v. Hawkins
17 F.2d 710 (Eighth Circuit, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 F.2d 145, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fetzer-v-johnson-ca8-1926.