Fulton v. Sherman

238 N.W. 88, 212 Iowa 1218
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 29, 1931
DocketNo. 40745.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 238 N.W. 88 (Fulton v. Sherman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fulton v. Sherman, 238 N.W. 88, 212 Iowa 1218 (iowa 1931).

Opinion

Kindig, J.

A drainage district was established in Jefferson *1219 County for the purpose of straightening, and preventing floods from, Cedar Creek. The district covers a territory approximately ten miles in length and at least one-half mile in width. As thus organized, the district extends over and along Cedar Creek.

It does not definitely appear when the drainage district in question was organized, but on October 1, 1928, the Jefferson County board of supervisors, by a proper resolution, confirmed a classification previously made by the statutory commissioners fixing the ratio of various lands in the district for assessment purposes according to the benefits received from the improvement. So, on October 10, thereafter, the board of supervisors assessed the land belonging to C. J. Fulton, the plaintiff-appellant, in conformity with the aforesaid classification.

Appellant’s two hundred acres of land, or a portion thereof, under the classification above named, is said to be benefited one hundred per cent. Of this classification appellant complains on the theory that the same is inequitable. To state the thought differently, appellant urges that his land is paying a greater portion of the improvement cost than the ratio of benefits demands. No claim is made that the appellant’s land is assessed higher than other lands of the same class, similarly benefited. Consequently we do not discuss or decide any phase of that proposition. There is no other land in the district, appellant claims, that is similar to his. Practically all of appellant’s land is covered with timber. Underlying his entire argument, therefore, is the thought that this land, thus consisting almost, if not entirely, of timber, should not be classified the same as cleared and cultivated lands. In other words, appellant believes that the classification for ordinary land which is farmed should be higher than that for timber lands. Adjoining appellant’s farm is cultivated land belonging to a Mr. Ball. The latter’s farm was classified as receiving benefits to the amount of one hundred per cent. Because Mr. Ball’s cultivated land and certain other farms were classified at one hundred per cent, appellant concludes that his timber acreage could not be benefited one hundred per cent. Hence, appellant maintains that the appellees, county supervisors, were mistaken in the classification, and he asks that the judgment of the district court confirming that classification be reversed.

Section 7464 of the 1927 Code, so far a.s material, provides:

*1220 “When a levee or drainage district shall have been located and finally established, and the contracts for construction let * * * tlie board (of supervisors) shall appoint three commissioners to assess benefits and classify the lands "affected by such improvement. One of such commissioners shall be a competent civil engineer and two of them shall be resident freeholders of the county in which the district is located, but not living within, nor interested in any lands included in, said district, nor related to any party whose land is affected thereby. The commissioners shall take and subscribe an oath of their qualifications and to perform the duties of classification of said lands, fix the percentages of benefits and apportion and assess the costs and expenses of constructing the said improvement according to law and their best judgment, skill, and ability.”

Section 7465 of the same Code continues as follows:

“At the time of appointing said commissioners, the board shall fix the time within which said assessment, classification, and apportionment shall be made, which may be extended for good cause shown. Within twenty days after their appointment, they shall begin to inspect and classify all the lands within said district, * * * in tracts of forty acres or less according to the legal or recognized subdivisions, in a graduated scale of benefits to be numbered according to the benefit to be received by each of such tracts from such improvement, and pursue said work continuously until completed and, when completed, shall make a full, accurate, and detailed report thereof and file the same with the auditor. The lands receiving the greatest benefit shall be marked on a scale of one hundred, and those benefited in a less degree with such percentage of one hundred as the benefits received bear in proportion thereto. They shall also make an equitable apportionment of the costs, expenses, fees, and damages computed on the basis of the percentages fixed.”

Under the foregoing statutes, the .commissioners in the drainage district now under consideration were appointed, made a classification, and duly reported. Such classification, as before stated, .was approved by the board of supervisors and finally confirmed by the district court.

A presumption is entertained in favor of the action of the *1221 commissioners, the board, and the court below. The report of the commissioners spreading the assessment is presumed to be correct. Hatcher v. Board of Supervisors, 165 Iowa 197; Thomas v. Board of Supervisors, 194 Iowa 1316; Cordes v. Board of Supervisors, 197 Iowa 136. Consequently the burden is upon the appellant to show that the district court and the board of supervisors did not properly assess the land in question. It is necessary, then, to consider the evidence offered by appellant for this purpose.

This evidence, generally speaking, amounts to: First, a comparison of appellant’s land with that belonging to the aforesaid Mr. Ball; and second, a comparison of appellant’s land with certain, other lands in the district classified as one hundred per cent.

I. Consideration now is directed to appellant’s evidence relating to a comparison of his land with that of Mr.. Ball. Much of that evidence is general and in the nature of indefinite conclusions; hence, as hereinafter seen, does not meet the test for cases of this kind. Not only that, but appellant cannot show the inequitableness of the assessment on his land by merely demonstrating that his property is assessed as much as that of Mr. Bafi.

A great number of elements enter into the problem involved. Here the question is, — does appellant bear more than his portion of the. improvement cost? There is expressly eliminated from this controversy, as before explained, the proposition of whether appellant’s land is assessed more than other lands similarly situated. It is quite immaterial, therefore, whether appellant’s property is assessed as high as that belonging to Mr. Ball. In this drainage district there is much land in addition to .that owned by appellant and Mr. Ball.. Consequently, theoretically speaking, a comparison must be made between appellant’s land and all the other land within the district to determine whether there is inequality in the assessment. Practically speaking, however, it is only necessary to consider appellant’s land with so much of the other lands as will enable the court to determine whether the assessment was equitable. Pollock v. Story County, 157 Iowa 232. Our court many times has laid down this proposition. To illustrate, we said in Mayne v. Board of Supervisors, 178 Iowa 783, reading on pages 785 and 786:

*1222 “It is argued, however, that the assessments are inequitable.

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238 N.W. 88, 212 Iowa 1218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fulton-v-sherman-iowa-1931.