Goodman v. Board of Drainage Commissioners

16 S.W.2d 1036, 229 Ky. 189, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 719
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 30, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 16 S.W.2d 1036 (Goodman v. Board of Drainage Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodman v. Board of Drainage Commissioners, 16 S.W.2d 1036, 229 Ky. 189, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 719 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Commissioner Hobson

Affirming.

Appellant brought this action in the Carlisle circuit court on February 10, 1928, against the board of drainage commissioners of McCracken, county and R. W. Rowland, the sheriff of Carlisle county, Ky. The circuit court sustained a general demurrer to his petition and dismissed it. He appeals.

The facts stated in the petition are these: The board of drainage commissioners of McCracken county, of Mayfield creek drainage district No. 1, is a corporation duly created by law, with authority to sue and be sued, and to contract and be contracted with. On or about June 4, 1918, by a proceeding in the McCracken county court in behalf of certain petitioners, a judgment was entered in that court, and also in the McCracken circuit *191 court establishing the Mayfield creek drainage district No. 1, fixing its boundaries, the assessments, the damages, and the benefits to the landowners in the boundary. By the judgment a ditch was established beginning in Graves county and extending through the counties of McCracken and Ballard into Carlisle county. The object and purpose of the proceeding and judgment was to reclaim the land within the boundary of the ditch, and to ■dredge out and cut a canal sufficient in size to carry the waters that accumulated by rainfall off of the land so that the same would become fit for agricultural purposes. During the year 1924 the ditch was finally cut in accordance with the judgment and all of the laterals of the ditch which emptied into it were cut and completed for the purpose of reclaiming the land in the boundary. The cutting and digging of the ditch was begun near Boaz Station, in Graves county, and completed during the latter part of the year 1924 in Carlisle county. By the provisions of the judgment establishing the ditch certain laterals were established for draining low lands which emptied into the main ditch. One of the laterals established by the judgment was a ditch to be cut up a creek known as West Fork, in Carlisle county, •which emptied into Mayfield creek near where the mouth of the canal in Mayfield creek stopped. By the provisions of the judgment the West Fork Creek Canal was cut and dredged out for the purpose of carrying the waters of West Fork creek off of the lands bordering thereon into the main channel of Mayfield creek. The judgment established the lateral and directed that it be cut up through West Fork creek and through the lands of the plaintiff, containing about 31 acres, which were in cultivation, and the plaintiff- produced thereon corn, peas, and other agricultural products every year prior to the cutting of the ditch.

Up to the completion of the ditch the tract of land was rich and fertile and produced good crops of grain, grass, and other agricultural products yearly thereon, which prior to the digging of the ditch were not destroyed by the waters of Mayfield ánd West Fork creeks. His tract of land lies on West Fork ditch, is in a short distance of the Mayfield Greek ditch, and is located near the mouth of both said ditches, which will bring all the water on both of the creeks for a distance of many miles in the drainage district. Ever since the year 1924 all of the rainwater emptying into the ditches in the above counties *192 comes with great force down into the ditches and overflows plaintiff’s land, which is within a very short distance of the end of both of the ditches, which were so negligently cut and established that they fail to carry the water off of plaintiff’s land or drain same, and by the stopping of the ditches near his tract of land the water which comes down the ditches from above is prevented from escaping or running down Mayfield creek into the river. .The Mayfield creek and West Fork creek ditches are not cut deep enough or large enough nor carried far enough down Mayfield creek toward the river to drain the water off the plaintiff’s land, and the negligence of the board of drainage commissioners in stopping the canals right near the plaintiff’s land causes the waters which come down from above to overflow and back up over plaintiff’s, land and to stand thereon several feet deep in great volume ever since the ditch was completed in the year 1924, and so destroy the plaintiff’s crops, the water from the ditches thereby remaining upon his land for many days and weeks at a time, and so destroying the use of the same for agricultural purposes, and will continue to so destroy it in the future as long as the ditches remain as they are. Instead of the ditches making his land more profitable for agricultural purposes, it has completely destroyed his tract of land for that purpose and he is unable to use his land for any agricultural purpose. The establishment of the ditches has not benefited his land in any way, but, on the contrary, has rendered it of no value to him whatever.

At the time the judgment was rendered the land owned by him was owned by Mrs. Hattie Gilmore and is tract No. 515 as set out in the proceedings establishing the ditch and is assessed as 40.4 acres of land. He became the owner of the land on November 30, 1923, when Mrs. Gilmore conveyed it to him and she has no interest in the land. By the provisions of the judgment establishing the ditches or canals, this tract of land was assessed for the drainage tax for special benefits which it would receive by reason of the cutting and establishing of the ditches, and the board of commissioners have wrongfully assessed against the land for special benefits received by reason of the cutting and establishing of the ditches the sum of $91.02 for a period of 25 years. The tax to be collected from the plaintiff for the year 1927 is $91.02. The defendants are at this time attempting to collect the tax against him and his property when neither the tract of *193 land nor the plaintiff nor Mrs. Gilmore received any benefits by reason of the construction and establishment of the ditches, 'nor will the land be benefited in any way thereby. The judgment establishing the ditch and assessment against the property is in full force and effect and is for a period of 25 years, beginning with the year 1923. Neither Mrs. Gilmore nor the plaintiff consented to the judgment, nor the establishment and construction of the ditches, and it is null and void for the reasons above stated, it. W. Rowland is the sheriff of Carlisle county and as such has in his hands a tax bill for $91.02 for collection and at the direction of the board of drainage commissioners is about to advertise and sell the land for the payment of the tax. The assessment of taxes as set out in the judgment is of greater value than the tract of land at this time. By reason of these facts the plaintiff is entitled to have the judgment, so far as it assesses his land for taxes, set aside and held for naught, and to have the sheriff enjoined from enforcing the taxes, for all of which he prayed judgment.

The statement in the pleading that the judgment of the McCracken circuit court is null and void for the reasons given in the petition is but a conclusion of law. A demurrer to a petition admits the facts to be true, but it does not admit the conclusions of the pleader as a matter of law. No facts are stated in the petition showing that the judgment of the McCracken circuit court is invalid in any way. The McCracken circuit court is a court of general jurisdiction; its judgments are presumed to be within its jurisdiction until the contrary appears.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 S.W.2d 1036, 229 Ky. 189, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodman-v-board-of-drainage-commissioners-kyctapphigh-1929.