Hanson v. Kittson-Marshall Rural Water System
This text of 257 N.W.2d 305 (Hanson v. Kittson-Marshall Rural Water System) 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.
Opinion
Pursuant to procedures set forth in Minn.St. c. 116A, the counties of Kittson and Marshall established a judicial improvement consisting of a piped water system to rural homesteads. The system was established in August 1972 in the district court following the filing of a petition. All of the necessary steps for establishment of the system, including the determination of benefits and damages, were accomplished on June 4, 1975.
After the foregoing proceedings had taken place, the court in late July 1975 notified appellant-landowner of a supplemental assessment, pursuant to Minn.St. 116A.18, subd. 1, advising him that the court would conduct a hearing on August 6, 1975, to consider assessing his property into the rural water system. The notice specified that the assessments would be upon “a unitary basis without regard to acreage or frontage” upon the water system.
Appellant appeared at the hearing and objected to the assessment.
The court determined appellant’s property had been inadvertently omitted although the plans and specifications showed his parcel would be served from the system. The court also found that by reason of the omission appellant did not receive notice of the original assessment hearing and did not appear at that hearing. The court granted [306]*306the supplemental assessment and ordered appellant’s property placed upon the assessment roll in the same manner as all other parcels and in the same amount.
Appellant timely appealed to the district court from the order pursuant to Minn.St. 116A.19, subd. 1. Upon motion by respondent, the district court dismissed appellant’s appeal upon the ground that the court lacked jurisdiction, and this appeal followed.
Respondent concedes an ambiguity between the provisions of § 116A.19, subds. 1 and 4.1 Respondent asserts that the am[307]*307biguity exists because of the legislature’s attempt to accommodate in the same section appeals concerning two procedures authorizing the establishment of a public water system. That is, in a single county system the power to establish and handle the matter is placed in the county board. In a multicounty system, the proceeding is placed in the district court. Respondent contends that whether the system is a judicial proceeding or a county board proceeding is determinative of the appellate procedure to be followed, and if the former, the landowner’s appeal is to the supreme court.
It must be recognized that § 116A.18, subd. 1, applies to both methods of establishing a water system and provides a separate and distinct supplemental assessment proceeding to correct errors and omissions in prior proceedings establishing the system conducted by either the county board or district court. In supplemental assessment proceedings, § 116A.18, subd. 1, expressly requires that the owner of each parcel included in the supplemental assessment receive notice and “a hearing as provided for the original assessment” proceeding.
Minn.St. 116A.19, subd. 1, provides in part:
“Any party aggrieved may appeal to the district court from an order of the board or court made in any proceeding.”
Subdivisions 3 and 4 are limited to appeals from orders or judgments relative to specific subject matters. Subdivision 3 governs appeals from orders of a county board establishing or refusing to establish any public water system, and subd. 4 governs appeals to the supreme court from final orders or judgments “rendered on appeal to the district court.” Subdivision 1 governs all other appeals from orders of the county board or the district court “made in any proceeding” before either forum, and subd. 1(b) affords to the appellant a right to trial by jury.
We are compelled to remand appellant’s appeal to the district court. The legislature clearly intended that an appeal to the district court from an order made pursuant to § 116A.18, subd. 1, should be heard by the district court even though the multieounty system was initially established by that court.
Although the right to a jury trial was not passed on in the district court, it should be ruled on here not only for the practical reason that on remand the trial court will be faced with the issue, but also for the reason that appellant was deprived of his right to a jury trial. It must be recognized that § 116A.18 was enacted to meet the problem where it is discovered after establishment of a public water system that certain properties have been omitted. Section 116A.19, subd. 1, was enacted to provide affected landowners a remedy.
In this instance, all the district court did was to include appellant’s land in the water system and subject his land to the previously established assessment. Appellant objected to being included as he represented in his notice of appeal that he had an adequate water system and had no voice in the fixing of the original assessment. As indicated, the broad language of § 116A.19, subd. 1, provides him — no less than landowners originally included — a right of appeal to the district court together with a right to a jury trial on the issues raised.
We conclude that the legislature in enacting § 116A.19, subd. 1, intended that those landowners brought into the water system pursuant to the provisions of § 116A.18, subd. 1, are entitled to a review in the district court and a jury trial on all fact issues.
Reversed and remanded.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
257 N.W.2d 305, 1977 Minn. LEXIS 1413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanson-v-kittson-marshall-rural-water-system-minn-1977.