Hawkins v. Gregory

26 P.2d 247, 138 Kan. 477, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 225
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 11, 1933
DocketNo. 31,620; No. 31,682
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 26 P.2d 247 (Hawkins v. Gregory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawkins v. Gregory, 26 P.2d 247, 138 Kan. 477, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 225 (kan 1933).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

These cases are original proceedings in which a peremptory writ of mandamus is sought to compel the county clerk of Wyandotte county to extend on the tax rolls a levy of 2.5 mills on the dollar on all property within the Kaw Valley Drainage District which was ordered by resolution of its board of directors on August 25, 1933.

The county clerk promptly notified the board that from his examination of its levy and budget his opinion was that the levy was unlawful and illegal and he would not extend it. Following that notification the board of directors conferred with the county clerk, but he steadfastly adhered to his first position, and the matter was allowed to drift until September 19,1933, at which time the plaintiff Frank Hawkins, a private citizen and taxpayer who owned property within the drainage district, brought the first of these cases, No. 31.620, praying for a writ of mandamus directing the county clerk to spread this 2.5-mill levy on the tax roll.

At a hearing in the chambers of the Chief Justice on the application for an alternative writ, the court raised a question of plaintiff’s right to maintain the action, and ordered that question briefed. While counsel were exploring the law on that subject, on October 28,1933, the county attorney of Wyandotte county instituted a similar action in the name of the state to the end that an adjudication of the validity of this questioned tax levy should not fail for want of [479]*479a proper party plaintiff. However, unless he was dissatisfied with the substance of the pleading in the first case, No. 31,520, it would have simplified matters if he had intervened in that case in the name of the state, rather than clutter our dockets with another case. Such procedure would have been in accord with precedent and good practice. (State, ex rel., v. Public Service Comm., 135 Kan. 491, 492, 11 P. 2d 999.)

By order of court, however, these cases have been consolidated, and owing to the urgency of an early determination an alternative writ in the second case was dispensed with. Counsel for the litigants appeared and argued the cause at length. The applications for the writ and the written objections to its granting developed no dispute of fact of present importance.

The allegations of both applications for the writ, much abridged, are that the Kaw Valley Drainage District was organized under authority of the statute of 1905 (R. S. 24-401 et seq.); that dikes have been constructed on each side of the Kaw for a number of miles upstream from its confluence with the Missouri river, at a cost of $1,750,000, for which the district still has a bonded indebtedness of $1,225,000; that these dikes are 30 feet in height above low-water level.

In July, 1915, the board of directors adopted a resolution to raise the dikes to an additional elevation of 5½ feet, and considerable work has been done on the left bank of the Kaw to carry that resolution into effect; but no work of that sort has been done on the right bank of the stream, leaving property on that side of the river open to inundation whenever a 30-foot rise occurs in the river. (It should be interpolated here that the electors of the district have never sanctioned the construction of dikes above the 30-foot level, and have disapproved a proposal to raise the dikes to a height of 35½ feet.)

It is also alleged that on August 25, 1933, in due form, the board of directors adopted a resolution imposing taxes for a general fund and for interest and sinking funds. That part of it of present concern reads:

“That pursuant to the authority conferred upon said district by chapter 215 of the Session Laws of the state of Kansas for 1905, and amendments thereto, The Kaw Valley Drainage District of Wyandotte county, Kansas, by and through its board of directors, does now and hereby levy a tax upon all taxable property within said district for the ensuing year, as follows:
[480]*480“1. A tax of .0025 mills [2.5 mills intended] on the dollar to create a general fund.”

Accompanying the state’s application for the writ is a copy of the drainage district’s “budget and financial statement” for the current year, duly certified by the officers of the district and reciting—

“That it is necessary to levy .0025 per dollar, [2.5 mills intended] to raise $107,500 for the general fund.”

The financial statement also shows that the drainage district treasurer’s balance, July 1, 1933, in the general fund is $58,611.64.

The budget for the ensuing year contains the following, among other items:

Proposed Adopted
“7. Improvement projects . .$110,000 $75,000.”

Repeatedly in the state’s application for the writ the allegation is made that the purpose of this 2.5-mill levy for the general fund is to provide money to raise the dike on the south bank of the Kaw 5½ feet. A typical excerpt from the application reads:

“11. That the present drainage board intended to use the funds received from the tax of 2.5 mills on the dollar to create a general fund for the purpose of repairing the dike or levee on the right bank of said river to raise the height of said levee on the south side of said river.”

The application also alleges that in order to collaborate with the federal government and with railroads owning adjacent lands “to raise the height and repair the levees,” this money is needed, and that the federal government is ready to furnish $120,000 for these purposes upon condition that the drainage board provide $75,000 for the same purpose, and that the board is anxious to take advantage of this liberal offer of the United States government.

Most important of all the allegations and admissions of the state’s application for the writ is the following:

“17. That the drainage board did not follow the requirements of R. S. 24-418 and 24-422, for the reason that said drainage board decided that the raising of the dike on the south bank of said river and the other work to be carried on with the funds to be raised from the levy of 2.5 mills did not constitute new construction work, but did decide that the same constituted repair work and decided that the same should be paid for by the levy of a tax, the proceeds of which were to constitute and be placed in the general fund.”

To the alternative writ issued in case No. 31,620, defendant filed an answer, the substance of which is included in his objections to the issuance of a writ in case No. 31,682. We pass by matters of historical and financial interest concerning this drainage district’s [481]*481affairs included in defendant’s answer and objections, and note with particularity certain provisions of statute which seem to control this controversy. We may also ignore such secondary considerations as the impleading of the members of the board of directors of the drainage district in these proceedings.

In the first place it should be obvious that the plaintiff, a private citizen, cannot maintain the action instituted by him in case No. 31,620. He has no special interest apart from the general run of citizens and property owners of the drainage district which would justify his assumption of the functions of a public prosecutor to compel the county clerk to extend this tax levy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 P.2d 247, 138 Kan. 477, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawkins-v-gregory-kan-1933.