Heagler & Sons v. Biggs

287 S.W. 752, 172 Ark. 144, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1926
StatusPublished

This text of 287 S.W. 752 (Heagler & Sons v. Biggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heagler & Sons v. Biggs, 287 S.W. 752, 172 Ark. 144, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 14 (Ark. 1926).

Opinion

Smith, J.

On February 18, 1915, by an order of the county court of Greene County, a small drainage district was established embracing lands on each side of what is known as Locust Creek ditch, including about ten sections of land. Huddleston, Fuhr & Futrell, attorneys, were appointed attorneys for the district. They prepared the papers necessary for the establishment of the district, and found there were three or four sections of land which were embraced in what was known as the St. Francis Drainage District of Greene and Clay counties, an improvement district created by a special act of the General Assembly, which act provided that no other improvement district should be created within its borders, and no further action was taken in the organization of the Locust Creek Drainage District.

In 1917, apparently for the purpose of curing this defect, the General Assembly passed act 357, creating a drainage district which embraced practically the same lands' as were included in the order of the county court, with an additional section of land. Under this act the viewers of the original district were named as the commissioners for the new one, and the act creating the St. Francis Drainage District was amended so that the lands of that district might also be included in another drainage -district. C. E. Waddell was appointed engineer for the new district, and the same firm of attorneys was named as attorneys for the new district.

A survey was made by Waddell, and a number of meetings were held by the commissioners, and the engineer finally filed a report, in which lie stated that the cost of the project would be too great to impose on an area so small, and be recommended that the district be enlarged to include other lands which would, in his’’opinion, be benefited by the proposed improvement.

For the purpose, evidently, of carrying the recommendations of the engineer into effect, the General Assembly, at its 1919 session, passed act 39, enlarging the district by adding thirty-four sections of land. New commissioners were named in the act of 1919, and, after they had qualified and organized, they employed the firm of W. R. Heagler & Sons as engineers, and the same firm of attorneys was employed as attorneys for the district.

The new engineers made a survey and prepared plans for the proposed improvement, which were filed with the commissioners, and an assessment of benefits was made, based upon these plans.

At this juncture the General Assembly, on the 24th day of February, 1920, passed act 224, enlarging the district so that its area embraced 61,000 acres of land, and included practically all the territory in Greene County between Crowley’s Ridge and the St. Francis River. This act reappointed the three commissioners of the previous district, and added-two more. After the commissioners qualified, the same firm of engineers continued to do the engineering work, and the same firm of attorneys was re-employed to do the legal work.

In the district established under act 39, as amended by act 224, two plans for the reclamation of the lands in the district were submitted by the engineers. The engineers were admonished by the commissioners that previous plans had been found to be impractical, and they were enjoined to profit by the previous failures and to prepare the new plans with great care. A plan was finally adopted, and the commissioners proceeded to assess the betterments based upon the plan adopted, but, before the assessment was' completed, the General Assembly, on March 28, 1921, passed act 590, repealing the prior acts creating the district.

The estimated cost of the improvement under the plans finally approved was $1,181,082.60, and the number of acres of land in the district was 61,081.

The engineering problems were shown to be quite difficult, and involved taking care of the run of water from the hills on the one hand and the flood water of the St. Francis River on the other.

The act dissolving the district provided that all claims against the district should be presented to the commissioners of the district within a time limited, and that the commissioners should pass upon and approve such claims as were found to be proper, and the commissioners were required to file with the circuit clerk a certificate showing the demands which had been approved and allowed, and the amounts thereof.

Pursuant to the provisions of the dissolution act, the attorneys presented a bill for $3,000, this bill to include all work necessary to be done in winding up the affairs of the district. The claim was allowed by the commissioners in the sum of $2,750.

The engineers presented a bill for $16,245.59, against which there was a credit of $6,000, leaving the balance claimed of $10,245.59. The commissioners allowed the engineers the sum claimed. In addition, the commissioners approved claims for their own services. Having thus ascertained the amounts for which, in their opinion, the district was liable, the commissioners filed a complaint in the chancery court, in which it was prayed, pursuant to the provisions of the dissolution act, that the sum found by them to be due by the district be declared a lien on the lands of the district, and that an assessment be made against the lands to discharge this indebtedness.

Certain owners of lands in the district intervened in this proceeding, and challenged the allowances-made by the commissioners to the engineers and the attorneys and to the commissioners themselves as excessive. The chancery court heard testimony, and reduced the fee of the attorneys from the sum of $2,750 allowed by the commissioners to the snm of $1,500. The claim of the engineers, with the interest thereon, as allowed by the commissioners, was for $17,761.35, and the court found that this was excessive, and the claim was reduced to $13,685.48. The court found that the claims of the commissioners for their per diem were just and equitable, and the intervention as to those items was dismissed, and a decree was entered in favor of the engineers and the attorneys for the amounts stated, and they have appealed.

It thus appears that the question presented is one of fact — whether the chancery court allowed the engineers and attorneys a fair and reasonable compensation for their services.

The case presented is not unlike that of Gould v. Toland, 149 Ark. 476, 232 S. W. 434, and .the principles there announced are controlling here. In that case it was said that, “while much weight must lie given to settlements made by the board under the act (of dissolution), they cannot be regarded as final. The effect of the ascertainment and settlement-necessarily casts upon the landowners in the district the burden of showing that the allowances were inequitable and unjust.” That case is authority also for holding that the engineers and the attorneys must be compensated upon a qucmtum meruit basis.

The engineers presented an itemized statement of their account, which embraced' many items, all of which appear to have been allowed except an item which reads as follows: “Engineering services, rendered during period February, 1919, to August, 1921, as per detailed statement, page 12, $2,320.”

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Related

Gould v. Toland
232 S.W. 434 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1921)
Vaughan v. Woodruff-Prairie Road Improvement District No. 6
250 S.W. 870 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
287 S.W. 752, 172 Ark. 144, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heagler-sons-v-biggs-ark-1926.