Hine v. Board of Com'rs of McClain County

1940 OK 350, 108 P.2d 112, 188 Okla. 260, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 442
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 10, 1940
DocketNo. 29554.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1940 OK 350 (Hine v. Board of Com'rs of McClain County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hine v. Board of Com'rs of McClain County, 1940 OK 350, 108 P.2d 112, 188 Okla. 260, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 442 (Okla. 1940).

Opinion

RILEY, J.

This action was commenced by plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, against the county commissioners of McClain county, as drainage commissioners of Walnut creek drainage district No..l, of McClain county, and Leo F. Gresham, county treasurer of McClain county, defendants in error, hereinafter referred to as defendants, wherein plaintiff seeks a judgment and decree canceling assessments, interest, and penalties levied against a large number of tracts of land owned by plaintiff.

The assessments complained of are special assessments against plaintiff’s land levied for the purpose of raising funds with which to pay bonds issued in connection with the construction of the drainage ditch in said district.

Plaintiff also seeks recovery of possession of that part of his land through which the drainage ditch was constructed.

The validity of the assessments involved is assailed upon several grounds. Summarized as follows:

Plaintiff in his petition refers to the transcript of record concerning the drainage district. He then alleges that the proceedings as disclosed in said transcript are void on its face, and, therefore, defendants were without authority of law, or any authority, to levy the assessments against plaintiff’s land, and that the commissioners acted without authority of law in taking plaintiff’s land in excavating the ditch, and the taking to that extent was without authority of law, and without compensation, all in violation of the due process of law clause of article 14 of the Constitution of the United States.

As particular grounds showing said proceedings void, he alleges:

1. The county commissioners were not in regular meeting when the original proceeding was begun, and that *261 orders made on the petition filed were void.
2. (a) The original petition was not signed by five or more residents of the county who claimed to be affected by the proposed drainage improvement; (b) that said petition did not set forth the necessity for the improvement with a general description of the proposed drain, the starting point, route or terminus, and whether it was desired to issue bonds and other evidence of indebtedness to meet the expense thereof; (c) that the persons purporting to have signed the petition were not residents of the county; neither did they own land in the proposed drainage district; (d) that one signer, Roy Glaseo, is a lawyer acting for himself and the other petitioners and for the drainage district, and for that reason was not eligible to become one of the five signers, therefore, there were only four signers, and these were not bona fide residents and landowners; (e) that no sufficient bond was filed with said petition.
3. The viewers appointed were not resident freeholders of the county, not interested in the construction of said work, and did not take and subscribe the oath required by law; that the report of the first viewers gave the starting point of the proposed draw at a certain point on the south line of a certain section and the ending at a point where Walnut creek empties into the South Canadian river in a certain section, and that notice of such return was not given as required by law.
4. That numerous protests were filed, but were not heard by the commissioners; that after the approval of said proceedings, the commissioners made an order changing the east terminus, and vacated and set aside certain assessments against the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Company. That said change in terminus and cancellation of certain assessment rendered the entire proceedings void, and was done in order to induce certain protestants to withdraw their protests and to avoid threatened litigation by the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company; that if said proceedings were not void, then the statutes and laws under which the proceedings were had are unconstitutional.

That by reason of the commissioners omitting many properties included in the boundaries of the district, they thereby limited funds available for payment of cost of construction to a sum less than necessary to pay cost of construction; that at the beginning plaintiff protested and attempted to show that the construction of the ditch would not benefit his property, but would destroy it, and that now six years of its existence had proven his claims and his land had not been benefited, but a part thereof had been destroyed and rendered worthless, so that in addition to taking his land without just compensation the commissioners have laid an assessment against it, which amounts to a confiscation thereof; and finally plaintiff alleged:

“Plaintiff further shows to the court that in addition to the allegations heretofore made, he pleads that there was a substantial change in the plans for the said drainage district, for the construction of the ditch and laterals after assessments of benefits and damages according to the original plans had been made, and that such change would materially damage the plaintiff as above related and that therefore the said proceedings were unconstitutional as a taking of plaintiff’s property without due process of law as heretofore herein pleaded, and that all laws, rules and regulations permitting such a change to be made at such time are unconstitutional for the reason that such laws as section 13013, O. S. 1931, provides a procedure which used in the present proceedings did materially damage plaintiff, and the application of such a statute rendered the entire proceedings unconstitutional.”

Demurrer to the petition was filed and overruled.

Thereafter Briggs - Campbell Construction Company intervened. After it alleged it as contractor constructed the drainage ditch; that bonds in the total sum of $108,000 were issued by the dis *262 trict, of which intervener received, as part payment on its contract, bonds of the par value of $106,000, of which it still owned $74,000, it denied all the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, except it admitted that plaintiff’s lands were assessed for the total amount alleged in plaintiff’s petition. It then alleged:

“That all of the questions raised' by the plaintiff herein in his said petition have been previously adjudicated and determined in actions in the district court of McClain county, Oklahoma, wherein all of the parties to this action were parties and by final orders of the board of county commissioners of McClain county, Oklahoma, and by the Supreme Court of Oklahoma on appeal from the district court of McClain county, Oklahoma, as hereinafter plead in detail by this intervener by reason of which the plaintiff is forever barred and precluded from again asserting the invalidity of the assessments or the proceedings upon which the same were based affecting the lands of the plaintiff in Walnut creek drainage district No. 1, of McClain county, Oklahoma.”

It then alleged in detail all the proceedings had concerning the organization of said drainage district, and action thereon and an appeal to the district court, where, it alleged, a final judgment was entered wherein certain assessments were canceled and others reduced. That said judgment became final, and that:

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Bluebook (online)
1940 OK 350, 108 P.2d 112, 188 Okla. 260, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hine-v-board-of-comrs-of-mcclain-county-okla-1940.