In re Amundson

180 N.W. 537, 147 Minn. 422, 1920 Minn. LEXIS 765
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 24, 1920
DocketNo. 21,975
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 180 N.W. 537 (In re Amundson) 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.

Bluebook
In re Amundson, 180 N.W. 537, 147 Minn. 422, 1920 Minn. LEXIS 765 (Mich. 1920).

Opinion

Taylor, 0.

County Ditch No. 18 in the county of Clay was established in 1907. The upper part of the ditch passes through a number of sloughs and a shallow lake, but, as originally constructed, was not as deep as the sloughs or the lake, and did not extend through the lake 'bed. Some of the landowners seem to have cut trenches through the outer edge of the lake bed, for the purpose of permitting the water from the lake to enter the ditch, but, as the bottom of the ditch was above the bottom [424]*424of muck of the lake bed, tbe lake was drained only to a limited extent.

In July, 1913, fire landowners, whose lands had been assessed for the construction of the original ditch, filed a petition with .the county auditor, representing that the ditch had become obstructed by grass, weeds and sediment, .and that laterals had been constructed which increased the volume of water beyond the capacity of the ditch, and asking that the ditch 'be repaired and that an engineer be appointed to ascertain what repairs were necessary and the cost of mailing them. The county board appointed an engineer who made a survey, and, on August 27, 1913, filed his report. This report provided for clearing out and deepening the upper part of the ditch, and for laying tile along parts of it instead of widening it at the surface. After considering this report, the county board had the auditor advertise for bids, and on July 24, 1914, let the contract to do the work specified in the report of the engineer for the sum of $5,033. The contract required the contractors to deepen nearly four miles of the upper part of the ditch from seven-tenths of a foot to five feet below its original depth and to lay 5,200 feet of tile. It was completed in the fall of 1916.

On January 4, 1917, the county board appointed viewers who made and reported an assessment in which they spread the cost of the work over all lands assessed for the construction of the original ditch and in the same proportion in which the original assessment had been apportioned to such lands. Thereafter the county auditor gave notice that a special meeting of the county board would be held .on October 22, 1917, to consider the petition for the work and the reports of the engineer and the viewers, and that all landowners affected were invited to appear and be heard at that time. This was the first opportunity for a hearing that had been given. The objectors appeared at this hearing, and each objected to the assessment against his land, on the ground that his land was situated on the lower part of the ditch, and that none of the work had been done on that part of the ditch which drained his land. The fact that the work in no manner facilitated the drainage of these lands is undisputed. But the county board took the position that section 5552, G-. S. 1913, required them to spread the cost of the work over all lands originally assessed for the construction of the ditch and in the same proportion in which the original assessment had been spread [425]*425over such lands, and fot this reason confirmed the assessments as reported by the viewers. The objectors appealed to the district court. The appeals were tried as one case before the court without a jury. The court found, among other things, that about 600 acres of land had been drained and reclaimed by the deepening of the upper part of the ditch; that none of the reclaimed land was owned by the objectors, and that the lands owned by the objectors had not been benefited by the improvement, and directed that the assessments against these lands be canceled. The county appealed from an order denying a motion for amended findings or for a new trial.

The county contends that section 5552, G. S. 1913, authorized the work in question, and required the assessment for the cost to be spread over all lands assessed for the original construction of the ditch and in the same proportion in which the^ original 'assessment was spread over such lands. This section was the statute in force when the proceedings in controversy were brought. It is section 26 of chapter 230, p. 327, of the Laws of 1905, as changed and amplified by subsequent amendments, and contains several somewhat disconnected provisions.

The first paragraph provides that the county board of the county, in which any public drainage ditch or any part thereof is located, “shall keep the same, or such part thereof, in proper repair and free from obstruction * * * so as to answer its purpose,” and authorizes the board to pay the expense incurred therefor out of the revenue fund, and to reimburse that fund by an assessment upon all property originally assessed for the construction of the ditch. This provision contemplates neither notice nor hearing at any stage of the proceedings, and the authority conferred by it does not extend beyond the making of repairs and the removal of obstructions. Its scope was doubtless thus limited because this court had held, in State v. McGuire, 109 Minn. 88, 122 N. W. 1120, that a ditch could not be widened or deepened without giving those whose.property was taken or assessed for the improvement an opportunity to be heard before the proceedings were concluded. As the work in controversy was not confined to repairs and the removal of obstructions, but consisted in substantially deepening nearly four miles of the ditch — some of it as much as five feet — and in laying nearly one mile of tile, no authority for doing it can be found in this provision. [426]*426Another paragraph prescribes the manner of making assessments for the repair of state ditches.

Another paragraph provides:

“That if the repair of any county or judicial ditch is made necessary or if it shall be necessary to widen or deepen the same in consequence of the construction of lateral or private ditches or in consequence of the construction of other ditch or ditches which connect with or empty into said original ditch or into a lake or lakes which are drained by such original ditch, and which lateral, private or public ditch or ditches are constructed subsequent to and not included in the assessment for such original ditch, and which increases the volume of water to be taken care of by the original ditch or which deposit sediment in the original ditch and thereby contribute to the necessity of such repair, widening or deepening, then the county board shall appoint three viewers whose qualifications shall be as herein provided and whose duty shall 'be to first apportion the cost of such repair, widening or deepening, and of the expense in connection therewith equitably between the lands 'benefited respectively by such original ditch and those benefited by such private, lateral or other ditches constructed as aforesaid, in proportion to the benefits to such respective ditch systems resulting from the construction of such original ditch and of such lateral, private and subsequent ditch or ditches, the same as if such original ditch and such lateral, private and subsequent ditch or ditches were originally one ditch system, and such viewers shall then equitably apportion and assess the portion of the cost of such repairs and expenses so determined to be borne by such private, lateral or other ditches upon the lands benefited by the original construction of such lateral, private or subsequent ditch or ditches or by branches thereto, in proportion to the benefits to such lands resulting from such construction, and shall likewise apportion and assess the portion of such cost determined to be borne by such original ditch upon the lands benefited by the establishment and construction thereof in proportion to such benefits.

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Related

In Re Improvement of County Ditch No. 1, Yellow Medicine County
62 N.W.2d 80 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1954)
Township of Normania v. County of Yellow Medicine
286 N.W. 881 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1939)
County of Brown v. Martinsen
190 N.W. 255 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1922)
Lee v. County of Jackson
186 N.W. 713 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 N.W. 537, 147 Minn. 422, 1920 Minn. LEXIS 765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-amundson-minn-1920.