Jacoby v. Missouri Valley Drainage District

163 S.W.2d 930, 349 Mo. 818, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 430
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 10, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 163 S.W.2d 930 (Jacoby v. Missouri Valley Drainage District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacoby v. Missouri Valley Drainage District, 163 S.W.2d 930, 349 Mo. 818, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 430 (Mo. 1942).

Opinions

This is an action in twenty-eight counts, on as many warrants issued to plaintiff by defendant Missouri Valley Drainage District of Holt County (hereinafter referred to as the district) in sums ranging from $14.92 to $1132.58 and aggregating $11,405.92, for services rendered by plaintiff as chief engineer of said district. The *Page 821 amended petition sought also the levy of an assessment to pay the indebtedness in question, and other relief. By further amendment, however, all such features were stricken, and so dropped out of the case, leaving the petition as praying merely for the judgment for the sums asked in the several counts thereof with interest. Judgment went for defendants below, and plaintiff appeals.

The cause was tried on an agreed statement of facts supplemented, on behalf of defendants, by the testimony of a single witness, the President of the Board of Supervisors of defendant district. The agreed facts, insofar as pertinent, are:

(1) That the district, containing 25,511.86 acres, was duly incorporated in the Holt Circuit Court, March 10, 1927, under the provisions of Article I, Chapter 64, R.S. '29 [Now Article I, Chapter 79, R.S. '39], and at the time of the institution of this suit, its Board of Supervisors consisted of the persons sued as such;

(2) That on May 28, 1927, the district, by written contract, employed plaintiff as its Chief Engineer;

(3) That shortly after the incorporation of the district there was duly and regularly levied a uniform tax of 50 cents per acre upon each acre of land within the district for the purposes mentioned in Section 10752, R.S. '29; that before the beginning of this suit, all of said tax (with all interest and penalties thereon) was collected and paid to the district, and all of the monies so collected were expended and paid for the purposes for which said tax was levied; and at the time each of the warrants in suit was issued, and when the same were severally presented for payment there was not sufficient money to pay any of said warrants, nor since said time has there been any money set aside for the payment thereof, nor is there now any money to pay the same;

(4) That pursuant to contract, plaintiff prepared plans and specifications and a plan for reclamation, and made the necessary surveys for the works, ditches, and embankments intended to drain and reclaim [932] the wet and overflowed lands in said district, which were approved by the Board of Supervisors, and that plaintiff performed all of the services which were required to be performed by his contract prior to the beginning of the construction and work of reclamation, and that the warrants sued on were issued to him for his said services; that in addition to the warrants sued on, plaintiff was paid for his said services by three warrants, two for $2,000.00 each, and one for $1,000.00; one of said $2,000.00 warrants has been paid by the district and the other two have not been paid;

(5) That the Circuit Court of Holt County, from the report of the commissioners appointed to assess benefits and damages, found the estimated cost of the proposed work and improvements to be less than the benefits assessed, and accordingly, on November 19, 1928, approved and confirmed said report. *Page 822

(6) That the United States of America by purchase and condemnation proceedings subsequent to the confirmation and approval of said report of said commissioners acquired title to approximately 7,675.247 acres of land lying in a body in said district for the purpose of establishing and has established a Government Game Refuge, and built permanent dams, dikes, ditches and spillways and other works on said land and collecting the water on and flowing on to said land so that practically all of said lands so acquired by it are covered with water and are unfit for cultivation or for any other purpose other than a game refuge, by reason whereof, the plan of reclamation as adopted and approved by the court was destroyed and made impossible of construction and operation; that after deducting the benefits assessed against the lands so acquired by the Government of the United States from the total benefits assessed, the costs of construction of works and improvement as set forth in the plans for reclamation materially exceed the benefits.

(7) That no contract for construction of said works of reclamation pursuant to said plans and specifications nor any other plans or specifications was ever let or was any work of any reclamation ever begun nor were any bonds ever issued to pay the costs thereof; that said district has not been dissolved, nor has its Board of Supervisors nor any of the landowners taken any action to dissolve the same.

(8) That plaintiff is the owner and holder of all of the warrants in suit, and that the same are wholly unpaid; that they were severally presented for payment, and payment refused for lack of sufficient funds, which fact was duly endorsed upon the back of each of said warrants, as alleged.

The testimony of the President of the Board of Supervisors was to the effect that he was familiar with the financial condition of the district and that as far as he could determine "the district has no money or property; when the records of the former Secretary-Treasurer were turned over to the Board it showed no property or money in the bank belonging to the Board;" that it has no money in the bank or on hand, or machinery or property of any kind; that a considerable portion of the proposed ditches and drains were located in the area acquired by the Government for a Game Refuge, so that the district's plan for reclamation was destroyed and made impossible of being carried out.

Respondents seek to sustain the judgment on the sole ground that the warrants were unauthorized and void because issued in payment of debts which, by law, were payable out of a particular fund that had been previously exhausted, and which the district had no power to replenish; that is, it is contended that the district having levied the maximum uniform tax of fifty cents per acre upon all lands within the district, as specified in Section 10752, R.S. '29 (Section 12333, R.S. '39), Sec. 10752, Mo. St. Ann., p. 3478, and the fund created *Page 823 thereby having been expended for purposes authorized by said section, other than those for which the warrants in suit were issued, the power of the district to levy a tax for the services in question was exhausted, and it is without power to levy any additional tax to pay for said services.

The relevant portions of the statute, supra, together with like portions of Section 10781, R.S. '29, Sec. 10781, Mo. St. Ann., p. 3506 [Now Section 12362, R.S. '39], which has a bearing on the case, are set out on the left side of parallel columns below. On the right side will be found counterparts of these sections which appeared in what was popularly known as the Ralph Sewer Law [Chapter 65, R.S. '29, Laws 1927, pp. 439-465; Repealed, with saving clause, Laws 1931, p. 355, as amended, Laws 1933-34, Ex. Sess., p. 117.]

  [933] Sec. 10752, R.S. '29               Sec. 11037, R.S. '29 [Sec.
  [Sec. 12333, R.S. '39, Sec.              11037, Mo. St. Ann., p. 7405]:
  10752, Mo. St. Ann., p. 

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Harris
Supreme Court of Missouri, 2023
State of Missouri v. Thomas J. Savage
Missouri Court of Appeals, 2019
Medicine Shoppe International, Inc. v. Director of Revenue
156 S.W.3d 333 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2005)
State v. Grubb
120 S.W.3d 737 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2003)
King v. Laclede Gas Co.
648 S.W.2d 113 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1983)
Sumpter v. City of Moberly
645 S.W.2d 359 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1983)
In re the Little Chariton Drainage District
602 S.W.2d 916 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1980)
McRoberts v. McRoberts
555 S.W.2d 682 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1977)
Small v. Gartley
363 A.2d 724 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1976)
State Ex Rel. O'Leary v. Missouri State Board of Mediation
509 S.W.2d 84 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1974)
State Ex Rel. Missey v. City of Cabool
441 S.W.2d 35 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1969)
State Ex Rel. R-1 School District of Putnam County v. Ewing
404 S.W.2d 433 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1966)
Gale and Company v. Hooper
323 S.W.2d 824 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1959)
MacK Motor Truck Corporation v. Wolfe
303 S.W.2d 697 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1957)
TERMINAL RR ASS'N v. City of Brentwood
230 S.W.2d 768 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1950)
Smithson v. State
39 So. 2d 678 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1949)
State Ex Rel. Jacoby v. Missouri Valley Drainage District
185 S.W.2d 800 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 S.W.2d 930, 349 Mo. 818, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacoby-v-missouri-valley-drainage-district-mo-1942.