Jefferson & Plaquemines Drainage Dist. v. Whitney-Central Trust & Savings Bank

75 So. 743, 141 La. 843, 1917 La. LEXIS 1574
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 14, 1917
DocketNo. 22335
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 75 So. 743 (Jefferson & Plaquemines Drainage Dist. v. Whitney-Central Trust & Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jefferson & Plaquemines Drainage Dist. v. Whitney-Central Trust & Savings Bank, 75 So. 743, 141 La. 843, 1917 La. LEXIS 1574 (La. 1917).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

O’NIELL, J.

The Jefferson and Plaque-mines drainage district was organized in the early part of the year 1912, under the lirovisions of the Act No. 317 of 1910. The area of the district is approximately 26,000 acres.

At a meeting of the board of-commissioners, in May, 1912, a petition signed by the owners of more than two-thirds in area of all the land within the district was presented, alleging that the land comprising the district was of that character that it had to be levied and pumped to drain and reclaim it, and asking that the board of commissioners have the land surveyed and the cost of draining and reclaiming all of it ascertained, and that the board issue negotiable bonds for an amount sufficient to drain and reclaim all of the land within the district. Thereupon a [845]*845resolution was adopted by the board, requesting the board of state engineers to survey all the land within the district and make an estimate of the cost of draining it adequately and completely. The state engineers made the survey and estimate, and in October, 1912, submitted to the board of commissioners of the drainage district a complete and exhaustive report, advising that the drainage and reclamation of the district, by means of canals, levees, and pumps, was practicable and feasible, and estimating the cost of the work at about $14 an acre, a total of $358,500. In their report, the engineers recommended that, as a large area of the land within the disitrict was “wet land” that could not be immediately pub under cultivation, and as the run-off of rainfall within the district would increase when the low lands would be cleared and cultivated, the economic method of procedure would be to provide the pumping capacity and canal capacity then necessary to take away the run-off of rainfall, with a safe margin of capacity, and, when necessary, to increase the canal and pumping capacity to the maximum that would be required ultimately for the drainage of the entire district. The detailed statement of the engineers showed that the initial cost of installation would be $208,500, leaving a margin of $150,-000 to be expended for future installation to complete the drainage of the entire district. At -the meeting of the board of commissioners at which the report of the engineers was submitted and considered, another petition, signed by the owners of more than two-thirds in area of the land within the drainage district, was presented, requesting the board of commissioners to undertake the drainage and reclamation of all the land in the district, in the manner advised by the board of state engineers, and to provide the necessary funds for that purpose, to incur a debt, and issue bonds bearing interest at 5 per cent, per annum, payable semi-annually, to run for a period not longer than 40 years, to the amount of $14 per acre on each and every acre of land within the district, and requesting that, in pursuance of the provisions of the Constitution and laws of this state, an acreage tax or forced contribution be levied, from year to year, against each and every acre of land in the district, sufficient to pay the debt and interest on it and to maintain the drainage of the district. In accordance with the recommendations of the state board of engineers and the petition of the landowners in the district, the board of commissioners thereupon adopted a resolution, resolving to proceed at once to drain and reclaim all of the land in the district. The debt was thereby incurred to the amount of $358,500 — that is, to the extent of $14 an acre — against all of the land composing the district. As evidence of the debt, the resolution provided for the issuance by the drainage district, through the board of commissioners as its governing authority, of 717 negotiable bonds for $500 each, bearing interest at 5 per cent, per annum, payable semiannually. Accordingly, bonds to the amount of $358,500 were issued and sold by the board of commissioners, and the proceeds were expended for the cutting of canals, building levees, and purchasing and installing the pumping plant for draining and reclaiming all of the land within the district.

When the work was completed and the pumping plant put into operation, it was found that, although some of the land within the district was adequately drained, an area of 2,496 acres lying between the forks of Bayou Barataria and Harvey Canal was not, and could not be, drained or reclaimed by the system installed as recommended by the board of engineers. That area, being low, wet land, unfit for cultivation without complete drainage, and incapable of being drained except by pumping the water from it, was therefore not improved by the partial drainage furnished by the system provided for the whole district, unless something more was to be done. Therefore in January, 1916, the [847]*847three owners of the 2,496 acres, belonging to two corporations and one individual, requested the commissioners of the drainage district to create a subdistrict, to be known as sub-drainage district No. 1, defining the limits of the subdistrict so as to embrace only the area of 2,496 acres belonging to the three petitioners, who were not benefited by the drainage system already provided. The petitioners requested the drainage commissioners to have the state board of engineers prepare plans and specifications and furnish estimates of the cost of completely draining the area within the subdistrict. In accordance with the provisions of section 1 of Act No. 227 of 1914, the drainage commissioners, by a resolution of the board, created the sub-drainage district No. 1, defining the limits of the sub-district so as to 'embrace only the 2,496 acres of land of the three petitioners that was not drained by the general system then in operation. And, by a resolution of the board, the commissioners called upon the state board of engineers to make an investigation of the practicability of completely draining the sub-district No. 1, and to furnish an estimate of the cost of the work.

The engineers ran the levels, made the surveys and estimates, and reported to the board of commissioners of the drainage district that the proposed drainage and reclamation of the subdistrict No. 1, by means of canals, levees, and pumps, was practicable and feasible; that the cost of the works required, taking into consideration the drainage system already in operation throughout the district, would be $23,675, that is, approximately $9.48 an acre for the 2,496 acres in the subdistrict; and that the additional cost of maintaining the drainage of the subdistrict would be about $1.25 per acre. When that report was submitted, the three owners of all the land in the subdistrict presented another petition to the board of commissioners of the drainage district, requesting the board to incur an additional debt of about $9.48- per acre upon or against each and every acre of land within the subdistrict No. l,.that is, a total additional debt of $23,675 against the 2,496 acres of land in the subdistrict, and requesting that, to represent that indebtedness, the board issue negotiable bonds for $23,675, bearing interest at 5 per cent, per annum, payable semiannually, to run not longer than 40 years, and to levy, from year to year, an acreage tax or forced contribution upon or against the lands in the subdistrict for an amount sufficient to pay the bonds and the interest thereon and the cost of maintenance of the drainage of the subdistrict.

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Related

Rawle v. Jefferson & Plaquemines Drainage Dist.
175 So. 610 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 So. 743, 141 La. 843, 1917 La. LEXIS 1574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-plaquemines-drainage-dist-v-whitney-central-trust-savings-la-1917.