Johnson v. Kersh Lake Drainage District

131 S.W.2d 620, 198 Ark. 743, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 125
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 29, 1939
Docket4-5501
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 131 S.W.2d 620 (Johnson v. Kersh Lake Drainage District) 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
Johnson v. Kersh Lake Drainage District, 131 S.W.2d 620, 198 Ark. 743, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 125 (Ark. 1939).

Opinions

Holt, J.

Appellants bring this appeal from the Lincoln chancery court.

The Kersh Lake Drainage District, embracing lands in Jefferson, Lincoln and Desha counties, was created by an order of the Circuit Court of Jefferson county on August 24, 1912, under Act 279 of 1909. Benefits were assessed against each tract of land in the district in the total sum of $272,782.12, payable in annual installments. A contract for the improvement was let, the work completed and certificates of indebtedness issued to the contractor in payment.

A. J. Johnson, one of the appellants, owned and still owns 160 acres of land in this district the benefits to which, were originally assessed at $1,600. Prior to 1931, he had paid installments of these tax benefits in the total sum of $1,628. • The other appellant landowners to this litigation paid the full amount of benefits originally assessed against their lands, but counsel have agreed that such appellants will abide the decision of this court with reference to the Johnson land as controlling as to these other appellants.

In 1931, the commissioners of this district, acting upon the authority of Act 467 of 1919, made an additional assessment against the lands in question, such assessment being the interest on the original assessment as contemplated in the act. This tax levied as additional assessment on the Johnson land amounted to $.104.

A suit was then filed by Johnson in the Lincoln chancery court against the district in which he alleged that the limits of the benefits accruing to his 160 acres of land in the district, amounted to $1,600, and prayed that the additional assessment of benefits made under Act 467, supra, be annulled. On October 19, 1931, the court found the issues in favor of J ohnson and held that all legally assessed benefits had been paid, annulled the additional assessment, and permanently enjoined the district from collecting any additional taxes on Johnson’s land. Prom this judgment of the court no appeal was taken.

The other appellants here brought a similar suit against the district, praying for similar relief to that granted Johnson, which prayer the court granted on June 15, 1932, and from this judgment of the court no appeal was taken.

The State Bank & Trust Company of Wellston, Missouri, in 1935 filed a suit at law against tbe Kersh Lake Drainage District in the federal court for the eastern district of Arkansas, in Little Rock, in which it sought to recover a judgment against the district on certain of its certificates of indebtedness which had been assigned to it by the contractor. In this cause, the Federal District Court entered a judgment in favor of the trust company against ihe district for $54,655, and this judgment was subsequently affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals. Kersh Lake Drainage District v. State Bank & Trust Company, 85 Fed. 2d 643.

Thereafter the State Bank & Trust Company instituted suit in the federal court in Little Rock against the same commissioners of this same district, joining the county clerks and sheriffs of Jefferson, Lincoln and Desha counties-, asking for a mandatory injunction to compel the collection of a tax of 6% per cent, a year on the assessed benefits in the district to pay this judgment. The court issued the mandatory injunction as prayed for as follows: “It is, therefore, considered, ordered and decreed that a mandatory injunction issue requiring the defendant county clerks, N. M. Ryall and M. D. Newton, to extend upon the tax books of their respective counties a tax of 6% per cent, of benefits assessed against each tract of land, railroad, and tramroad in the district for each of the years 1936 and following years until the whole of this decree has been satisfied. . . . It is further considered, ordered and decreed that the defendants, T. H. Free, Claude H. Holthoff and Emmett Warren, as commissioners of said district, be required to institute suits for the collection of all delinquent taxes of said district, and to prosecute the same with .due diligence to a conclusion, and'to see that the delinquent lands are sold promptly under the decree of foreclosure, and that they be required to do all things necessary, as commissioners of said district, to insure the prompt collection of the drainage taxes.” This judgment of the court was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals. Kersh Lake Drainage District v. State Bank & Trust Company, 92 Fed. 2d 783.

In accordance with the provisions of this mandatory injunction the county clerk of Lincoln county extended a tax of 6% per cent, on the original-assessment of benefits of $1,600 against Johnson’s 160-acre tract in this county. Johnson refused to pay this tax and the assessment against his land was returned delinquent.

The Kersh Lake Drainage District filed the present suit in the Lincoln chancery court pursuant to the order of the federal court to collect the delinquent tax against Johnson’s land and the delinquent assessments against the other appellants to this litigation. In his answer, John'son alleged that the tax sought to be collected was void and set up as a complete bar the decree of the Lincoln chancery court rendered on October 19, 1931, supra, in the former suit brought by him against the district, pleading res judicata. He also alleged that his lands were not embraced within the terms of the mandatory injunction for the reason that the injunction directed the county clerk to extend a tax on the assessed benefits in the district, and that there were no unpaid “assessed benefits” against his land. The other appellants here made similar allegations in their answer with respect to their lands and also pleaded the decree rendered by the Lincoln chancery court on June 15, 1932, in their favor as res judicata. The chancery court overruled the defenses set up by these appellants, entered a decree for the taxes and ordered the lands sold to satisfy them. ' The trial court Avas of the opinion that it was precluded by the federal court’s order from considering any of the defenses interposed by Johnson or the other appellants.

The decree of the Lincoln chancery court, heretofore referred to, in the cause in which appellant, A. J. Johnson, was plaintiff and Kersh Lake Drainage District Avas defendant, and rendered on October 19,1931, recites, among other things, the folloAving: “The court being advised as to the laAV and facts in the premises, finds that' (he plaintiff is the OAvner in fee of the SW% of section 8, toAvnship 9 south, range 5 west; that said lands constitute a part of the Kersh Lake Drainage District of Jefferson, Lincoln and Desha counties, that said drainage district was organized by the judgment of the Jefferson circuit court on August 24, 191.2, under act No.

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Related

Holthoff v. State Bank & Trust Co.
186 S.W.2d 162 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1945)
Real Estate Exchange Corp. v. Muskegon County Drain Commissioner
8 N.W.2d 652 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1943)
Kersh Lake Drainage District v. Johnson
157 S.W.2d 39 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1941)
Burton v. Harris
152 S.W.2d 529 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1941)
Kersh Lake Drainage District v. Johnson
309 U.S. 485 (Supreme Court, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 S.W.2d 620, 198 Ark. 743, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-kersh-lake-drainage-district-ark-1939.