Kelley v. Drainage District No. 60

158 Iowa 735
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 12, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 158 Iowa 735 (Kelley v. Drainage District No. 60) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelley v. Drainage District No. 60, 158 Iowa 735 (iowa 1912).

Opinion

Ladd, J.

Drainage district No. 3, containing twenty-four forty-acre tracts situated in sections 3, 4, 9 and 10, in township 83 north, of range 29 west, of the 5th P. M., in Greene [737]*737county, Iowa, was established, and the improvement contemplated was completed in 1906. On May 26, 1909, the members of the town council of Grand Junction and many others, after calling attention to the insufficiency of the improvement, and declaring that it did not carry off the water or adequately drain a part of Grand Junction, prayed the board of supervisors of Greene county to give the matter consideration. Thereupon the board directed the engineer who had planned said improvements to investigate, which he did, and in his report recommended that additional tile be laid to carry off the surplus water. Later Geo. Rice and others filed a petition reciting that the improvement in district No. 3 had proved insufficient to drain the lands necessarily tributary, and requested the board for the establishment of a new drainage district;

Covering and including the said district No. three (3) and for the purpose of giving a description of the land in said district, and the character thereof, these petitioners make all the allegations in the original petition filed for the establishment of said district No. three (3) a part of this petition by reference, with the same effect as if copied and set out herein, and these petitioners ask that a new tile ditch or drain be laid or constructed in said district, commencing at the line of the present tile drain therein, and connecting with the same at a point at or about twenty-five rods south of the center of section four (4), township eighty-three (83) north, of range twenty-nine (29) west of the 5th P. M., and extending thence in a general northeasterly direction, and following approximately the course of the tile drain now in and constructed under the proceedings in said district number three (3), at an average distance of about one hundred (100) feet north and west of the same across the east half of said section, and also across the northwest forty (40) acres of section three (3) in said township and range, and crossing the right of way of the Chicago & Northwestern Railway Company’s right of way at a point about thirty-five rods east of the west line of said section three, and terminating and outletting in an open drain on the public highway immediately north of the point where the same is asked’to cross said railway [738]*738right of way, the same to follow in general and approximately the course of the natural drainage over the land to be crossed thereby, as may be found most practicable by the engineer in charge, also to connect at the upper end thereof with such branch or branches of the said improvement now in and forming a part of said district number three as may by such engineer be found most practicable for the bettering of the outlet of said drainage district number three and rendering the same sufficient to protect and drain in lands therein and tributary to said improvement.

This petition was accompanied by bond in proper form and duly approved, and Geo. M. Thompson was appointed engineer to act on the same. On October 22, 1909, the engineer filed his report, reciting therein that he had inspected the land to be affected by the proposed improvement, <and that, as he had made the survey and superintended the construction of the improvements in drainage district No. 3, was in possession of the field book and plat of said district, and other matters not necessary to be repeated, recommended that a drain be constructed substantially as described in the petition. A plat of drainage district No. 3 was made a part of the report, and “the line of the new drains that I recommended to be constructed is shown by a line of red dots, and run parallel to sections 10, 4, and 5A of drainage District No. three (3) as will be seen from an examination of the plat.”

Then follows a specific description of four sections of the improvement, one being an open ditch and the others of 14, 18, and 20 inch tile, all at the estimated expense of $2,515.44. Were a plat before us, we might be able to understand the location of the tile drain and ditch as recommended, but we have nothing but a photograph of the plat, so dim as to be of no service whatever, save as indicating that much of the land has been platted into town lots, as disclosed by the report of the commissioners who assessed the expenses, including all costs against the several parcels of land. We [739]*739infer from the statements of counsel that the drainage district is bounded on the north approximately by the Chicago & Northwestern Railroad and on the west by the Minneapolis & St. Louis Railroad, these crossing at right angles in the town of Grand Junction. “The east boundary of the district is approximately the east line of section 4 and 9, except near the outlet two forties of section ‘3’ are included. The south boundary of the east part of the district is approximately the center line of section 9, and the south boundary of the west part of the district is approximately Elizabeth street in South Grand Junction. The main line of district No. 3 started at the northeast corner of the district at about the Chicago & Northwestern right of way, and deflected to the west, and then approximately straight south past the center line of section 9 across the lands of Kelley and Scott, and to the land of Rebecca K. Herron. The appellant herein owns certain town lots in South Grand Junction and certain lots in the south of the district. Commencing at the aforesaid main line of the ditch on the N. E. % of the S. E. % of. section 4,” the drain “ran- to the west and southwest and ended at the corporation . ; . line which is the center line of said section.” This last drain “was connected with an old tile drain in South Grand Junction. ’ ’ The engineer reported that this drain was insufficient to carry off the water from “where the town branch connected into the.main,” and he recommended that a tile drain entirely independent of drain No. 3 be constructed from the same outlet and parallel therewith to the junction “where the town branch, came in and thence past the town branch and to the end at the east line of the corporation of the town approximately to where No. three (3) ends.” No description of the several tracts of land contained in the district nor the names of the owners thereof as shown by the transfer books accompanied this report. On the same day the recommendation of the engineer was approved, and the county auditor directed to serve the necessary notice, and it was resolved “that said new drainage dis[740]*740trict and enlargement of outlet of drainage district No. three (3) for the purpose of convenience and description be known and named as drainage district No. (60) sixty.” Subsequently on January 3, 1910, the board of supervisors adopted a resolution covering all requirements, including those of section 1989-al of the Code Supplement, and thereafter commissioners were appointed to equitably apportion the costs and expenses, including the cost of construction, fees, and damages among the several tracts of land, and make report, which they did, and the improvement was constructed in pursuance of proceedings of which there is no complaint.

Appellants and others interposed objections to the establishment of drainage district No. 60, but, as no appeal was taken from the findings of the board of supervisors overruling these, only questions affecting the authority of the board to act and bearing on the assessments as made from which appeal was taken can be considered.

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Bluebook (online)
158 Iowa 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelley-v-drainage-district-no-60-iowa-1912.