Kilpatrick v. Mills County

288 N.W. 871, 227 Iowa 721
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 12, 1939
DocketNo. 44944.
StatusPublished

This text of 288 N.W. 871 (Kilpatrick v. Mills County) 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
Kilpatrick v. Mills County, 288 N.W. 871, 227 Iowa 721 (iowa 1939).

Opinion

Hamilton, J.

Two warrants are involved in this appeal. One for $450 issued to Genung & Genung and W. H. T. Wellons and one for $450 issued to Genung & Genung. These warrants were issued for professional services rendered in the case entitled *722 Baldozier et al. v. Mayberry et al., reported in 226 Iowa 693, 285 N. W. 140; the first mentioned warrant was for services in the district court, and the second for services in this court. The attorneys were employed by the members of the board of supervisors of Mills county, acting in their representative capacity as trustees for Nishna Botna Drainage District Number Five, Mills county, Iowa. The warrants were presented for payment, duly registered by the county treasurer and endorsed not paid for want of funds and are still outstanding. Nishna Botna Drainage District Number Five is a regularly established drainage district in Mills county, Iowa, and, at the time said claims were allowed and warrants issued in payment thereof, was, by virtue of the statutory provisions contained in chapter 353, Code of 1935, under the management and supervision of the board of supervisors of Mills county. At the time the instant suit was instituted, the district was under the supervision of trustees duly elected, under the provisions of chapter 358 of the said Code, and this action was brought by such trustees against Mills county, Iowa, and Maurice Mayberry, treasurer of Mills county, in which said trustees, plaintiffs and appellees herein, allege that the issuance of said warrants against the drainage fund of said district was illegal and ultra vires and they pray that the county treasurer be enjoined from payment of said warrants and for general equitable relief.

From a perusal of the opinion in the Baldozier case, it will be observed that the contention was made that the work performed by the contractor, at the instance of the board and for which claims were filed and allowed and warrants issued in payment thereof and special assessments levied against the land in said district to cover the cost of said improvements in an amount of approximately $5,000, was performed solely for the purpose of protecting two bridges and a township road and was not for the purpose of better service in the drainage ditch or in the interest of drainage and that the lands within the district received no benefit from said work and that the expense of such work should be paid from the road fund of the county rather than from assessments against the drainage district. The plaintiffs, in said ease, further alleged that no proper determination was made by the board to give it jurisdiction to incur the expense of same; that the assessments made, as *723 aforesaid, were illegal and void, and tlie plaintiffs prayed for an injunction restraining the county board of supervisors and tbe county treasurer from collecting sucb assessments. The trial court, in that case, held against the plaintiffs and an appeal was taken to this court which affirmed the lower court. The attorneys, whose claims are involved in the instant case, were employed and rendered service in defending the action of the board of supervisors, acting in their representative capacity as managers of said drainage district in making the repairs which the trial court held and which this court affirmed were for the interest and benefit of the drainage district. Mills county, in its corporate capacity, and the board of supervisors and the county treasurer, as representatives of said county in its corporate capacity, were not made parties and were in no way involved in the Baldozier case. In the instant case, Mills county, in its corporate capacity, is named one of the defendants and the county treasurer is also made a defendant; and the contention now is that, in the former case, the attorneys were employed to defend the county and not the drainage district and, hence, the county should pay the attorney fees. The additional ground is asserted, against the claim for services rendered in the supreme court in the former case, that it was allowed and paid by the board of supervisors before the services were fully performed and, hence, the employment extended beyond the time that the district was under the control of the board and, for this reason, the allowance and payment of said claim was against public policy and it is also urged that neither of said claims was properly itemized.

As a basis for his holding in the instant case, the trial court stated in the decree that:

“Said Baldozier case was one brought by land owners in said drainage district to relieve the land therein from an assessment for the repairing of the drainage ditch in said district, and was for the benefit of the land owners therein and of said drainage district. It was to the best interest of said drainage district that said action be not defended, and that a decree be entered therein ordering the cost of said repairs to be paid from the road fund of Mills County. The trial was a contest between said county and said drainage district as to which should pay for said repairs. If the board had acted for the *724 interests of tbe drainage district it would not have employed counsel, nor defended this action. The board was defending the action to prevent the costs of these repairs from being paid from the road fund of the county. No one else was adversely interested in the result of said action. The action of the board of supervisors in employing counsel and defending this action was against the interests of the drainage district and the land owners therein. Its action in so doing was solely for the benefit of Mills County in trying to protect the county road fund from the payment for said repairs. It is not equitable to permit the board to employ counsel and pay them out of the funds of the drainage district when the purpose of their employment is directly opposed to the interests of the district. The action of the board in ordering counsel to be paid from the drainage district for defending said action, and levying a tax against the land in the district to pay said warrants for such services is illegal and against public policy, and cannot be enforced against said drainage district, and the defendants should be enjoined from paying either of said last two described warrants from any funds belonging to said drainage district.”

Decree was entered accordingly. Mills county and May-berry, county treasurer, defendants, have appealed from this decree.

We are unable to agree with the able trial court. Code, section 7519, provides:

“In all actions or appeals affecting the district, the board of supervisors shall be a proper party for the purpose of representing the district and all interested parties therein, other than the adversary parties, and the employment of counsel by the board shall be for the purpose of protecting the rights of the district and interested parties therein other than the adversary parties. ’ ’

In the case of Mitchell County v. Odden, 219 Iowa 793, 804, 259 N. W. 774, 781, we said:

“Under the drainage act, as we have heretofore shown, the board of supervisors acts as a special tribunal in an official or governmental capacity, and, while so acting, does not in any way represent the county as a whole in its corporate capacity. * * * and the act of issuing the bonds is not the act *725

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Related

Baldozier v. Mayberry
285 N.W. 140 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1939)
Mitchell County v. Odden
259 N.W. 774 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
288 N.W. 871, 227 Iowa 721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kilpatrick-v-mills-county-iowa-1939.