Little River Drainage District v. Friedlein

165 S.W.2d 396, 350 Mo. 218, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 560
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 8, 1942
DocketNos. 37847, 37848.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 165 S.W.2d 396 (Little River Drainage District v. Friedlein) 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
Little River Drainage District v. Friedlein, 165 S.W.2d 396, 350 Mo. 218, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 560 (Mo. 1942).

Opinions

Actions by the Little River Drainage District, a public corporation, (hereinafter designated District) for the *Page 224 collection of delinquent drainage taxes for the year 1938.* The cases were tried to the court, a jury having been waived. They involve like legal issues, except that the answer of Dale B. Perkins and Birdie Perkins presented an additional issue, viz., that they [398] had offered to pay that portion of the bonded indebtedness of the District chargeable against their lands at the time the refunding bonds, hereinafter mentioned, were issued. There was a stipulation for like judgments, unless, of course, the Perkins' case went off on the additional issue presented. The court entered judgment for the District in each case: for $921.11 and costs in the Perkins' case; for $486.40 and costs in the case against A.O. Friedlein and Martha A. Friedlein. The defendants perfected their respective appeals. They contend, among other things, the taxes may not be collected because the acts of the District contravened Federal and State constitutional provisions: the due process clause and the prohibition against taking private property for public use without just compensation. Defendants admitted they had not paid the District's taxes for the year 1938.

The Little River Drainage District was decreed a public corporation November 30, 1907 (Laws 1905, p. 190, consult, Chap. 79, Art. 1, R.S. 1939) for the reclamation of about 500,000 acres of land situate in Bollinger, Cape Girardeau, Scott, Stoddard, New Madrid, Dunklin, and Pemiscot counties. Little River Drainage Dist. v. St. Louis. M. S.E. Rd. Co. (Banc), 236 Mo. 94, 103, 139 S.W. 330, 331.** On October 21, 1912, the court approved and confirmed the report of the Commissioners appointed to view the lands and assess the benefits and damages. This decree recited, among other things:

"(a) . . . it appears that the estimated cost of said improvements is the sum of $4,054,445.00, and the estimated damages are the sum of $162,886.00, and the estimated benefits are the sum of $14,148,634.00."

We tabulate, for convenience, the material features here involved *Page 225 connected with the 1st, 2d 3rd, and 5th bond issues of the District:

         Total                              Levy on Assessed Benefits    
  Year    Benefit                  Int.         For                    For
   of     Assessments  Bonds       Rate       Principal              Interest
  Issue                Issued       %          Amount         %        Amount        %

1913 $13,196,463 $4,750,000 5½ $5,584,753.96 42.32 $3,652,770.00 27.68 1918 13,158,635 1,000,000 5½ 1,100,061.88 8.36 939,526.54 7.14 1920 13,158,635 600,000 6 667,142.79 5.07 622,403.44 4.73 1921 (This issue, insofar as shown of record, is explained hereinafter.) 1924 13,099,413 4,000,000 6 5,763,741.72 44 5,239,765.20 40

The following statements are made in explanation. World War I was in progress prior to the 1918 issue. Construction costs increased, the proceeds of the first bond issue were found insufficient to complete the original plan for reclamation, and the 1918 and 1920 bond issues resulted. We quote the several statutory provisions infra under which bonds were issued. The total benefit assessments (estimated in the decree of October 21, 1912) is stated in different amounts in the resolutions adopted at different times authorizing the issuance of bonds. This resulted from proper causes; for instance, litigation, the taking over by the District of productive lands for improvements, retention basins, et cetera. The resolution adopted in 1924 authorized the issuance of $5,000,000 in bonds but only $4,000,000, principal amount, were actually executed, issued and negotiated. The total levies for principal and interest were made under Sec. 12340, R.S. 1939, hereinafter quoted.

Under proceedings instituted in 1917 and subsequently consummated additional lands in Stoddard and Bollinger counties were taken into the District. The court, in 1920, confirmed benefits assessed against said lands in the aggregate sum of $961,775. The supervisors authorized the issuance of $750,000, 6% bonds therefor in 1921, and levied against said assessed benefits a principal tax of $836,744.25 and an interest tax of $645,007. Defendants' lands are within the original boundaries of the District and the aforesaid levies for taxes incurred in connection with the extension of the boundaries constituted no part of the tax levies of 1913, 1918, 1920, or 1924 against defendants' lands.

The District defaulted in the payment of its bonds in 1929. Drainage and levee districts were authorized to refund outstanding bond issues and to avail themselves of [399] Federal laws in respect thereto by Laws 1929, p. 180, Secs. 3 and 4; now R.S. 1939, Secs. 12611 and 12612, discussed hereinafter. Negotiations with the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, extending over some time, finally consummated in 1938 in the refunding of $8,018,000 outstanding bonds of the District, with the exception of about $50,000, principal amount, of bonds which could not be located. As of that time the assessed benefits of the original District stood at $12,931,584 and of the additional *Page 226 lands subsequently taken into the District at $954,255; and the bonds issued and outstanding were:

Year of Bonds Bonds Issue Issued Outstanding ------- ---------- ------------ 1913 $4,750,000 $1,918,500 1918 1,000,000 994,000 1920 600,000 597,500 1921 750,000 516,000 1924 4,000,000 3,992,000 __________ ____________ $11,100,000 $8,018,000

The District authorized the issuance of $7,216,500 in refunding bonds, said bonds to be in two separate series designated Series "A" and Series "B" and carrying corresponding numbers, bearing date of October 1, 1937, with interest coupons at the rate of 4%. The Series A bonds were to be in the aggregate amount of $2,405,500 and the Series B bonds in the aggregate amount of $4,811,000. The Series A bonds represented the amount of money made available for the acquisition of the $8,018,000 outstanding bonds, the bondholders receiving approximately thirty cents on the dollar. The Series B bonds were required by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation as additional security to become, we understand, obligations of the District upon and so long as default might exist in the payment of Series A bonds. Upon payment of the interest coupons and bonds of Series A at maturity, said Series A coupons and bonds and correspondingly numbered coupons and bonds of Series B are to be cancelled and delivered to the District.

Defendants' asserted constitutional issues, briefly stated, are:

1st. The action of the District in levying taxes (and issuing bonds, principal amount) insofar as they exceed the original estimated costs ($4,054,445) in the original decree of October 21, 1912, being had without notice to and opportunity for a hearing afforded defendants, constitutes a taking of property without due process of law.

2nd.

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Dalton v. Fabius River Drainage District
184 S.W.2d 776 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1945)

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Bluebook (online)
165 S.W.2d 396, 350 Mo. 218, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/little-river-drainage-district-v-friedlein-mo-1942.