Miller County Highway & Bridge Dist. v. Standard Pipe Line Co.

19 F.2d 3, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2162
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 18, 1927
DocketNo. 7338
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 F.2d 3 (Miller County Highway & Bridge Dist. v. Standard Pipe Line Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller County Highway & Bridge Dist. v. Standard Pipe Line Co., 19 F.2d 3, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2162 (8th Cir. 1927).

Opinion

SYMES, District Judge.

The Miller county highway district was created by a special act of the Legislature of Arkansas in 1915 (Laws 1915, p. 617), and empowered to construct 60 miles of highway and a bridge over the Red river. The usual district organization, consisting of a commission of three resident landowners, was provided for, with the power and duty to appoint three assessors to assess all benefits accruing as a result of the improvements to the real property within the district, including railroads, pipe lines, etc., and all other franchises connected with the realty in said district. Later it was concluded that the bridge and roads could not be constructed within the limit of cost prescribed by the original act, to wit, 15 [4]*4per cent, of the value of the real property subject to assessment; so the law was reenacted and amended by Act No. 15 of the year 1917, and additional land included This amendment ratified and confirmed the assessment theretofore made by the assessors, and provided for a similar assessment on the new lands, and increased the authorized mileage to 75 miles. Under a third act relating to this district, being No. 83 of the year 1925, the Legislature declared the assessments for benefits made by the district to be just, equitable, and proportionate, and ratified the same.

By the original act notice of the assessment was required to be given by publication, and that the notice must set a date not less than 30 days distant, when complaints by any landowner, etc., may be heard. It was made the duty of the assessors to correct any inequality, etc., in assessments, and in’crease or decrease the same, provided the total amount of the assessed benefits be not diminished. Full right of appeal from the action of the assessors was given to the commission, and thence to the county court. Compare House v. Rd. Imp. Dist. No. 2, Conway County, Ark., 158 Ark. 330, 251 S. W. 12, aft., 266 U. S. 175, 45 S. Ct. 60, 69 L. Ed. 229.

In 1922, and after the assessment of benefits had been made, the appellee here, plaintiff below, purchased from the Prairie Pipe Line Company all of its property within the district and the state, and is now owner of certain pipe lines laid beneath the surface of the earth in the district, as a part of a continuous line running from Oklahoma, through Arkansas, to Louisiana. It does no business within the district, other than to maintain and operate its pipe line as part of an interstate system.

On May 21,1924, it instituted this suit to enjoin the collection of any taxes upon an assessment of benefits of $60,000 made against its property, on the following grounds: First, the property of the appellee within this district is personal property not subject to local improvement assessments; second, its pipe lines are in no manner benefited by the improvement; third, the alleged assessment is wholly arbitrary, discriminatory, etc., and violates the Fourteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution; fourth, that it is engaged exclusively in the transportation of petroleum as a common carrier for hire in interstate commerce, and the assessment constitutes an unlawful burden thereon.

A decree in its favor was entered in the lower court, and the district appeals. Taking up the points made by the appellee in order:

First. The defendant’s pipe line is real property, and properly included in the district for the same reasons, according to the state authorities, that rights of way railroad companies are included. See Missouri Pac. v. Conway County Bridge District, 142 Ark. 11, 218 S. W. 189, and compare Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Road Imp. Dist. No. 1, 144 Ark. 476, 222 S. W. 717, and Standard Pipe Line Co. v. Index-Sulphur Drainage Dist. (Supreme Court of Ark., March 28, 1927), 293 S. W. 1031. It will be noted that the legislative act creating the district expressly provided for the assessment of pipe lines.

Second and Third. Are the pipe lines or the property of the appellee in any manner benefited by the improvement of the roads and the building of the bridge, and is the alleged assessment wholly arbitrary and discriminatory, etc? This question is not free from difficulty, and we find a mass, or rather wealth, of authority thereon, both in this court and in the Supreme Court of the United States. Appellee contends, and the lower court found, that the highway had not added, and will not add, anything to the value of the plaintiff’s property, or increase its revenue; the alleged benefits being at best speculative and conjectural only.

To the layman the direct benefits accruing to the pipe line as such, by reason of the construction of good roads, are not apparent. They do not bring appellee any new business, as it solicits none, and there is none available to it within the district or state. It obtains all its oil in Texas or Oklahoma, and conveys it through Arkansas to a terminus in Louisiana. Nor does it have any revenue from any source within the state. Its officers and employees took the witness stand, and gave as their conclusions that it made absolutely no difference to the company whether it had the improvement or not.

These and other witnesses called by ap-pellee testified, however, that when they put in two additional lines they used the new roads for hauling pipe and unloading it adjacent to the right of way; that the new roads resulted in great economies in time and cost, both in laying and repairing the line and in affording access to the same. Other witnesses testified that, on the occasion of a fire at appellee’s pumping station, the Texar-kana fire department, at its request, arrived in time to be of material assistance; that without the good roads they would not have attempted the run and risked the damage to equipment and danger to the lives of the fire[5]*5men that would have resulted; and that ap-pellee generally used the new roads for heavy loads between certain points in preference to the existing dirt roads, though the latter were shorter and more direct.

Several farmers living in the district testified that the quality or size of their crops were not, of course, affected by the improvements, and that the only advantage of good roads to them was the factor of transportation and accessibility. The adoption of ap-pellee’s argument on this feature of the case would, with a few exceptions, perhaps, inevitably and logically require the lifting of the burden of this assessment from every class of property sought to be assessed. Kansas City Ry. v. Rd. Dist. No. 3, Sevier County, 266 U. S. 379, at page 387, 45 S. Ct. 136, 69 L. Ed. 335.

The original act provides an opportunity for all the property owners aggrieved to appear before the board of assessors and have a hearing, with right to appeal to the eomr mission, and from the commission to the county court. The appellee never availed itself of this remedy. They say that, because they were a nonresident corporation, they are not bound thereby. The record shows that they had local employees in the district, including a taxing officer, charged presumably with the duty of looking after tax matters. Their predecessor in title, the Prairie Company, paid three or four installments of these taxes without protest. There is testimony that Mr. Helf ord, who at one time had charge of the pipe line property in Miller county, knew the assessments were being made.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F.2d 3, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-county-highway-bridge-dist-v-standard-pipe-line-co-ca8-1927.