Mississippi-Fox River Drainage District 2 of Clark County v. Plenge

735 S.W.2d 748, 1987 Mo. App. LEXIS 4524
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 4, 1987
Docket51799, 51789
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 735 S.W.2d 748 (Mississippi-Fox River Drainage District 2 of Clark County v. Plenge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mississippi-Fox River Drainage District 2 of Clark County v. Plenge, 735 S.W.2d 748, 1987 Mo. App. LEXIS 4524 (Mo. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

SIMEONE, Senior Judge.

I

These cases are consolidated appeals from a judgment entered on April 21,1986, by the circuit court of Clark County which involved a dispute between the plaintiff, Mississippi-Fox River Drainage District # 2 of Clark County [drainage district], and the defendants, Hugh and his wife Susan Plenge, concerning the construction of the defendants’ private levee and its connection with the district’s levee. 1 The trial court denied Count I of the drainage district’s petition for an injunction requesting an order that the Plenges “disconnect” their private levee from the district’s main stem levee. The court did, however, grant the Plenges “affirmative relief” by permitting them to attach their private levee to the district’s main stem levee, but imposed certain conditions. The order stated as follows:

(1) Plaintiff’s claim as set forth in Count I of First Amended Petition is ruled against Plaintiff and in favor of Defendants. Count II and Count III has [sic] previously been dismissed.
(2) Defendants’ request to attach their private levee to Plaintiff’s levee shall be allowed upon the conditions and specifications that follow.
(3) Defendants shall immediately remove the berm located at the Southwest comer of their tract of land involved herein. This will be done on or before May 10, 1986 [condition (3)].
(4) Defendants will reconstruct their levee at the Northwest comer of their property to provide an arc of not less than 500 feet radius base. Defendants will complete this reconstruction within 60 days of the date of this Order. Thereafter, Plaintiff is ordered to remove the brush and debris pile located in the channel on the West of Defendants’ levee [condition (4)].
(5) Defendants shall and are hereby ordered to maintain their levee with a minimum 10 feet top, at a height equal to or less than the District's levee immediately opposite (known as the Dyer levee). Defendants’ levee shall “blend” into the points of attachment with the District’s levee at the Northeast corner and Southwest corner so as to maintain uniformity in height insofar as possible. Defendants shall dress, shape, and seed their levee within a reasonable time [condition (5)].

We affirm in part and reverse in part. We affirm the judgment denying the district’s petition for an injunction ordering the Plenges to disconnect their private levee and permanently enjoining them from reconnecting. We also affirm the judgment of the trial court upon the Plenges’ request for “affirmative relief” insofar as the judgment orders the defendants to remove the berm and maintain their levee at a height equal to or less than the district’s levee; but we reverse that part of the judgment which requires the defendants to reconstruct their levee at the northwest corner of their property to “provide an arc of not less than 500 feet radius base.” Furthermore, we remand the cause for an evidentiary hearing so the court may determine the proper “shaping of” and “dressing up” of the northwest corner and enter an order in conformity therewith. We therefore affirm the judgment in all respects except for condition (4).

*751 There is no need to unduly lengthen this opinion with a complete recital of the complicated maze of facts. Cutting through all the details, suffice it to say that the plaintiff is a drainage district organized and existing pursuant to chapter 242, RSMo. 1986 and all its pertinent provisions.

In 1975 the district acquired title to an easement and to the flood control levee existing upon said easement on lands adjacent to the land owned by defendant, Hugh Plenge. Hugh Plenge has been the owner of certain property within the district since 1981. Susan, his wife, has a marital interest in the property. In March, 1982, Mr. Plenge contacted various property owners and the board of supervisors of the district (presumably properly selected pursuant to § 242.150 RSMo.), concerning the building of a private levee on the side of Honey Creek opposite the drainage district’s main stem levee. Plenge wanted the levee in order to protect the Plenges’ property that runs along Honey Creek. The board held a special meeting on March 1, 1982, lasting for several hours at which the plans for constructing Hugh Plenge’s private levee were discussed. The secretary, Mr. Lynn D. Fox kept the minutes. Those attending the meeting were Mr. Bruce Otte, “who might have been vice president — I wasn’t president or secretary;” Mr. Fox, the secretary-treasurer; Harold Dyer, a neighboring landowner; Simon Jesberg, who owned and farmed land adjacent to the main stem levee and adjacent to the Plenge land; Jim Campbell, who farmed the property of Jes-berg, and a few other “interested” persons. The topic of discussion was essentially what conditions Plenge must meet, with respect to the dimensions and location of his levee, in order for the drainage district to permit him to connect his levee to the main stem levee.

The dispute and the resulting lawsuit involved in this appeal center around what the parties agreed to. The original minutes that were taken at the meeting and, subsequently more formally recopied, state that (1) the “opinion was stated [that the levee was to be] 150' from Simon’s [Jes-berg’s] cemet [sic — cement] post for levee and the NW corner to be the same as Simon’s corner, approximately 4 As [acres].” Everyone “seemed to agree.” The minutes, therefore, reflect that the board gave written consent authorizing Plenge to connect with the district's levee at a point 150 feet from the “cement post” and that the “northwest comer to be the same as Jesberg’s corner” leaving a flood pool of approximately four acres. The minutes do not reflect any discussion or consent of the board concerning the berm or the height of the Plenge levee nor the requirement in the trial court’s order that the northwest comer of the Plenge levee provide an “arc of not less than 500 feet radius base.” The board members who testified claim that the minutes are not comprehensive and do not reflect what was agreed upon, and that the meeting was a long one and that other matters were discussed.

Considerable variance exists in the evidence as to what agreements were made between the board and Plenge for the connection of the private levee. There is even evidence that the “agreement” relative to the levee connection was actually between Simon Jesberg and Plenge and not with the board. The board takes one view of the “agreement” and Mr. Plenge another.

Clearly there was no written contract or “agreement” between the parties, and as the trial court stated in its judgment, neither party followed the provisions of § 242.370, RSMo. which requires written consent of the board of supervisors “particularly describpng] the method, terms and conditions of such connection, and shall be approved by the chief engineer.” Under these circumstances the trial court, pursuant to the provisions of § 242.370.3, treated the Plenges “request for affirmative relief” as a petition, filed pursuant to § 242.-370, and rendered the judgment imposing the conditions stated above.

Sometime after the March 1 meeting, Plenge contracted with a contractor to build his levee. The work commenced in 1982, but by the fall of 1982 he received no real protection.

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Bluebook (online)
735 S.W.2d 748, 1987 Mo. App. LEXIS 4524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mississippi-fox-river-drainage-district-2-of-clark-county-v-plenge-moctapp-1987.