Montague v. Board of County Commissioners

53 P. 145, 7 Kan. App. 160, 1898 Kan. App. LEXIS 301
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedMay 4, 1898
DocketNo. 554
StatusPublished

This text of 53 P. 145 (Montague v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montague v. Board of County Commissioners, 53 P. 145, 7 Kan. App. 160, 1898 Kan. App. LEXIS 301 (kanctapp 1898).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

McElroy, J. :

This action was brought by John Montague against the board of county commissioners of Jefferson county and L. M. Tutt to enjoin the construction of a drainage ditch. At the commencement of the action a temporary injunction was granted ; on the trial of the case it was vacated and a perpetual injunction denied. The trial court made special findings of fact and conclusions of law. A motion for a [161]*161new trial was filed and overruled, and the case is presented to this court for review upon the findings of fact. The findings are as follows :

FINDINGS OF FACT.

“1. The proposed ditch in question herein commences in a natural watercourse having a well-defined channel, and will necessarily divert the larger part of the water which flows each year in said watercourse.
“2. Said ditch may be constructed with a water-pipe laid under the embankment on one side of said ditch, so that, if said pipe be kept open by occasionally clearing the same, sufficient water for plaintiff’s live stock will continue to flow down in said channel below and beyond the commencement of said ditch.
“3. Said watercourse has a well-defined channel commencing more than a mile above the point of commencement of said ditch and continuing more than twenty-five rods below and beyond- such point, and is fed by springs above such point, so that it furnishes a flow of water sufficient for all of plaintiff’s live stock through all ordinary years.
“4. Said natural watercourse terminates at its lower end upon the bottom land of plaintiff, and there empties into a ditch constructed by plaintiff ten or twelve years ago, which ditch extends to a railroad ditch at the boundary of plaintiff’s land. The water in this ditch constructed by plaintiff occasionally overflows in times of excessive rainfall.
“5. That portion of said natural watercourse which is below and beyond the point of commencement of the said proposed ditch is enclosed in plaintiff’s corral and feed lot, and has been used by plaintiff to furnish water for his live stock for the thirty years last past.
“ 6. The plaintiff’s entire farm, contiguous to and including said corral and feed lot, contains about 800 acres and has springs and wells • thereon sufficient to furnish water for all of his live stock, and the water from said wells and springs can be conducted into said corral and feed lot by water-pipes.
[162]*162“ 7. It is the opinion and judgment of plaintiff and of several witnesses called by him that the construction of said proposed ditch will cause great and irreparable damage to plaintiff.
“8. It is the opinion and judgment of several witnesses called by defendant that the construction of said proposed ditch will be of great benefit to plaintiff and will not damage him.
“9. The court, upon the judgment and opinion of said witnesses, finds that the construction of said ditch will cause more damage than benefit to plaintiff.
“10. The plaintiff was present when the viewers made the view for said proposed ditch, and then suggested to said viewers that if said proposed ditch was constructed he would construct that portion of it which would be on his land if they would assess no further portion of the expense of said ditch against him ; and he then presented to said viewers his claim in writing for $1000 damages for the construction of said ditch.
“ 11." The said viewers found and reported that there should be allowed to plaintiff for his damages the sum. of ten dollars, and that there should be assessed against him a portion of the expense of constructing said ditch.
“12. The county commissioners of Jefferson county acted as said viewers and regularly made their report of said view in September, 1896 ; and at the next meeting of said board of county commissioners of said county thereafter, to wit, at the regular October, 1896, meeting thereof, the said board did not make an order establishing said ditch, but made and entered of record an order continuing and postx>oning consideration of said report until the next regular meeting of said board ; and at said next meeting, in January, 1897, said board made and entered of record another order continuing and postponing consideration of said report until-the April, 1897, meeting of said board. By x’eason of the exxxiration of the term of office of one of said commissioners and the election and qualification of another person as his successor, the defendant E. D. Bradford became and was a member of said [163]*163board on and before April 13, 1897, and was not a member of said board in 1896.
“13. The plaintiff was present before said board at its meeting in October, 1896, and in January and April, 1897, when the matter of said proposed ditch was under consideration by said board, and made no objection to any continuance or postponement thereof.
“ 14. On April 13,1897, said board made and caused to be entered of record an order to establish and construct said proposed ditch, the form of which order was in exact accordance with section 10 of an act of the legislature of the state of Kansas entitled ‘An act providing for the drainage of swamps, bottom or other low lands in Jefferson and Neosho counties,’ approved March 6, 1891.
“ 15. All the proceedings in and about the matter of the said proposed ditch were had and done by said board in accordance with the provisions of said act, except as stated in the foregoing finding No. 12, and were not in accordance with the provisions of any other act.
“16. On said April 13, 1897, the said board* made and entered of record its confirmation and approval of the viewers’ assessment of damages mentioned in the foregoing finding of fact No. 11.
“ 16-J-. Several ditches had been located and established by the said board of county commissioners of said county of Jefferson, and assessments were made, and paid for by plaintiff, with the knowledge and consent of plaintiff, under the act of the legislature under which said ditch in question has been sought to be located, which act was approved March 6, 1891, before the proceedings were had for the location and establishment of the ditch in question. And for one of said ditches the said plaintiff, John Montague, was petitioner before defendant board of county commissioners for the location and establishment of the same, to wit: A ditch under said act; and said ditch was afterwards established and constructed thereunder and assessments therefor levied upon said plaintiff and others, which were paid ; and in the construction [164]*164-of such ditch a natural watercourse was diverted from its usual channel.
"'17. The amount or value in controversy herein, exclusive of costs, exceeds $100.
" 18. The facts stated in the foregoing findings of fact are all of the material facts which were proven on the trial of this action.”
CONCLUSION OP LAW.
"Aud the court finds, as its conclusion of law, that the plaintiff is not entitled to an injunction.”

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Bluebook (online)
53 P. 145, 7 Kan. App. 160, 1898 Kan. App. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montague-v-board-of-county-commissioners-kanctapp-1898.