Nebraska Mid-State Reclamation District v. Hall County

41 N.W.2d 397, 152 Neb. 410, 1950 Neb. LEXIS 92
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1950
Docket32702
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 41 N.W.2d 397 (Nebraska Mid-State Reclamation District v. Hall County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nebraska Mid-State Reclamation District v. Hall County, 41 N.W.2d 397, 152 Neb. 410, 1950 Neb. LEXIS 92 (Neb. 1950).

Opinion

Chappell, J.

This action was brought by The Nebraska Mid-State Reclamation District, hereinafter generally designated as the district, and its directors, under the provisions of the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act, particularly section 25-21,149, R. S. Supp., 1949, and section 25-21,150, R. R. S. 1943, and under the provisions of the Reclamation Act, particularly sections 46-568 to 46-570, R. S. Supp., 1949.

The purpose of the action was to obtain an adjudication that the Reclamation Act, hereinafter generally designated as the act, Chapter 173, Laws of Nebraska, 1947, p. 523, now Chapter 46, article 5, R. S. Supp., 1949, was constitutional and valid, obtain judicial confirmation of the legality and finality of organization of the district, and the validity of specified subsequent acts of the district and its directors, and also to have judicially determined the rights, status, duties, and other legal relations of the district, its officers and directors, the officers of defendant counties, and others under the act.

Defendants were Hall, Merrick, and Buffalo counties, and their respectively named county supervisors, treasurers, and county attorneys, the Attorney General, and State Engineer, together with Henry H. Falldorf, Warren Marsh, Harvey E. Glatfelter, and Leo Wyman, who each owned irrigable and non-irrigable rural farm lands, urban real estate, and tangible personal property within the boundaries of plaintiff district, respectively in Hall, Merrick, and Buffalo counties, and “all persons having or claiming any interest in and to the organization and operation of the Nebraska Mid-State Reclamation District.”

Notice of the action was concededly published and posted as required by section 46-568, and process as well *413 was duly served upon all named defendants. Defendant counties and their respective officers, the Attorney General, the State Engineer, Warren Marsh, and Leo Wyman, first demurred generally, or generally and for defect of parties defendant. However, their demurrers were overruled, whereupon such defendants filed answers preserving their demurrers, which answers were respectively traversed by plaintiff. All other defendants defaulted.

In that connection, defendant Hall County and its officers answered, substantially admitting that the district was legally organized and that the subsequent acts alleged by plaintiff were taken as alleged, and that same were legal and valid if the act had constitutional validity, which they denied.- Such defendants also admitted that part of the tax moneys levied for the benefit of the district was being withheld by the county treasurer of Hall County pending judicial determinatiQn of constitutionality of the act. Defendants Merrick and Buffalo counties and their respective officers denied generally. Defendants Warren Marsh and Leo Wyman denied generally and also affirmatively alleged that the Reclamation Act was unconstitutional in several particulars. The Attorney General and State Engineer answered, affirmatively alleging that the act was constitutional and admitting that the district had been legally organized, but, for lack of informátion, denied generally the other allegations of plaintiffs’ petition.

After a hearing whereat evidence was adduced, the trial court found generally for plaintiffs and against defendants and all other parties having or claiming any interest in and to the organization and operation of the district. Its decree particularly found that the court had jurisdiction of the subject matter and persons of the named defendants, all owners of property in the district, and all parties having any interest in the district; that a justiciable controversy existed between the parties; that the district had been legally and finally organized and established as a public corporation and political *414 subdivision of the state under the provisions of the act; that the taxes levied or caused to be levied by the district were legally and lawfully levied within the specific limits prescribed by the act; that the taxes levied against the property of defendants Warren Marsh and Leo Wyman were valid and that it was their duty to pay such taxes, and that it was the duty of all other taxpayers in said district on whose property taxes were similarly levied, to pay the same as provided by the act; and that it was the duty of the county officers to levy and collect such taxes. It specifically found and adjudged that the Reclamation Act was not unconstitutional, as claimed by defendants.

Motions of defendants for new trial were overruled, and they appealed, assigning substantially that the trial court erred in overruling their demurrers, and that the judgment was not sustained by the evidence but was contrary thereto, and contrary to law. We conclude that the assignments should not be sustained.

The evidence is not in conflict. In the light thereof, and admissions in the pleadings, it cannot be disputed that the district was legally and finally organized and established,, from which no appeal was taken, and that the subsequent acts of the district and its officers and directors conformed with the provisions of the Reclamation Act, all of which were valid and binding, if the act was constitutional. The rights and duties of district officers, as well as those of defendant counties and others, are clearly defined in the act, but, of course, such rights and duties are thus created and imposed only if the act is constitutional.

Admittedly, the county treasurer of Hall County is withholding a part of the tax money levied and collected for the benefit of plaintiff district, pending decision of this case, and will continue to do'so until a court order requires him to do otherwise. Also, without dispute, the county treasurer of Merrick County had difficulty with some taxpayers who protested the payment of taxes *415 levied for plaintiff district, whereupon he informed the taxpayers of that county by public notice that if they would pay the taxes he would not pay any of such money to the district until validity of the district, its conduct, and constitutionality of the act, had been determined. He has not turned any of such moneys over to the district, and does not intend to do so until this case is decided, or a court order requires him to do so. He, as well as the county treasurers of Hall and Buffalo counties, received notices from the Union Pacific Railroad Company, demanding that taxes paid by it for district purposes be refunded,, because the act was unconstitutional, and such taxes were illegal, unauthorized, and void.

Admittedly, the district includes both rural and urban real and personal tangible property located in parts of Buffalo, Hall, and Merrick counties, the value of which property aggregates millions of dollars. Admittedly, also, the district is populated by many thousands of persons.

Briefly summarized, the act provides as follows: Sections 46-501 and 46-502 declare the public policy, use, benefits, and purpose of the organization of reclamation districts to conserve and control water resources of the state for the prosperity and welfare of the people of the State of Nebraska.

Sections 46-503 to 46-514 contain definitions of terms.

Sections 46-515 to 46-529 provide generally for the organization and establishment of reclamation districts as political corporate quasi-municipal subdivisions of the state.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.W.2d 397, 152 Neb. 410, 1950 Neb. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nebraska-mid-state-reclamation-district-v-hall-county-neb-1950.