Pritchett v. Road Improvement District No. 3

219 S.W. 21, 142 Ark. 509, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 65
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 8, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 219 S.W. 21 (Pritchett v. Road Improvement District No. 3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pritchett v. Road Improvement District No. 3, 219 S.W. 21, 142 Ark. 509, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 65 (Ark. 1920).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

Appellee, Road Improvement District No. 3 of Poinsett County, was duly formed by an order of the county court of Poinsett County entered July 12, 1917, on petition of a majority of the owners of real property in the proposed district. The route of the road was specifically described in the petition, and was to begin at the town of Marked Tree and run thence east and north to the town of Lepanto, and thence northeasterly to the Mississippi County line, covering a total distance of about fourteen miles.

Appellants were at that time, and are now, the owners of land situated in the district as originally proposed, and they appeared in the county court and presented objections to the inclusion of their lands in the district, and the court in rendering final order forming the district eliminated the lands of appellants from the district. There was no appeal from that order of the county court.

The commissioners of the district proceeded with the plans for the construction of the proposed improvement, but upon the recommendation of the engineers decided to alter the plans by shifting the route of the road one-fourth of a mile from the original route as originally planned for a distance of one mile. Further alterations were made in the plans so as to construct six separate laterals in the aggregate covering a distance of 18% miles in length. The plans as thus altered were submitted to the county court by the commissioners and approved, and the court appointed the members of the board of assessors to assess benefits. The assessors proceeded to make the assessment of benefits, and included in their assessment lists the lands of appellants, which had been eliminated from the boundaries of the district. On the filing of the report of the assessors the county court ordered publication to be made, which was done, and the assessments were on a subsequent day approved by order of the county court, and the boundaries of the district were extended so as to include the lands not within those boundaries according to the order as originally entered forming the district. This order was rendered by the court on October 11, 1918, but part of the order, viz.: That part which extended the boundaries of the district, was omitted from the entry and was subsequently, on January 6, 1919, entered nunc pro tunc, so as to correct the omission. Appellants filed their petition in the circuit court of Poinsett County on November 12, 1919, praying for a writ of certiorari to bring up the record of the proceedings of the county court and that those portions of the order of the county court extending the boundaries of the district and approving the assessments on appellants ’ lands be quashed. The record was brought up under the writ, but on final hearing of the cause in the circuit court relief as prayed for by appellants was denied and their petition was dismissed.

The contention of appellants is that the original order of the county court eliminating their lands from the boundaries of the district, as formed, is conclusive of the power to tax those lands for the construction of the improvement, and that the county court was without jurisdiction subsequently to extend the boundaries so as to reinclude those lands and to assess them. If the contention of appellants is correct that the court had no authority under the statute to reinclude the eliminated lands and to assess the benefits, then the court was without jurisdiction over these lands, and certiorari was the proper remedy to reach the void orders of the county court in order to quash them. Griffin v. Boswell, 124 Ark. 234.

The road district was created pursuant to the terms of the general statute of March 30, 1915 (Acts 1915, p. 1400), and section 2 of that statute provides that in passing on the petition for the formation of such a district “if the county court is of the opinion that any part, or parts, of the territory included in the petition and plat is not benefited by the proposed improvement, the court may, in the order creating said district, eliminate such territory from the boundaries of the district.” Section 15 of the statute reads in part as follows:

“Whenever the commissioners find that other lands not embraced within the boundaries of the district are benefited by reason of the improvement made, or about to be made, they shall instruct the assessors herein provided for to assess the benefits accruing to such lands by reason of the improvement, and shall file a special report in the county court setting up the lands so benefited together with assessment of benefits made by the assessors of the district. * * * At the hearing which shall not be held earlier than five days after the last insertion of said notice, the county court shall investigate as to whether the land beyond the boundaries of the district are really benefited by reason of the improvement, and, if it finds that said lands are benefited, the boundaries of the district will be so extended as to embrace the land so benefited and the county court at the same time shall also consider the assessment of benefits so made on said land and enter its finding thereon in accordance with section 12 of this act.”

One of the contentions of learned counsel for appellees in support of the validity of the court’s order re-including the lands of appellants is that the original order of the county court eliminating those lands from the boundaries of the district and creating the district with those lands eliminated constituted the formation of the district as if these lands had never been included in the petition and left the other provisions of the statute governing such proceedings in full operation. In other words, the contention is that the district stood as if appellants’ land had never been included, and that if it was subsequently ascertained by the board of assessors that those lands would be benefited the boundaries of the district could be extended under authority of section 15 of the statute, quoted above, so as to include those lands and authorize their assessment.

This view of the statute would put the two sections (section 2 and section 15) in conflict with each other, for one of the sections authorizes the elimination of lands from the boundaries of the district and the other authorizes the extension of the boundaries so as to include new territory; and if both sections are operative upon the same lands, then the two orders of the court thereunder would be conflicting. The manifest purpose was to provide a method in section 2 for the adjudication by tbe county court in advance of tbe question of benefits to given tracts of land of objecting owners. Tbe owner of land has a right to appear in the county court when the district is to be formed and raise an issue of anticipated benefit to his land, and if the court on the hearing finds that the lands will not be benefited there must be an order excluding the same from the boundaries. Such an order constitutes a final adjudication of the question of benefits to those lands. Section 15 was intended to afford a remedy for the inclusion of lands which had not theretofore been included in the proceedings and which had not fallen within the adjudication of the court with respect to benefits. The two statutes as thus interpreted operate in harmony and present no conflict. This is also in accord with the decision of this court in the recent case of Harrison v. Abington, 140 Ark.

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Bluebook (online)
219 S.W. 21, 142 Ark. 509, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pritchett-v-road-improvement-district-no-3-ark-1920.