Remington Drainage District

120 N.W. 523, 138 Wis. 621, 1909 Wisc. LEXIS 112
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 120 N.W. 523 (Remington Drainage District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Remington Drainage District, 120 N.W. 523, 138 Wis. 621, 1909 Wisc. LEXIS 112 (Wis. 1909).

Opinion

Timlin, J.

Drainage commissioners appointed under sec. 1379 — 11 et seq., Stats. (1898), had their amended and final report confirmed by the circuit court as provided by these statutes on September 2, 1902. They made on September 1, 1904, an additional assessment under sec. 1379 — 24, to complete the construction, and on October 23, 1907, filed a supplemental report substantially to the effect that when the report confirmed September 2, 1902, was made it was thought that the ditches therein described would be of sufficient depth .and capacity to drain the land, but experience had shown they were not so; that, in order to give good and sufficient agricultural drainage to the lands in the district and permit the maintenance of good roads therein, certain specified drains should be deepened and widened as indicated. The cost of this enlargement of drains was reported at $28,623.31. This drainage district since its original formation had been enlarged by addition of certain lands, and it was further reported that the benefits accruing to the original drainage district as it existed before enlargement from this widening and deepening of drains would be $406,737.76, and in proportion to the benefits theretofore reported to the court and confirmed by the order of September 2, 1902; that this work should be paid for by the original district for reasons given, and the public health and welfare would be greatly promoted, etc. A list of assessments of the estimated cost of construction against lands reported to be benefited is part of the petition, and the prayer of the petition is that the former order of confirmation dated September 2, 1902, be revised, modified, [623]*623and changed so that it confirms the reported benefits of •$406,737.76, confirms the specifications for the enlarged drains, and confirms the said assessment of the cost of enlargement upon the lands and lots reported.

The appellant met this petition with a remonstrance averring that he was a landowner affected by the proposed action and showing how; that the original assessment for benefits and maintenance confirmed September 2, 1902, was for $62,831.46 and no more; that of this sum there was assessed for collection September 2, 1902, and confirmed by order of that date, $31,465.73, and by the second assessment of September 1, '1904, $7,642.48, making $39,109.21, which together with the $28,623.31 now proposed to be assessed would exceed by $4,901.06 the entire benefits first found, assessed, and confirmed by the court order of September 2, 1902. This idea is presented in several different ways in the remonstrance, and it is further averred that the order of September 2, 1902, is in force and the matters adjudicated and conclusively fixed for all time.

The petitioners demurred to this remonstrance and their •demurrer was sustained, and the case is before us upon appeal from the order sustaining the demurrer and striking out the remonstrance.

One might, perhaps, be readily excused for not thoroughly understanding these drainage statutes. The provisions thereof are loosely worded, the plan complicated, and the statutes drafted as if there 'were no limitations upon the power of the legislature in this respect. We have given the questions involved in this appeal careful study. It is only by keeping constantly in mind that these statutes can be upheld by reason of the public nature of the enterprise in fact and the actual benefits in fact accruing to the persons taxed, and not otherwise, that we are enabled to obtain any just notion of the proper interpretation of the statute. These facts may be established beyond contradiction or denial by a ju[624]*624dicial proceeding going upon notice and bearing as against a party to sucb judicial proceeding. Otherwise they would be open to controversy in every direct contest involving the right to assess or collect assessments. We need not here pass upon the validity of a statute which sought to make a judgment or order conclusive upon one of the parties litigant and not conclusive upon the other, because that question cannot arise until we first find that the legislature has really attempted to do such a thing. The commissioners base their right or claim to carry out this proceeding largely, if not altogether, upon the‘following provisions of statute:

“AH drainage districts heretofore organized under sections-of law hereby repealed shall, after the passage hereof, be governed by this act.” Sec. 35, ch. 419, Laws of 1905.
“At any time prior to making the order confirming said report or thereafter, the court may permit the commissioners to-present and file a supplemental report, or amend their report, as to any matter which, pursuant to the provisions hereof, was- or might have been included in the original report presented by them, and after reasonable notice given to all parties interested, in such manner as the court shall direct, the court may upon the hearing in said matter make such order as the-case may require.” Sec. 10.

These provisions standing alone are very broad and sweeping. But they do not stand alone in the act. There is in the-same section:

(1) “The order of confirmation shall be final and conclusive, the proposed work shall be established and authorized,, and the proposed assessments approved and confirmed tuiless-within thirty days an appeal be taken to the supreme court.”

(2) There is in the sixth subdivision of sec. 1, and in the seventh subdivision of sec. 8, language tending strongly to-show that the enlargement of a drain is a matter to be presented and passed upon by original petition of the landowners.

(3) There is after the initial petition by the landowners- and after the second report of the commissioners an assessment of benefits provided for based upon such second report,. [625]*625and separate and distinct from tbe assessment for cost of construction. Tbe latter assessment is again subdivided into an assessment against tracts, lots, and corporations specially benefited, and tbe remainder of tbe cost of construction as there defined is tben assessed against tbe several benefited tracts, lots, and easements in proportion to tbe benefits wbicb tbey have assessed against tbe same. Secs. 8, 9, 10. Here are three different kinds of assessments provided for: First, an assessment of benefits; secbnd, assessment of costs of construction divided into two, namely, one according to special benefits and tbe other according to benefits.

(4) Tbe only authority found in this statute for any assessment of any kind after tbe first is as follows: First. In sec. 20, wbicb is limited to two cases: (a) Where in tbe first assessment for construction (not assessment of benefits) tbe commissioners shall have reported to tbe court a smaller sum than is needed to complete tbe work of construction; (b) where an additional sum is needed to pay tbe interest on lawful indebtedness of said drainage district. In these cases tbe assessments shall be based on tbe last “assessment of benefits.” Second. In sec. 13, wbicb provides for annual assessments to keep up repairs, wbicb shall be apportioned on tbe last assessment of benefits. This must be read with sec. 8, wbicb requires tbe commissioners in their second report to report tbe probable cost of keeping in repair. Third. In sec.

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120 N.W. 523, 138 Wis. 621, 1909 Wisc. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/remington-drainage-district-wis-1909.