Ruffin v. Sewell

235 P. 31, 134 Wash. 208, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 656
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1925
DocketNo. 19206. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 235 P. 31 (Ruffin v. Sewell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruffin v. Sewell, 235 P. 31, 134 Wash. 208, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 656 (Wash. 1925).

Opinion

Tolman, C. J.

This action was instituted to restrain the defendants, as commissioners of Diking District No. 22, of Skagit county, from proceeding to issue and sell bonds of the district, amounting to $1,300,000, for the purpose of providing funds for the carrying out of its plans for the-diking and drainage of the district.

In his complaint, the plaintiff makes four principal attacks upon the right of the commissioners to proceed: (a) That the petition for the organization of the district was not signed by a majority of the property owners owning lands within the proposed district; (b) that-notice of the election was not posted as required *209 by law; (c) tbat a subsequent annual election was not beld and one of tbe commissioners is now holding over beyond bis term; and (d) tbat tbe commissioners were proceeding to tbe issuance and sale of tbe bonds prior to tbe approval of tbe plan for tbe improvement by a decree of the superior court in tbe condemnation proceedings brought for tbat and other purposes. Tbe trial court sustained tbe attack on tbe first-mentioned ground, and tbe defendants have appealed.

Tbe proceedings for tbe formation of tbe district were bad under tbe act of 1895, now § 4236 et seq., Rem. Comp. Stat. [P. O. § 1914-1 et seq.]. Tbe first section provides for tbe formation of such districts and confers upon them certain powers. Section 4237, in part, provides:

“For the purpose of tbe formation of such diking districts a petition shall be presented to tbe board of county commissioners of tbe county in which said proposed diking district is located, which petition shall set forth tbe object for tbe creation of said district; shall designate tbe boundaries thereof and set forth therein tbe number of acres of land to be benefited by tbe proposed diking system, and shall also contain the names of all tbe record owners of land within said proposed district (so far as known), . . . Said petition shall be signed by such a number as own at least a majority of tbe acreage in tbe proposed district, . . .”

Section 4238 provides for tbe presentation, giving of notice, and tbe bearing on such petition, and concludes:

“ ... and if, upon final bearing, tbe board of county commissioners deem it advisable and to tbe best interests of all concerned, they may grant tbe prayer of said petitioners in whole or in part, and said board of county commissioners of such county shall enter an order on tbe records of their office setting forth all facts found by them upon tbe final bearing of said petition, and which may be adduced by them from tbe evidence beard upon tbe final bearing thereof.”

*210 At the outset we are confronted by the question of whether or no these statutory requirements, especially as to the petition being signed by a majority of the owners of acreage, are jurisdictional. If so, was the petition here questioned sufficient to give the county commissioners jurisdiction? If not jurisdictional, then, of course, the inadequacy of the petition, if any, could be cured by subsequent proceedings.

From a reading of the statute alone, it would seem that the county commissioners would have no jurisdiction of the subject-matter and no right to proceed to a hearing unless and until a petition in conformity with the statute, and signed as the statute directs, was first duly filed. But we are told this court has already held otherwise, and it therefore becomes necessary to examine the cases thought to so hold.

In Northern Pac. R. Co. v. Pierce County, 51 Wash. 12, 97 Pac. 1099, 23 L. R. A. (N. S.) 286, the question presented was the right to assess all lands in the district to pay the preliminary expenses of ascertaining whether the improvements should be carried out, and that assessment was made after abandonment and dismissal of the proceedings for lack of sufficient benefit to cover the costs. It clearly appears in that case that the district was established without objection by anyone, and the court says that the proceedings leading up thereto were regular in every respect.

“There is nothing in the complaint indicating that the proceedings leading up to the formation of the district were not in strict compliance with the law, nor that there was any objection to the incorporation of appellant’s lands into the district.”

So that the question of jurisdiction which we have here was not in that case. Moreover, the appellant in that case had, without questioning in any way the regularity of the formation of the district, successfully de *211 fended an action by the drainage commissioners to subject its property to assessment, on the ground that no benefits would accrue thereto. The court says:

“So that no objection having been made by the appellant at any stage of the proceedings to the formation of the district and the inclusion of their lands in said district, nor to the petition and proceedings under which the decree determined the amount of the indebtedness of the district, the right of appeal from all of such proceedings existing, it is estopped to object to anything but the constitutionality of the law under which the assessment is sought to be made and the tax collected, for it seems plain that the provisions of the law have been complied with.”

This is no more than a holding that the proceedings leading up to the formation of the district could not be collaterally attacked; therefore anything said in that case which might seem to support an opposite view is of no controlling force.

In Jackson v. Commercial Waterway District No. 1, 85 Wash. 301, 147 Pac. 1140, it was also conceded that the statute relating to the formation of drainage districts had been complied with and no objection had been made at any stage of the proceedings, and the court, without deciding the question, refers to the possibility that the petition is not a jurisdictional requisite, citing, as supporting that proposition, Northern Pac. R. Co. v. Pierce County, supra, and Collins v. Ellensburg, 68 Wash. 212, 122 Pac. 1010, and Chandler v. Puyallup, 70 Wash. 632, 127 Pac. 293. These latter cases relate to special assessments in cities, under entirely different statutes, and are so clearly not in point here that we need not take time to point .out the reasons why they are not authority upon the question we are now considering. The case.of Jackson v. Commercial Waterway District No. 1, supra, while not in point upon this question, is thought to be in point upon a question to *212 be subsequently considered and will be latei referred to.

In State ex rel. O’Phelan v. Lundquist, 103 Wash. 339, 174 Pac. 440, the question presented was exactly the question presented in Northern Pac. R. Co. v. Pierce County, supra, though it was presented in a different way, by quo warranto, apparently in the attempt to make a direct attack upon the proceedings leading up to the formation of the district.

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Bluebook (online)
235 P. 31, 134 Wash. 208, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruffin-v-sewell-wash-1925.