Seabury v. Adams

225 N.W. 264, 208 Iowa 1332
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 7, 1929
DocketNo. 39464.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 225 N.W. 264 (Seabury v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seabury v. Adams, 225 N.W. 264, 208 Iowa 1332 (iowa 1929).

Opinion

KINDm, J.

During the year 1913, there was organized in Harrison County a drainage project known as Upper Soldier Drainage District No. 1. It contained two parts, a main ditch and a lateral known as "A." Those ditches therein were duly and timely constructed in a northerly and southerly direction, and the cost of the main ditch was spread over all the property within the district, according to an established ratio of benefits; while the expense of the lateral was only partly assessed to the lands especially benefited thereby, and the balance thereof was taxed against all the land in the district, regardless of the classification of benefits. Whether right or wrong, that is the way it was done. Here it is important to note that the Chicago & Northwestern Railway right of way crosses the main ditch where the lateral joins it; so the north end of the improvement was on the west side of the railroad, and the south part to the east thereof. Said portion north of the railroad is the lateral, and that south thereof is the main ditch.

On May 8, 1925, the board of supervisors passed a resolution authorizing repairs on Lateral A at a cost of $3,512.54. For the purpose of those repairs, a new assessment was made by the board, according to the ratio of the original benefit classification relating to the lateral. Accordingly, the auditor spread the entire cost thereof against the lands named as benefited by the lateral, consistent with the established standard of classification. In other words, the new assessment was to be in harmony with the fixed ratio of benefits for the lateral, rather than against the other property within the district, which, as shown by the original classification, was benefited by the main ditch only. *1334 Appellees have land included within the territory benefited by the lateral. Hence, the new assessment affects their realty. Consequently, the present injunction was sought by them to prevent the collection of that tax; and because the application was sustained, the appellants now ask a reversal.

There are several propositions presented for consideration, but only one is material to this discussion. This relates to the method of assessing benefits in the district: that is, whether or not all the lands in the district, or only appellees’ property and that of those similarly situated, vrere classified as the recipients of the benefits from Lateral A.

Obviously, under the record here presented, the original cost of Lateral A was assessed against certain designated property in the district, including' that of appellees. However, such apportionment did not embrace all the lands within the district. To repeat the thought in another -way, the cost of Ijateral A on the original project was declared, under the classification of benefits established, to affect appellees’ and certain other lands adjacent to and in the vicinity of that specific part of the ditch. But that initial classification did not include the remainder of the acreage within the district. All the property in the district was found benefited in some ratio by the main ditch. Nevertheless, as before said, it was not all thus declared to be benefited by the lateral. The costs of the. main ditch and the lateral were estimated, incurred, and expended separately; and likewise, assessments to meet those expenses were individually based upon distinct classifications of benefits. No change in the said classification has been made since that time. Therefore, until there is a change, the assessment, if made at all, must be upon the ratio of the original classification. Section 7466 of the 1924 Code provides:

“This classification when finally established shall remain as a basis for all future assessments connected with the objects of said levee or drainage district, unless the board for good cause shall authorize a revision thereof. ’ ’

And Section 7476 continues:

“The classification as finally adopted shall remain the basis of all future assessments for the purpose of said district unless revised by the board in the manner provided for reclassification. ”

*1335 See, also, Sections 7492 and 7494 of the same Code.

Manifestly, the Harrison County board, when authorizing Lateral A’s repair, attempted to follow the mandates of the above and foregoing legislation. Such part of the resolution which is material reads in this way:

“Second: That the original classification and apportionment is equitable and that there is no reason to change the same.
‘ ‘ Third: The said drainage district is indebted in the cost of construction and repairs — and current expenses in the sum of approximately $3,512.54, and in order to pay outstanding indebtedness which has been legally incurred it is necessary to levy an assessment upon the lands within said drainage district as established in the sum of approximately $3,512.54 or 73 per cent of the original assessment in said drainage district.
“Fourth: There is hereby levied upon the lands within said drainage district an assessment of approximately $3,512.54 or 73 per cent of the original assessment of benefits (for Lateral A).
“Fifth : The county auditor of Harrison County is directed to extend said tax so levied and assessed upon the lands within said drainage district * * * in accordance with the established classification and in the same proportion that the original cost of construction was levied and assessed in said drainage district, and the county auditor is hereby directed to certify said tax so levied and assessed to the county treasurer to be by him collected.”

Plainly, therefore, the board of supervisors did not reclassify the benefits accruing to the lands because of the main ditch or the lateral. If, then, any assessment at all was authorized, it was one made in accordance with the original classification for the improvement of Lateral A, and, as before suggested, only part of the. land within the district was included therein. Authorization for assessments to repair may be found in the 1924 Code, Sections 7556 to 7562, both inclusive. Thereupon, the board of Harrison County found its right to initiate the new work on Lateral.A. Yet the assessment, whether for repairs or otherwise, must be made by the board, and no one else, and when thus made, the statutory plan shall be followed. As before suggested, this requires that, until there has been a re *1336 classification, the original must be used. Resultantly, the auditor and treasurer were confined to the resolution aforesaid. They had no authority except that therein indicated. Any assessment, then, made in disregard of that resolution and the classification of benefits for assessment purposes would be a nullity.

Contention, on the other hand, is made by appellees to the effect that the original assessment was spread against all the land in the district, regardless of its association with Lateral A, and therefore the present tax should be made upon the same basis. Explanation for appellees’ claim in this regard may be furnished by considering the improvement’s original cost and the allocation thereof between the main ditch and the lateral. Illustration will aid the understanding.

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Bluebook (online)
225 N.W. 264, 208 Iowa 1332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seabury-v-adams-iowa-1929.