Sioux City Bridge Co. v. Miller

12 F.2d 41, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3155
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 16, 1926
DocketNo. 7041
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 F.2d 41 (Sioux City Bridge Co. v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sioux City Bridge Co. v. Miller, 12 F.2d 41, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3155 (8th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

KENYON, Circuit Judge.

Appellant (for convenience hereafter designated as plaintiff) brought this action in the District Court of the United States for the District of Nebraska, Omaha Division, against the county treasurer of Dakota county, Neb., to restrain the collection of certain taxes assessed for the benefit of school district No. 11, in said county, upon a part of plaintiff’s bridge and approach thereto across the Missouri river at or near South Sioux City, Neb., contending that the bridge and the east 90 feet of the west approach were not within said school district. School district No. 11 (also known as South Sioux City district, and hereinafter designated as the school district) intervened in said case. The controversy was narrowed to the one question of whether or not the school district included the part of the bridge within the state of Nebraska and the east 90 feet of the west approach. The trial court held against plaintiff and dismissed the bill.

Plaintiff is an Iowa corporation, and pursuant to permission given by act of Congress built a bridge across the Missouri river from near Sioux City, Iowa, on the east, to South Sioux City, Neb., on the west, the western terminus being in section 22, township 29, range 9, Dakota county, Neb. This bridge was completed in 1888, and has been used ever since for railroad purposes. At the time of its completion the high bank of the river was about 90 feet west of pier No. 5, the west pier of the bridge. At the time of the trial the high bank of the river was east of this, and there had been considerable accretion along the river bank. Dakota county extends to the state line. State and county taxes have been paid by plaintiff on the bridge and approach valuations to the state line, which is the center of the main channel of the Missouri river.

The school district has for years asserted the right to tax this property for school purposes, and there has been litigation with reference thereto both in the state and federal courts. One action was brought in the United States District Court at Omaha to restrain the school district from collecting taxes levied upon the west one-half of plaintiff’s bridge. The limits of the school district were not determined by the decree in said ease filed in 1903.

In an action in the state court of Nebraska by plaintiff against the county of Dakota to' correct alleged errors in the proceedings of the board, of county commissioners in assessing taxes upon said bridge and its approach, a decree was entered on June 13, 1904, by consent, which had in it this provision : “That so long as the bridge property of the Sioux City Bridge Company in Dakota county, consisting of the bridge structure proper and the west approach thereto, shall continue to be assessed for the purposes of taxation in said county at the total sum of sixty thousand ($60,000) dollars, and no more, the said Sioux City Bridge Company will make no objections to the levy of taxes upon said bridge property for and on behalf of school district No. 11 of Dakota county: Provided that, however, if at any time the valuation of said bridge property for the purposes of taxation in said Dakota county shall be raised above sixty thousand ($60,-000) dollars, said Sioux City Bridge Company shall not, by any acquiescence theretofore in the taxation of said property, for and on behalf of said school district, or the payment of taxes thereon, or by reason of any matter or thing in this judgment contained, be concluded or estopped from, or prejudiced in, claiming that any part or all of its said bridge property, commencing ninety (90) feet west of the fifth or westerly pier of said bridge and extending across said river to the first or easterly pier thereof, is not [43]*43within, the limits of said school district No. 11, and therefore not bound to respond in taxes for the benefit of said school district.”

After the entry of this decree in the state case the valuation was increased from time to time. The $60,000 assessment provided for by the decree was increased by 1920 to $700,000, and the school tax increased from $780 in 1904 to $8,750 in 1921. Plaintiff paid the school district taxes upon this property in the year 1904 and until 1921. Por the year 1920 they were paid under protest. For 1921 it offered to pay on the west approach, except the east 90 feet.

Another case was also brought by plaintiff against Dakota county in the state court .of Nebraska, in which decree was filed February 14,1924, providing in part as follows: “For the years 1918,1919, and 1920, the valuation of said property shall be fixed at five hundred sixty thousand and no/100 dollars ($560,000), of which amount two hundred thousand and no/100 dollars ($200,000) shall be fixed as the valuation of the approach to said bridge (except the east 90 feet in Dakota county), and three hundred sixty thousand and no/100 dollars ($360,-000) shall be fixed as the valuation of the bridge proper, including the east 90 feet of the approach. For the years 1921 and 1923 the valuation of said property shall be fixed at five hundred thousand and no/100 dollars ($500,000), of which amount two hundred thousand and no/100 dollars ($200,000) shall be fixed as the valuation of the approach of said bridge (except the east 90 feet) in Dakota county and three hundred thousand and no/100 dollars ($300,000) shall be fixed as the valuation of the bridge proper, including the east 90 feet of the approach.”

The school district issued $22,000 of bonds in 1915 and $30,000 of bonds in 1920. It is the theory of plaintiff that the part of the bridge in the state of Nebraska and the east 90 feet of the west approach are not in school district No. 11, nor in any other school district; that the government never surveyed the bed of the Missouri river; that fractional section 22 ended at high-water mark, as shown by the government survey of 1870; and that the school district ended where this survey showed fractional section 22 ended.

A variety of claims is made by the school district to sustain the position that the property sought to be taxed is within the school district. Some of them we group as follows:

(a) That the school district embraced this territory because of the creation while Nebraska was a territory of the Covington election precinct, which it is asserted extended to the center of the river, and that t'he election precinct and school district were identical under territorial laws.

(b) That the order of the county superintendent in 1904, upon petition of voters within school districts numbered 11, 23, and 27, established the boundary of the school district.

(c) That this provision of the Nebraska law, “Provided, on January 2, 1910, any territory which is not then a part of any school district shall, by the county superintendent of the county in which such territory lies, either be organized into new districts or attached to one or more adjoining districts: Provided further, changes affecting cities shall be made upon the petition of the board of education of the district or districts affected” (found in Rev. Stat. Neb. 1913, § 6703), automatically annexed that portion of the river bed adjacent to fractional section 22 extending from high-water mark to the center of the stream and covering the property in question.

(d) That the plaintiff, by paying school taxes levied against the bridge and the approach for many years, was estopped to claim said taxes were void in the year 1921.

Others are urged, but we desire to consider and dispose of these first and in their order.

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Bluebook (online)
12 F.2d 41, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sioux-city-bridge-co-v-miller-ca8-1926.