WOODSON, P. J.
This suit was instituted by the collector of revenues of Lincoln county, in the circuit court thereof, to collect certain special tax bills assessed against the lands of the defendant, for benefits received, located in Kings Lake Drainage and Levee District, duly organized by the county court o£ that county, under and in pursuance to article 5 of chapter 122, Revised Statutes 1899.
The answer is quite lengthy and sets up the facts which will be presently stated as a defense thereto.
A trial was had, which resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff for the full amount sued for, and defendant duly appealed the cause to this court.
The facts are as follows:
The petition for the incorporation of the district embraced a large body of land lying along the Mississippi river in Lincoln and Pike counties, which included the lands of this defendant, who signed the petition praying for the incorporation of the district. He also had personal service and was notified by publication, as provided for by statute in such cases.
A number of persons (not including the defendant) owning lands embraced within the boundaries of the proposed district, after being duly notified, appeared and filed objections to the proposed boundaries, which were by the court taken up, considered and sustained; and thereby excluded their land from the proposed district.
[631]*631Thereafter in obedience to the mandate of the statutes, the court appointed commissioners to view the lands remaining in the proposed district and to report to the court, as provided by statute. To tbis report certain other owners of land in the district (not including defendant) filed exceptions, which were by the court overruled; and an order was made and entered of record confirming the report of the commissioners and establishing the said territory as a levee and drainage district, under the name previously mentioned.
Among the exceptions filed to said report of the commissioners were those of "W. D. Jamison, who, after the overruling of the same by the county court, appealed the cause to the circuit court, which on change of venue was sent to the circuit court of the city of of St. Louis. the latter court sustained’ said exceptions and the district appealed the cause to tbis court, which affirmed the judgment of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis. [176 Mo. 557.]
Thereafter, on September 29, 1903, certain other parties who bad acquired some of tbe lands belonging to former owners filed with tbe county court a supplemental petition asking to be made parties to tbe original proceedings and that tbe boundaries be extended so as to include all their lands and those of some other parties.
Upon filing tbis supplemental petition the county court made an order fixing the time for bearing the same on November 13, 1903, and on that date the court, after making certain findings, appointed other commissioners to view the lands, etc., as the” former commission had been directed, who made and filed their report on August 9, 1904. On the latter date the court made an order setting September 27, 1904, for persons interested to appear and contest the report, and due notice thereof was given by publication and personal service as required by statute. In othet [632]*632words, the same proceedings were had after the filing of the supplemental petition that were had in the original proceedings before the- case was appealed to the circuit court, and to this.
Among other things, the latter report contained recommendations for rebuilding and strengthening the levee which had been constructed by the first commissioners under the original proceedings, commenced in 1894, and prior to the date the judgment incorporating the district was reversed by this court; also the changing of the channel of Byrant’s Creek making a ditch with cross levees, drains and ditches to carry off the surface water and the running waters from the adjacent hills. In this report the commissioners estimated the cost of rebuilding the old levee and extending the same as previously stated, at $36,831.37, and for changing the Bryant’s Creek channel and digging the new ditch therefor at $45,882.98, and assessed benefits to each tract of land embraced in the new limits of the district its proportional part of said costs therefor.
This report also contained a recommendation of the commissioners that R. E. Black should be allowed a rebate or credit of $600 upon his assessment on account of the levee theretofore built by him along the east and south lines of his tract of land in survey 1706, which was to be taken and used in the construction of the new levees and ditches, and which the commissioners estimated was worth said- $600.
In response to said order of service and notice the court fixing September 27, 1904, the day for hearing exceptions to said report of the commissioners, various interested persons appeared and filed objections thereto, as authorized by the statute (but the defendant was not one of them), and thereupon the cause was continued to October 27, 1904, when said objections were by the court heard, and some of them were sustained and others were overruled. The court [633]*633then ordered the commissioners-to amend their report so as to conform to the findings and judgment of the court then and there rendered on said objections.
Among other things the court ordered the commissioners to amend or modify their last report so as to conform to the said judgment of the court, in the following particulars:
“That said commissioners make inquiry and determine the amount to be credited each tract of land entitled to credit on- account of the levee heretofore built by the former commissioners of this district and state the same in their report and also state the net amount of benefits charged and assessed against each tract after deducting the damages awarded and its proper proportion of the value of said old levee as fixed at $16,019.20, each tract which contributed to said work to be credited with such proportion of said sum of $16,019.20, as the amount contributed to the doing of said work by said tract bears to the aggregate amount paid by the owners of all tracts contributing to said work.”
If I correctly undérstand the record this report also rejected the $600 credit theretofore allowed Mr. Black, but be that as it may, it has no particular bearing upon the live issues involved in this appeal.
The court also ordered the commissioners to submit their modified report to the court on November 18, 1904, and the cause was continued to that date.
Upon that date the commissioners filed their amended or modified report as ordered, setting out everything required by the statutes from the inception of the proceedings down to the date of its filing. In other words, this report of the commissioners was in all things the same as an original report in an original proceeding, save and except the new commissioners undertook to and did deal with the conditions of things in- the district as they found them to exist after the old proceedings had in the cause had by this [634]*634court been declared null and void.
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WOODSON, P. J.
This suit was instituted by the collector of revenues of Lincoln county, in the circuit court thereof, to collect certain special tax bills assessed against the lands of the defendant, for benefits received, located in Kings Lake Drainage and Levee District, duly organized by the county court o£ that county, under and in pursuance to article 5 of chapter 122, Revised Statutes 1899.
The answer is quite lengthy and sets up the facts which will be presently stated as a defense thereto.
A trial was had, which resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff for the full amount sued for, and defendant duly appealed the cause to this court.
The facts are as follows:
The petition for the incorporation of the district embraced a large body of land lying along the Mississippi river in Lincoln and Pike counties, which included the lands of this defendant, who signed the petition praying for the incorporation of the district. He also had personal service and was notified by publication, as provided for by statute in such cases.
A number of persons (not including the defendant) owning lands embraced within the boundaries of the proposed district, after being duly notified, appeared and filed objections to the proposed boundaries, which were by the court taken up, considered and sustained; and thereby excluded their land from the proposed district.
[631]*631Thereafter in obedience to the mandate of the statutes, the court appointed commissioners to view the lands remaining in the proposed district and to report to the court, as provided by statute. To tbis report certain other owners of land in the district (not including defendant) filed exceptions, which were by the court overruled; and an order was made and entered of record confirming the report of the commissioners and establishing the said territory as a levee and drainage district, under the name previously mentioned.
Among the exceptions filed to said report of the commissioners were those of "W. D. Jamison, who, after the overruling of the same by the county court, appealed the cause to the circuit court, which on change of venue was sent to the circuit court of the city of of St. Louis. the latter court sustained’ said exceptions and the district appealed the cause to tbis court, which affirmed the judgment of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis. [176 Mo. 557.]
Thereafter, on September 29, 1903, certain other parties who bad acquired some of tbe lands belonging to former owners filed with tbe county court a supplemental petition asking to be made parties to tbe original proceedings and that tbe boundaries be extended so as to include all their lands and those of some other parties.
Upon filing tbis supplemental petition the county court made an order fixing the time for bearing the same on November 13, 1903, and on that date the court, after making certain findings, appointed other commissioners to view the lands, etc., as the” former commission had been directed, who made and filed their report on August 9, 1904. On the latter date the court made an order setting September 27, 1904, for persons interested to appear and contest the report, and due notice thereof was given by publication and personal service as required by statute. In othet [632]*632words, the same proceedings were had after the filing of the supplemental petition that were had in the original proceedings before the- case was appealed to the circuit court, and to this.
Among other things, the latter report contained recommendations for rebuilding and strengthening the levee which had been constructed by the first commissioners under the original proceedings, commenced in 1894, and prior to the date the judgment incorporating the district was reversed by this court; also the changing of the channel of Byrant’s Creek making a ditch with cross levees, drains and ditches to carry off the surface water and the running waters from the adjacent hills. In this report the commissioners estimated the cost of rebuilding the old levee and extending the same as previously stated, at $36,831.37, and for changing the Bryant’s Creek channel and digging the new ditch therefor at $45,882.98, and assessed benefits to each tract of land embraced in the new limits of the district its proportional part of said costs therefor.
This report also contained a recommendation of the commissioners that R. E. Black should be allowed a rebate or credit of $600 upon his assessment on account of the levee theretofore built by him along the east and south lines of his tract of land in survey 1706, which was to be taken and used in the construction of the new levees and ditches, and which the commissioners estimated was worth said- $600.
In response to said order of service and notice the court fixing September 27, 1904, the day for hearing exceptions to said report of the commissioners, various interested persons appeared and filed objections thereto, as authorized by the statute (but the defendant was not one of them), and thereupon the cause was continued to October 27, 1904, when said objections were by the court heard, and some of them were sustained and others were overruled. The court [633]*633then ordered the commissioners-to amend their report so as to conform to the findings and judgment of the court then and there rendered on said objections.
Among other things the court ordered the commissioners to amend or modify their last report so as to conform to the said judgment of the court, in the following particulars:
“That said commissioners make inquiry and determine the amount to be credited each tract of land entitled to credit on- account of the levee heretofore built by the former commissioners of this district and state the same in their report and also state the net amount of benefits charged and assessed against each tract after deducting the damages awarded and its proper proportion of the value of said old levee as fixed at $16,019.20, each tract which contributed to said work to be credited with such proportion of said sum of $16,019.20, as the amount contributed to the doing of said work by said tract bears to the aggregate amount paid by the owners of all tracts contributing to said work.”
If I correctly undérstand the record this report also rejected the $600 credit theretofore allowed Mr. Black, but be that as it may, it has no particular bearing upon the live issues involved in this appeal.
The court also ordered the commissioners to submit their modified report to the court on November 18, 1904, and the cause was continued to that date.
Upon that date the commissioners filed their amended or modified report as ordered, setting out everything required by the statutes from the inception of the proceedings down to the date of its filing. In other words, this report of the commissioners was in all things the same as an original report in an original proceeding, save and except the new commissioners undertook to and did deal with the conditions of things in- the district as they found them to exist after the old proceedings had in the cause had by this [634]*634court been declared null and void. And in dealing with that condition the commissioners assessed the benefits and damages against each tract of land embraced in the district as provided for by the statute, and in obedience to the order of the county court before mentioned, gave to each tract which contributed to the old work a credit for its proportional part of the $16,019.20, the value placed upon the old levee appropriated by the district in working out the new scheme.
After the commissioners filed this modified report the court continued the cause to November 29, 1904. On that date the modified report was duly approved and the assessments of benefits and damages levied therein, as well as the credits ordered, were made and duly approved and confirmed, and the district was incorporated as provided for by statute.
Some of the landowners again appealed the cause to the circuit court and a trial was had, which resulted in a decree thereof confirming the orders and judgments of the county court in all things.
The appellant did not appear or take any part whatever in the proceedings after the judgment of the circuit court was by this court reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Notice • I. Counsel for appellant insist that the judgment of the circuit court is erroneous and should be reversed because the order of the county court, made November 18, 1904, directing the commissioners of the district to amend their report theretofore filed on August 9, 1904, so as to conform to said order of the court, changing the boundaries of the district so as to exclude certain lands to which objections had been filed and sustained, was absolutely void, because he had no notice of the proposed amendment.
There is no merit in this insistence.
[635]*635The record shows that the appellant was one of the petitioners for the formation of the original district ; and not only that, he was personally served and dnly notified by publication.
Moreover, after the cause had been remanded by this court to the county court for further procedure, certain other landowners filed a supplemental petition in the cause, praying the court to extend the boundaries of the district so as to include their lands, and those of certain other persons named. Upon the filing of this supplemental petition the appellant was again served with personal service and was dnly notified by publication. So it conclusively appears from this record that he voluntarily entered his appearance in the cause by signing the original petition and was thereafter duly served four times; which he does not deny. But his contention is, that he had no notice that the court had ordered the commissioners to make the amendment before mentioned, changing the boundaries of the district, which is true; but there is no question but what the court had the legal authority under the statutes to make said order, and the appellant having been in court all the time cannot be now heard to say he knew nothing of the order nor of the change of the boundaries of the district, made in pursuance thereof.
This question was presented to this court in the case of State ex rel. v. Wilson, 216 Mo. 215, l. c. 274, and was there decided against the contention of counsel here.
But independent of that case and the authorities therein cited, the rule is universal, so far as I know, that when a person enters his appearance in a cause or when he has been personally served, he is in the court for all the purposes of that case from that time until the final disposition of the same. Of course there are minor exceptions to that rule, for instance, where the party has been finally discharged from the court [636]*636by any order or decree, unexcepted to in time, and unappealed from, etc.
Benefits: change Just Apportionment. II. It is next contended by counsel for appellant that the judgment of the circuit, court was erroneous and should be reversed because the benefits and damages assessed by the commissioners against the various tracts of land embraced in the district were different, as reported by the commissioners on November 18, 1904, from what they were as reported by them on August 9, 1904; also that they were not equally, justly or equitably apportioned against the various tracts of land, and that the credits allowed in favor of the same, on account of the value of the old work, were not equally and properly apportioned, all to the detriment óf appellant.
This contention is based upon the same ground that the validity of the order changing the boundaries of the district was challenged, which was disposed of in paragraph one of this opinion, namely, that the appellant had no notice of said intended change of the assessments and credits, as previously made, etc. Both of these changes were made at the same time and reported to the court in the same report and passed upon and confirmed at the same time; and if the conclusions reached in paragraph one, regarding the change of the boundaries of the district, are correct, then it necessarily follows that the changes made in the assessments and credits must also be held to be correct, as. there is no contention that the county court did not have the authority to make the changes, barring the contention that the appellant should have been notified of the intended change and afforded an opportunity to defend against the same.
III. But independent of the rulings made in paragraphs one and two, the defenses interposed by appellant in the circuit court and in this court are [637]*637■unavailing, for the reason that the very basis of his contention challenges not only the validity of the assessments and credits made by the county court, in a collateral attack, but also the organization of the drainage district, which cannot be done. [State ex rel. v. Blair, 245 Mo. 680, par. 1 and cases cited; State ex rel. v. Wilson, 216 Mo. 215, l. c. 274; Black v. Early, 208 Mo. 281.]
From these observations it must follow that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed; and it is so ordered.
All concur.