State Ex Rel. Kinder v. Little River Drainage District

236 S.W. 848, 291 Mo. 267, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 99
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 31, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 236 S.W. 848 (State Ex Rel. Kinder v. Little River Drainage District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Kinder v. Little River Drainage District, 236 S.W. 848, 291 Mo. 267, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 99 (Mo. 1921).

Opinions

The suit is to recover the general State and county taxes assessed against real estate owned by the defendant. The petition describes thirty tracts of land aggregating 4,635.66 acres, situated in Bollinger County, and demands judgment for delinquent taxes for the years 1916 and 1917.

The answer set forth facts which, under Section 6, Article X, of the State Constitution, the defendant claims exempts the land from taxation.

On a trial of the cause at the September term of the Bollinger Circuit Court judgment was rendered for the plaintiff enforcing the tax lien, in the sum of $966.62. From that judgment the defendant appeals.

The Little River Drainage District was organized in 1907. It comprises 1136 square miles, in an elongated shape extending approximately north and south parallel with the Mississippi River. It includes a part of Bollinger County on the northwest and extends southward through several counties. Bordering this territory on the north and northwest is a range of hills called the Ozark Hills; flowing down from these hills are several streams including Castor River and Crooked Creek, the waters of which formerly overflowed the lands comprising the district. In order to divert these waters a channel known as the Castor River Diversion Channel was constructed across the north end of the district, extending from the Castor River on the northwest eastward to the Mississippi River. This diversion channel varied in width from sixty-four to one hundred and thirty feet. Along the south *Page 272 side of this channel was built a levee which averaged eighteen feet in height, was twelve feet wide at the top and eighty-four feet wide at the base. North of the channel and between it and the Ozark Hills was a stretch of land acquired by the company for the purpose of forming what were called detention basins. There were three of these detention basins, the west basin, the middle basin and the east basin. The west basin, which includes the land involved in this suit, was low, flat land, subject to overflow by Castor River and Crooked Creek. The tract is about eleven miles in length, extending east and west, and comprises about ten thousand acres.

The answer of the defendant alleged and the evidence proved that three of the thirty tracts of land against which the State seeks to enforce a general tax lien were wholly within the right-of-way of the headwater diversion channel; thirteen of the tracts were wholly within the west basin, and parts of the remaining tracts were used as the right-of-way of the headwater diversion channel or in the west basin; that the purpose of acquiring the land included in the west basin was for the storage of flood water from the Castor River when the headwater diversion channel was unable to take it off as fast as it flowed in, and that all the tracts of land described in the petition had been acquired and were necessary for the purposes of the district.

In addition to the improvements mentioned the district had built 625 miles of dredge canals.

At the time of the trial the waters of Castor River were being diverted by the headwater diversion channel to the Mississippi River, and land in the west basin was subject to overflow from those waters.

The plaintiff offered evidence to show that part of the land in the west basin had been used for agricultural purposes, the exact amount is not stated. It was estimated by one witness that about eight hundred acres had been used for tillable purposes.

The defendant showed a net loss of over twelve hundred dollars in the income derived from the tracts *Page 273 of land which were cultivated in the west basin. There was evidence that all of the land in the west detention basin was low, wet, swamp, covered with swamp timber. The defendant's engineer testified that all of the lands within the basin were subject to overflow and at times were entirely covered at variable depths.

On that evidence the court rendered judgment for the plaintiff, as stated, and the defendant appealed.

I. The question presented for determination is whether the land on which the State seeks to establish a general tax lien is exempt from taxation under Section 6, Article X, of thePurposes Constitution, which provides that: "The property, realof Acts. and personal, of the State, counties and other municipal corporations, and cemeteries, shall be exempt from taxation" etc.

Exemption in almost the same words is provided by Section 12753, Revised Statutes 1919.

The defendant, Little River Drainage District, was incorporated in November, 1907, by the Circuit Court of Butler County, under the Act of 1905, which appears in Chapter 41, Revised Statutes 1909. This act was amended by the Act of 1913 which now appears in Chapter 28, Revised Statutes 1919. The Act of 1913 was made to apply to existing districts by providing that the powers, rights and remedies existing on behalf of a drainage district of this State might "be enforced and made available under the provisions of this act." The change in the amendment of 1913, however, did not materially affect the law applicable to this case.

The Act of 1905, Section 5496, Revised Statutes 1909, provided that a majority of owners in the contiguous body of swamp and overflowed land might "form a drainage district for the purpose of having such lands reclaimed and protected from the effects of water, by drainage or otherwise."

In the amendment of 1913, Section 4378, Revised Statutes 1919, such owners were authorized to form a *Page 274 drainage district "for the purpose of having such lands and other property reclaimed and protected from the effects of water, for sanitary or agricultural purposes, or when the same may be conducive to the public health, convenience or welfare, or of public utility or benefit."

The purpose mentioned in the original act is general enough to include the more specific statement in the Act of 1913. "The effects of water" necessarily would include every effect of water, so that the amendment added nothing to the purposes for which a drainage district might be formed.

II. The Act of 1905 provides for the incorporation of a district, notwithstanding the objections of a minority in interest of landowners in the proposed district,Corporation. who had a right to their day in court to show cause why their lands should not be "made liable for taxation for draining the same." [Secs. 5497, 5498, 5499, R.S. 1909.]

This statute then provided (Sec. 5507, R.S. 1909) for a board of supervisors and engineers, and defined their powers (Sec. 5513, R.S. 1909) and stated that:

"In order to effect the drainage, reclamation and protection from overflow of the lands in said district, the said board of supervisors is authorized and empowered to clean out, straighten, widen, change the course and flow, alter or deepen any ditch, drain, river, water course, pond, lake, creek, bayou or natural stream in or out of said district, or to fill," etc., . . . "in order to turn the flow and direction of any volume of water in or out of said district, or to concentrate the flow of water in or out of said district, so as to protect, drain and reclaim the lands in said district."

The board was further authorized to "construct and maintain main or lateral ditches, canals, levees, dams, sluices, reservoirs, holding basins and floodways in or out of said district," etc. And "to hold, control and acquire, by donation or purchase, and if need be, condemn any real estate, easement, railroad right-ofway, *Page 275 sluiceway, reservoir, holding basin or franchise in or out of said district," etc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 S.W. 848, 291 Mo. 267, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-kinder-v-little-river-drainage-district-mo-1921.