State ex rel. Marshall v. Bugg

123 S.W. 827, 224 Mo. 537, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 21
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 21, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 123 S.W. 827 (State ex rel. Marshall v. Bugg) 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. Marshall v. Bugg, 123 S.W. 827, 224 Mo. 537, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 21 (Mo. 1909).

Opinion

FOX, J.

This is an original proceeding by mandamus, instituted by relators in this court, to compel •the respondents, William H. Bugg and James Mc-Pheeters, who are, respectively, presiding judge and clerk of the county court of Scott county, Missouri, to sign and attest bonds of Scott county, Missouri, to the amount of one hundred thousand dollars, which were, by the county court of Scott county, Missouri, on the 16th day of December, 1907, ordered issued to pay for the construction of a system of ditches and levees in what is known as Drainage District No. 4 of Scott county, Missouri.

We do not deem it essential to reproduce in full the petition presented to this court for the relief sought, as heretofore indicated, but it will be sufficient to briefly state in substance what such petition contains.

This proceeding is predicated upon the provisions of article 4 of chapter 122, Revised Statutes 1899', and amendments adopted in 1905, Laws of 1905, p. 180. These laws, to which reference is made, fully provide for the organization of drainage districts by the county courts of the respective counties in which the lands are situate, to which the drainage district has application.

Section 8278 of the Laws of 1905, provides: “The county court of any county in the State of Missouri shall have power at any regular session thereof, when the same shall 'be conducive to the public health, con[542]*542venience or welfare, or where the same will he of public utility or‘benefit, to cause to be constructed, straightened, widened, altered or deepened, any ditch, drain, natural stream, not navigable, or water-course, within said county, when the same is necessary to drain any lots, lands, public or corporate roads, or railroads. The word ‘ditch’ as used in this article shall be held to include a drain, water-course, or levee, or any drain, water-course, or levee hereafter constructed. The petition for any such improvement shall be held to include any side, lateral, spur or branch, ditch, drain, water-course, or levee, the lowering of any lake or any other work necessary to secure fully the object of the improvement petitioned for, whether the same is mentioned in such petition or not.”

Sections 8279 and 8280, Laws of 1905', provide for the preliminary steps necessary to be taken for the organization of the drainage district improvement which may be sought to be made.

Those sections provide:

“Sec. 8279. Before any county court shall establish any ditch, drain, water-course, or levee improvement, as provided for in this article, there shall be filed, with the clerk of the county court of such county, a petition signed by one or more landowners if the improvement be less than five miles in length, and if it be more than five miles in length, by five or more landowners, whose lands will be liable to be affected by or assessed for the construction of the same, setting forth the necessity therefor, with a general description of the proposed ditch or other improvement, the starting point, route and terminus thereof, and whether it is desired to issue bonds. There shall be filed, with such petition, a bond in the sum of not less than fifty dollars per mile, payable to the State of Missouri, signed by one or more of the petitioners, and two or more good and sufficient freehold sureties, to be approved by the county court, conditioned for the [543]*543payment of all costs and expenses if the prayer of the petition be not granted or the petition be from any canse dismissed.”
“Section 8280: When such petition is filed and such bond approved, the county court shall, if in regular session, or at a called session, appoint three resident freeholders of said county, not interested in the construction of said wort and not of tin to any person interested therein, as viewers or commissioners, and also a competent civil engineer, to assist them, who shall proceed at once under the direction of an order of said court made therein certified by the clert thereof, to view the line of the proposed ditch or improvement and report by actual view of the premises, along and adjacent thereto, whether the proposed improvement is necessary, practicable and would be of public utility or conducive to the public health, convenience or welfare, and if they find that the proposed improvement is necessary, practicable and would be of public utility or conducive to the public health, convenience or welfare, then they shall also report the best route for the proposed drain whether any portion of the same should be covered, and whether the work of constructing the same should be by allotment to the several interests, or be let by contract without allotment. They shall report their finding, in writing, to the county court at a time fixed by said court, or, if no time be fixed, at the next regular term thereof, and the said court shall cause the same to be entered on its records. All viewers and engineers, before entering upon the discharge of their duties as such, shall take and subscribe an oath to faithfully and impartially discharge their duties as such viewers and engineer, and to make, to the county court, a true and correct report of the work done by them.”

The petition presented to the county court, it is alleged in the petition upon this application, fully [544]*544conforms to the requirements of the sections of the statute herein indicated.

Section 8281, on the subject of drainage districts, makes provision that, after the report of the viewers, appointed under the provisions of section 8280-, is filed, a time should be fixed by the county court for a hearing upon the petition and report of the viewers, and for the giving of notice of such hearing.

Section 8282, treating of this same subject, substantially provides that if, at the hearing provided for, as above stated, the county court shall find against the improvement, it shall dismiss the petition and the proceedings at the cost of the petitioners, and section 8283 provides that, if the court shall find in favor of making the improvement, the land which will be thereby benefited shall constitute a drainage district which shall be designated by number.

Section 8284 provides that, if the county court shall find that the proposed ditch, or other improvement, is necessary for sanitary or agricultural purposes, or would be a public utility, or conducive to the public health, convenience or welfare, it shall cause to be entered upon the record of the court such finding.

Following this, provision is made for the appointment of a civil engineer and three viewers who are required to take the oath as prescribed by one of the sections of this statute, and then to go upon the land where the ditches are to be located, and, if only the general route of such ditches has been located, then it shall be the duty of the engineer and the three viewers to establish the precise location of such ditches along lines where, in their judgment, the proposed improvement will prove most efficient.

Other provisions are made for the surveying and leveling of the line and for the determination of the dimensions and form of the proposed ditches, levee, or other improvement, and what disposition shall be made of excavated earth.

[545]

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.W. 827, 224 Mo. 537, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-marshall-v-bugg-mo-1909.