State Ex Rel. Pieper v. Patterson

70 N.W.2d 838, 246 Iowa 1129, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 443
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 7, 1955
Docket48721
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 70 N.W.2d 838 (State Ex Rel. Pieper v. Patterson) 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
State Ex Rel. Pieper v. Patterson, 70 N.W.2d 838, 246 Iowa 1129, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 443 (iowa 1955).

Opinion

Garfield, J.

The action is in the nature of quo warranto on the relation of William J. Pieper to test the legality of defendant Ray B. Menke’s claim to the office of trustee representing Election District No. 1 of Green Bay Levee and Drainage District No. 2 of Lee County. Rules 299 to 305, Rules of Civil Procedure, provide for such an action. Leave of court to bring the action was granted Pieper under rule 300, the county attorney and attorney general having failed on demand to do so. The relator claims he, not Menke, was duly elected trustee. The case was heard on stipulated facts. The district court upheld the legality of Menke’s election and plaintiff appeals.

Green Bay Levee and Drainage District No. 2 is operating under chapter 462, Code, 1954. It is divided into Election Districts Nos. 1, 2 and 3, each represented by one trustee. The election in controversy here, held January 17, 1953, was of a trustee to represent Election District No. 1 for a term of three years from January 24, 1953. The trustees of the levee and drainage district then in office, acting as an election board, certified defendant Menke as having been duly elected as a new trustee.

The legality of Menke’s election depends upon (1) whether the proper method of counting the votes was used, and (2) whether relator Pieper was “the bona fide owner of agricultural land in the election district” No. 1, so as to be eligible for trustee under section 462.7, Code, 1954. The statutes that govern counting the votes are sections 462.11, 462.12, which provide, so far as pertinent here:

*1131 “462.11 Qualifications of voters. Each landowner over twenty-one years of age * * * and any railway or other corporation owning land in said district assessed for benefits shall be entitled to one vote only, except as provided in section 462.12.
“462.12 Votes determined by assessment.
“1. When a petition asking for the right to vote in proportion to assessment of benefits at all elections for any purpose thereafter to be held within said district, signed by a majority of the landowners owning land within said district assessed for benefits, is filed with the board of trustees, then, in all elections of trustees thereafter held within said district, any person whose land is assessed for benefits * * * shall be entitled to one vote for each ten dollars or fraction thereof of the original assessment for benefits against the land actually owned by him in said district at the time of the election, * *. The vote of any landowner of the district may be .past by absent voters ballot * * *. For the purpose of this chapter all landowners of the district shall be considered qualified voters, regardless of their place of residence.”

Prior to December 30, 1952, there were 133 landowners in Green Bay Levee and Drainage District No. 2. One Lodwick and wife made two warranty deeds (Exhibits A and B) dated December 30, purporting to convey a triangular piece of ground containing 27.095 acres in the district to 100 grantees, 80 in Exhibit A and 20 in Exhibit B. The deeds were recorded January 10, 1953, together with nine similar deeds which purported to convey certain tracts to 22 relatives of the grantors. Thus on January 10, according to the records in the' county auditor’s office, there were 255 landowners in the district.

About 11 of the 27.095 acres were under cultivation. The rest of the tract has not been cultivated but is suitable for hunting, fishing and cabin sites along the Mississippi River. The deeds, Exhibits A and B, were made without monetary consideration paid or received. They were made at the instigation and procurement of the grantors and the grantors of the other nine deeds for the purpose of making the grantees landowners within the meaning of Code chapter 462. The grantors thereafter asked the grantees to petition for a change in the manner of *1132 counting votes in the election of January 17, 1953, and subsequent elections in the district from the manner stated in section 462.11 to that specified in 462.12.

Three of the grantees in Exhibits A and B were minors. All grantees except the minors took title with knowledge of the purpose of the grantors and subsequently signed “a petition asking for the right to vote in proportion to assessment of benefits” under section 462.12, but there was no agreement to sign the petition when the deeds were made. The petition above referred to was filed with the board of trustees January 10, 1953, when the deeds were filed for record. It had been prepared and circulated between December 30 and January 10 by the grantors of the deeds and their agents for the purpose of changing the manner of voting as above explained. One hundred of the 141 signers of the petition were grantees in the deeds. They were not record titleholders when they signed the petition but became such the day the deeds and petition were filed.

It is agreed that if the grantees in Exhibits A and B were not “landowners” under sections 462.11 and 462.12, a majority of the landowners did not petition for the right to vote in proportion to assessment of benefits and defendant Menke was legally certified as elected trustee from Election District No. 1. If, however, the grantees in these deeds were “landowners” under these Code sections, then a majority of landowners filed the petition for the change in counting the votes and relator Pieper, if legally qualified to hold the office, was elected trustee of the election district.

On the question whether relator was “the bona fide owner of agricultural land in the election district” No. 1, to be eligible for trustee under seetion 462.7, it is stipulated he was the grantee in a deed from one Willard and wife dated and filed for record January 16, 1953 (the day before the election) of a one-acre tract, triangular in shape, part of a larger triangular tract of 11 acres in the district. The grantors reserved an option to purchase the acre for $200 on or after January 25, 1956 (the day after Pieper’s term as trustee, if elected, would expire).

Relator owns 145 acres in Election District No. 2 in the *1133 levee and drainage district but no land in Election District No. 1 except the acre above described. He acquired this one acre for the principal purpose of making himself eligible for trustee in Election District No. 1. He did not farm or receive income from the acre in 1953 (trial was had in February or March 1954), but Willard, his grantor, did. Pieper intended to farm the tract and pay the taxes on it in 1954 and they are assessed to him. The one acre is three miles from the land relator owns and operates in Election District No. 2. It is not adjacent to a highway and is accessible only by use of the drainage district right of way for ditch.

The grantees in the deeds, Exhibits A and B, live in various parts of the United States, from California to Chicago. The record seems to indicate that in most and perhaps all instances where any grantee is married his or her spouse is also made a grantee.

Upon the above facts the district court held relator was not “the bona fide owner of agricultural land in the election district” No. 1 within the meaning of section 462.7 and was therefore ineligible for trustee.

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Bluebook (online)
70 N.W.2d 838, 246 Iowa 1129, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-pieper-v-patterson-iowa-1955.