Watson v. Drainage District No. 3

236 S.W.2d 423, 218 Ark. 361, 1951 Ark. LEXIS 342
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 12, 1951
Docket4-9385
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 236 S.W.2d 423 (Watson v. Drainage District No. 3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watson v. Drainage District No. 3, 236 S.W.2d 423, 218 Ark. 361, 1951 Ark. LEXIS 342 (Ark. 1951).

Opinions

George Rose Smith, J.

In 1949 the appellee, Drainage District No. 3 of Crittenden County, petitioned the county court to levy annually for ten years a tax of 5% uf the assessed benefits for the purpose of cleaning out and maintaining the district’s drainage system. Ark. Stats., 1947, § 21-533. The appellant, a landowner within the-district, protested the proposed levy on the theory that the benefits assessed against his land had been paid in full and that any additional levy would have to be authorized by a majority of the landowners, as set forth in Cox v. Drainage Dist. No. 27, 208 Ark. 755, 187 S. W. 2d 887. The county court found that the assessed benefits had not been paid in full and that a sufficient amount of uncollected benefits remained to permit the suggested levy. The court levied the tax as requested, and the circuit court affirmed the order. The case was then brought to us.

All material facts are stipulated. The district was organized under the general law in 1916, to construct a drainage system at an estimated cost of $228,911.32. Bonds in the amount of $240,000 were issued, and the commissioners estimated that the total cost of the improvement, including interest on the bonds and a 10% margin of safety, would be $430,925. Benefits assessed against the lands totaled $440,478.50. To pay the bonds the county court originally levied a tax of 3x/2% of the benefits for 1917 and 5% annually for the next nineteen years, making a iotal of 98%% of the assessed benefits. In 1921 a second bond issue of $35,000 was sold, and the lax was increased to 6%% annually for the years. 1927 through 1936. It is agreed that the total tax levies from 1917 through 1939, when the bonds were retired, have amounted to 123.6% of the assessed benefits. After 1939 the district was dormant until the present petition was filed in 1949.

Of course, the reason the district was able to collect more than the face amount of the benefits is that the assessed benefits bear interest at 6% per annum if the landowner does not elect to pay his assessment in full when the district is formed. Ark. Stats., % 21-540 and 21-541. The main issue in this case concerns the method of calculation to be used in determining when the landowner has paid the full amount of his assessed benefits, together with interest. We have touched upon this question several times, but we have not had occasion to state the formula tliát is to be applied in all cases.

The case that comes nearest to reaching this question is Richey v. Long Prairie Levee Dist., 203 Ark. 1, 155 S. W. 2d 582. There the district levied an annual tax of 6% of the assessed benefits from 1918 through 1922 and thereafter an annual tax of 8.75%. We approved the trial court’s use of the ordinary rules governing the application of partial payments. Under these rules the annual payments of 6% in the early years merely discharged the interest, and it was not until the tax was increased to 8.75% that the landowner began making payments on the principal.

The present case is somewhat different in that until 1927 the annual levies were less than the 6% interest rate. The question naturally arises, should the uncollected interest be added to the principal and be available for future tax levies? A study of the statutes convinces us that this Avas not the legislative intention. Until the passage of Act 177 of 1913 (Ark. Stats., § 21-540), the assessment of benefits did not bear interest. We had previously held that in the absence of statute the interest on borrowed money should be included as part of the cost of construction. Fitzgerald v. Walker, 55 Ark. 148, 17 S. W. 702. In practice this decision meant that the benefits from the proposed improvement had to exceed both the principal and interest of the bonds, else the cost'of construction would be greater than the benefits.

It is evident that a primary purpose of Act 177 of 1913 was to alleviate this situation. The statute was first construed in Oliver v. Whittaker, 122 Ark. 291, 183 S. W. 201. There, after referring to the Fitzgerald case, we said that additional burdens could not be cast on the landowners unless the assessment of benefits could be made to bear interest. It was pointed out that the 1913 statute gave the landowner the option of paying his assessment in full when the district was formed. If that option was not exercised the interest on the bonds would be met by the interest on the deferred payments of assessments. That’holding makes it clear that one purpose of the 1913 law was to permit interest on benefits to offset interest on bonds. Even more' indicative of the legislature’s thought was the statute construed in Pfeiffer v. Bertig, 141 Ark. 531, 217 S. W. 791. That statute provided that if the commissioners had to borrow money to construct the improvement they could fix a rate of interest on the assessed benefits sufficiently high to meet the interest on the bonds. Here again the two interest factors were closely allied.

In the light of this legislative history we cannot believe that the legislature intended that uncollected interest should be added to the principal. In this case, for example, the district was dormant from 1939 to 1949. During those years no taxes were levied; the landowners were in no sense in default in failing to pay interest on their assessments. They were not then taking advantage of the option to pay in installments, for no installments were due. It is not reasonable to think that the legislature meant for the landowners’ potential liability to be increased by 60% during such a period of inactivity. Bather, it is our conclusion that the annual interest on the assessed benefits was available to the district if it chose to collect all or any part of it by the levy of a tax, but in any given year tbe district’s failure to collect the full amount of interest operated as a waiver of the uncollected amount.

Hence, in the absence of some other procedure expressly adopted by the district, the rule is that the annual payments should be applied first to interest. If the annual levy is not more than 6% the principal remains intact. Payments in excess of 6% of the unpaid principal reduce it to the extent of the excess, but payments of less than 6% of the unpaid balance do not increase the principal by the addition of the uncollected interest. When this formula is applied to the present case the uncollected benefits are found to be ample to support the tax now complained of. In only ten years, 1927 through 1936, have the landowners been required to pay more than 6% of the benefits. In those years they paid 6%% annually, thereby reducing the principal one-half of 1% in 1927 and slightly more in the succeeding years as the unpaid balance became progessively smaller. Without encumbering this opinion with mathematical calculations it is enough to say that there are plainly enough uncollected benefits to warrant the levy of this tax.

The appellant further contends that even though the benefits are sufficient when so computed, the effect of Act 285 of 1941 (Ark. Stats., § 21-541) was to remove this district from the operation of the statutes that provide for interest on the assessment of benefits.

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Bluebook (online)
236 S.W.2d 423, 218 Ark. 361, 1951 Ark. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-drainage-district-no-3-ark-1951.