Whitehouse v. Sam Ferguson Drainage District 11

284 S.W. 1009, 215 Ky. 106, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 671
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 11, 1926
StatusPublished

This text of 284 S.W. 1009 (Whitehouse v. Sam Ferguson Drainage District 11) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitehouse v. Sam Ferguson Drainage District 11, 284 S.W. 1009, 215 Ky. 106, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 671 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Turner, Commissioner—

Affirming.

On August 2nd, 1915, certain landowners of McLean county filed their proceeding in the county court to establish a drainage district wholly within that county. The proceeding.remained upon the docket of that court for about 5% years with only certain preliminary steps taken, and then in February, 1921, certain landowners of Muhlenberg county owning lands in that county adjacent to the proposed drainage district in McLean county filed their petition to he made parties to the proceeding, and asked to have the proposed district extended so as t'o embrace certain territory in Muhlenberg county. Accordingly viewers were directed to view the newly proposed territory in connection with that originally proposed, and a preliminary report having been filed including the Muhlenberg county lands, on August 1,1921, the clerk of the McLeau'county court, acting under the orders of that court, issued process ag’ainst the landowners embraced within the Muhlenberg county territory, of whom appellant was one. That process appears to have been executed upon appellant on the 4th. of October, 1921, at a time, however, when two terms of the McLean county 'court had intervened between the issnal of the process and its service.

Prior, however, to the service no step affecting appellant or his property was taken in the proceeding, and never at any time thereafter did he enter or take any step whatsoever in the' proceeding. But .certain other *109 parties did file exceptions, and after they were disposed of in May, 1922, a judgment was entered establishing the drainage district, and referring the matter to the drainage commissioner for further action. The commissioner appointed an engineer who made his report to the commissioner showing in detail the boundary of the main ditch and all arms or laterals, the location of the lands affected, etc., together with a map showing the location of the main ditch and all laterals and arms, and the acreage of all lands affected. For some reason a supplementary engineer’s report was thereafter filed with the commissioner, and after its filing the commissioner filed a report adopting the original report as modified by the second report, and there was an order of court adopting and approving the drainage commissioner’s report as thus changed and modified, and directing the viewers to classify and assess the benefits, damages, etc., which was thereafter done.

The assessment against appellant’s land so fixed and approved was $549.60.

The original report and map filed by the engineer with the commissioner showed that one arm of the main ditch was to run directly through the property of appellant, but the modified or supplemental report as finally adopted by the court eliminated so much of that arm 'as run through the lands of appellant and left his lands, as now alleged, wholly unaffected or benefited by the establishment of the draniage project.

But appellant entered no motion, filed no exception, and took no steps whatsoever to have any order made so as to relieve him from this assessment. Nor did he appeal from the action of the county court, as he might have done under the act authorizing the creation of the district.

Upon the filing of the assessment roll the court made an order directing notice by publication in a newspaper that on a given date thereafter the assessment roll would be considered, and the same was thereafter confirmed and made final by an order of the court without exception or objection by appellant.

After the time for appeal had expired this action for a new trial was filed by appellant setting forth in great detail the facts we have endeavored to state above. His allegation in substance is that the drainage district as finally established did not benefit his lands in the least by *110 reason of the supplemental or modified report filed by the engineer and adopted by the court, and that therefore that arm of the ditch having’ been eliminated in so far as it benefited his lands, the assessment against his land should not stand.

In the county court a demurrer was sustained to' his petition, and upon its dismissal he appealed to the circuit court, and there again a general demurrer to the petition was sustained, and from an order dismissing the same this appeal is prosecuted.

At the outset we are met with a motion by appellee to dismiss this appeal. The motion is based upon the failure of appellant to take certain steps required by the provisions of the drainage act within certain time in order to appeal from the action of the court in such proceeding. But this is an action under the provisions of the code for a new trial, and in the case of C. St. L. & N. O. R. R. Co. v. Cypress Swamp Drainage District, 196 Ky. 792, the precise question of practice was passed upon, and the court held that the provisions of the drainage act with reference to the taking of appeals, had no application to appeals in an action for a new trial under the provision of the Code, but that the Code regulated the same. It is true in that action the drainage act of 1918 was involved, while in this the drainage act of 1912 is involved, but no distinction in the principle can be made.

It results therefore that the motion to dismiss the appeal must be and is overuled.

But it is said for appellant that so far as he is concerned the judgment establishing the drainage district and all proceedings had therein are void because he was never before the court. This contention is based upon the view that the summons which was served upon him, and as alleged returnable at the September term of the McLean county court, was not valid because not served upon him until after the expiration of that term.

The act in question (section 2380-4), in providing for the filing of exceptions to the preliminary report, says:

‘ ‘ The action on the viewers ’ preliminary report shall stand for exceptions as to each and every party brought before the court, at the next regular term of the county court after process shall have been executed for the length of time provided by the Civil Code for actions in the circuit court. ’ ’

*111 The act prescribes no form of “process” which shall be served npon the interested party, and we are nnable to see why some act upon his part was not demanded when the paper was served upon him, even though it was served after the.term at which it was directed to be returned. It certanily gave him notice there was a proceeding in the county court for the establishment of a drainage district which affected his land; and he knew the duty devolved upon him, if'he desired to contest the validity of that service, to appear in court and enter a motion to quash the return. He had no right to assume that the service was absolutely void because it was returnable at a term of court that had passed; and as a reasonably sensible man he must have assumed that no action had theretofore been taken which could affect him; but that his presence in court was required at some future time to take such steps as he deemed advisable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 S.W. 1009, 215 Ky. 106, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitehouse-v-sam-ferguson-drainage-district-11-kyctapphigh-1926.