Wrightsman v. Stevenson

1934 OK 86, 33 P.2d 499, 168 Okla. 63, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 13, 1934
Docket23958
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1934 OK 86 (Wrightsman v. Stevenson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wrightsman v. Stevenson, 1934 OK 86, 33 P.2d 499, 168 Okla. 63, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 79 (Okla. 1934).

Opinion

BUSBY, J.

This action originated in, the district court of Tulsa county. It comes to this court on appeal. The plaintiff in error was plaintiff in the trial court, and the defendants in error were defendants therein. For the sake of convenience, parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

The plaintiff, Edna Wrightsman, commenced this action on the 10th day of June, 1931, agaist the defendants R. Y. Stephenson, M. A. Snyder, and Carl Elmore (directors of water improvement district No. 8), the board of county' commissioners of Tulsa county, Okla., W. L. North, J. W. Dickery, *64 Ed. W. Hedgecock, O. G. Weaver, county clerk of Tulsa county, Okla., and Standard Paving Company, a corporation. As a property owner she contended that water improvement district No. 8 of Tulsa county was illegal, null, and void, because of alleged judicial defects in the proceedings by which it was undertaken to be created. Plaintiff likewise sought the cancellation of special assessments imposed upon her property to defray the cost of the improvements. She also prayed for injunctive relief to prevent bonds from being issued and the contemplated improvement from being constructed.

We shall subsequently refer in detail to a portion of the alleged jurisdictional defects upon which the plaintiff relies to recover.

The defendants, as one of several defenses to the action of the plaintiff, pleaded the statute of limitation. Under our view of this case, it is unnecessary that other defenses be considered.

At the hearing of the cause- the trial court, on motion of the defendants, rendered judgment for the -defendants on the pleadings and the opening statement.

In support of the- decision of the trial court the defendants assert in their brief that “The plaintiff was barred by the special statute of limitation.” In response to defendants’ contention upon this point the plaintiff says:

“The position of plaintiff in respect to that is: That such limitation is applicable only when the municipality acquires jurisdiction to make the assessment, etc., and the validity of the assessment, etc., is attacked for mere irregularity and not upon jurisdictional ground: that where, as here, the attack is on jurisdictional ground, in consequence of which the attempted assessment, etc., is void, such short statute of limitations lias no application and does not preclude attack.”

The water improvement district in question was created under the provisions of chapter 145, Session Laws 1925 (secs. 13211 to 13239, inclusive, O. S. 1931). Section 25 of the act (see. 13235, O. S. 1931) provides in part:

“No suit shall be suutained to be set aside any assessment or to enjoin the county commissioners or the board of directors of any water improvement district from levying or collecting any assessment or installment thereof, or interest or penalty thereon, or issuing the bonds, or providing for their payment, or contesting the validity thereof upon any ground, or for any reason, other than the failure of the board of directors to adopt and publish the resolution declaring the necessity for such improvements, and the publication thereof as provided in section 10 of this Act (13220) and the failure of the board of county commissioners to give notice of the hearing on the return of the appraisers unless such suit shall be commenced not more than fifteen (15) days after the publication of the resolution levying assessments, and no suit shall be sustained after, the work has been completed and accepted by the board of directors of the water improvement district, except for failure to give * * * notice of the hearing on sucli return of the appraisers.”

The proceedings to organize the improvement district and levy the assessment on the property included therein occurred in the years 1928 and 1929. This action was commenced in 1931. The 15 days’ special statute of limitation constituted a bar to the action if that statute of limitation is applicable to this ease.

Under the above-quoted statutory provision two classes of cases are excluded from its operation: First, cases based upon the failure of the board of directors of the water improvement district to adopt and publish a resolution declaring the necessity for the improvement. Second, cases based upon the failure of the board of county commissioners to give notice of hearing on the return of the appraisers. This case does not fall within either of those classes. Plaintiff does not allege that the resolution declaring the necessity of the improvement was not adopted and published nor that the board of county commissioners failed to give notice of hearing on the return of the appraisers.

Plaintiff, however, urges that the short statute of limitation does not apply in any case where jurisdictional defects in the attempted organization of the water improvement district exist. This contention is legal-sound. It is supported by analogy by the decisions of this court construing the short statute of limitation providing for street improvement districts. (See section 6241, O. S. 1931, which is practically identical with the statute in the case at bar). Morrow v. Barber Asphalt Paving Co., 27 Okla. 247, 111 P. 198; Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. v. City of Tulsa, 45 Okla. 382, 145 P. 398; Flanagan v. City of Tulsa, 55 Okla. 638, 155 P. 542; Southern Surety Co. v. Jay, 74 Okla. 213, 178 P. 95; City of Muskogee v. Nicholson, 69 Okla. 273, 171 P. 1102. The plaintiff contends that the "defects complained of in her petition are jurisdictional. We will therefore consider the alleged defects for the purpose of determining whether or *65 not tlio samo are jurisdictional as distinguished from mere irregularities.

An excellent distinction between jurisdictional- defects in the organization of a special improvement district which renders that proceeding or some part thereof void and subject to collateral attack, and an irregularity in the proceedings which can only be attacked directly in the manner prescribed by law, was stated by the Supreme Court of Maine, in the ease of Cabbossee Nat. Bank v. Rich, 81 Me. 164, and later quoted with approval by this court in the case of St. Louis-S. F. Ry. Co. v. City of Wetumka, 136 Okla. 64, 276 P. 226. It was therein said:

“The difference between void proceedings and merely irregular proceedings is the difference between a wrongful act and a rightful act imperfectly or defectively done. The one is a wrongful act and the other a wrongful way of doing an act. In doubtful cases courts incline to treat defects as irregularities rather than as nullities.”

In the case of Price v. Water District No. 8, 147 Okla. 11, 293 P. 1092 (which case involves a previous action in which the same district involved in this case was collaterally attacked), this court said in syllabus par. 4:

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Bluebook (online)
1934 OK 86, 33 P.2d 499, 168 Okla. 63, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wrightsman-v-stevenson-okla-1934.