Yoknapatawpha Drainage District No. 2, Lafayette County, Mississippi v. United States

242 F.2d 925
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 23, 1957
Docket16283
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 242 F.2d 925 (Yoknapatawpha Drainage District No. 2, Lafayette County, Mississippi v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yoknapatawpha Drainage District No. 2, Lafayette County, Mississippi v. United States, 242 F.2d 925 (5th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment based on a jury verdict in favor of appellant in a land condemnation action in which appellant contended that the damages for the taking of its drainage canal should include the amount which had been assessed as benefits accruing to other lands previously taken by the Government, which would thus no longer be subject to a charge for the maintenance of the remaining section of the canal.

Although it is difficult to see how in a condemnation action for the taking of the ditch alone the drainage district could procedurally seek damages which it claims it suffered because the Government had in other actions taken title to two thirds of the lands in the drainage district, thus removing such lands from the assessment rolls for further charges in maintaining the rest of the canal, we shall consider the case as though this claim could properly be made in this manner, as did the trial court and as do both parties here,

j-j. qUi^e clear that whatever lands -jjjg United States took it took free of lien and jt -would be necessary for the court authorize the finding by the jury of a sufficient amount to discharge any lien that actually existed in favor of the district at the time of taking. We must therefore determine whether the Mississippi statute either created, or authorized the creation by the district of, a lien for the full amount of the benefits assessed or only for the amount necessary for the initial construction and the currently needed sums for maintenance,

The facts are not in dispute.

The United States instituted proceedjngS jn January, 1952, to condemn the £ee sjmple title to lands located in Yalobugh Panola and Lafayette Counties, Miggiggippi) for use in the construction Qf ^ Enid Dam an(J Regervoir Project. , . ,. „ , , . , ... The declaration of taking and complaint were filed, and for the purposes of this appeal, Tract No. 457 was taken, consisting of 126.5 acres and comprised of a drainage canal with connecting drainage works owned by the appellant. Along with the declaration of taking $1,265.00 was deposited in the registry of the court as the estimated just compensation for the tract. The district extends from the Yalobusha-Lafayette County lines in a northeasterly direction and constitutes the northeastern extremity of the lands condemned for the project. This district js part 0f a system of drainage canals and linked with other drainage districts below it. With the exception of 1,973.5 acres and two miles of the canal, both located in the eastern end of the district, the remaining 4,115.6 acres within the district were taken. The owners of this 4,115.6 acres were compensated for the market value of their lands taken.

*927 Judgment on the declaration of taking was entered January 22, 1952, vesting fee. simple title to the lands in question in the United States and authorizing immediate possession.

Appellant’s answer set out that the drainage district was organized and functions under Chapter 197, Laws of Mississippi, 1912, and is by virtue of such laws a municipal corporation; that the County Board of Drainage Commissioners, as required by law, assessed $147,-151.00 in benefits to accrue to the lands within the district by reason of the improvements to be made; that the assessment became a lien upon all of the lands in the district; that the drainage system in the district was constructed according to an approved plan for a total cost of $58,860.40 for which bonds were issued; that in accordance with assessment of benefits the district commissioners assessed the lands in the district for the years 1917 through 1941; 1 that the district has the power and is under obligation to assess the lands in the district for future necessary maintenance; that the unused assessed benefits on all lands in the district, including but not restricted to the lands previously taken, is $33,109.05; and that to defray expense it incurs in furnishing future drainage protection, it will be necessary to levy taxes based upon the assessed benefits accruing to all lands in the district, including those taken by the United States.

The appellant contends that by virtue of the alleged lien the district has an indefeasible estate in the lands which is property for which the United States must pay compensation in the amount of the unused assessed benefits, or, in the alternative, it should have the right to levy on the unused assessed benefits of all the lands in the district for maintenance of the drainage system when it becomes necessary.

Upon motion of the United States, the court entered an order striking all of the appellant’s answer except as to its claim for compensation for the canal and its land taken by the United States in the district. The order stated that Yoknapatawpha Drainage District No. 2 has placed no specific lien on any of this land up to this time and that there is no specific lien on any of the land in said Drainage District because of any unused assessed benefits.” We agree.

Chapter 197, Laws of Mississippi, 1912, is entitled in part, “An Act to create additional methods of organizing and maintaining drainage districts * * In conformity with Section 12 of the Act, prior to the organization of the drainage districts, the District Drainage Commissioners are to go upon the lands upon which the work of constructing the canal is proposed and determine: (1) the location of the proposed work; (2) the cost; (3) the land that will be injured or damaged by the proposed work and the aggregate amount to be sustained, and (4) “What lands will be benefited by the construction of the proposed work, and whether the aggregate amount of benefits will equal or exceed the cost of the construction of such work.”

Section 20 of the Act provides that after organization of the drainage district “the said district drainage commissioners shall go upon said lands and examine the same and apportion the cost of said proposed work upon the several tracts of land according to the benefits received [the assessment of benefits] by each from the said proposed work, * * * and shall also estimate and set down * * * the amount of the assessment against each tract of land and shall make and file a schedule or assessment roll of the same * *

It is clear from this section that the assessment of benefits and assessment for the cost of the proposed work are not one and the same, but the assessment of benefits accruing to each tract in the district from the construction of the drainage canals is used as a basis for apportioning to the various tracts within the district their proportionate share of the cost of the proposed work. Consequently the $147,151.00 figure here constitutes the total assessment of benefits *928 accruing to all tracts within the district and was the basis for apportioning the cost of the proposed construction work, $58,860.40, to each tract.

Section 25 provides that upon confirmation of the assessment, the “county board of drainage commissioners may order the assessments to be paid in installments, in such amount and at such times as will be convenient for the accomplishment of the proposed work;

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Bluebook (online)
242 F.2d 925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yoknapatawpha-drainage-district-no-2-lafayette-county-mississippi-v-ca5-1957.