Sloan v. Village Creek Drainage District

Decision Date01 November 1926
Docket Number220
Citation287 S.W. 380,171 Ark. 1088
PartiesSLOAN v. VILLAGE CREEK DRAINAGE DISTRICT
CourtArkansas Supreme Court

Appeal from Lawrence Circuit Court, Western District; Dene H Coleman, Judge; affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

Eugene Sloan, Cunningham & Cunningham, H. L. Ponder, for appellant O. C. Blackford and Eli Thornburgh, pro se.

W. M Ponder, W. A. Jackson, W. P. Smith and G. M. Gibson, for appellee.

OPINION

MCCULLOCH, C. J.

The improvement district involved in this controversy was created by special statute enacted by the General Assembly at the extraordinary session of 1920, which authorized the construction of a drainage system in the area described in Lawrence County, and the imposition of taxes upon benefits in order to raise funds to pay for the improvement. The district embraces nearly 70,000 acres of land, and the authorized plan for the improvement contemplates the construction of a main ditch, or canal, from twenty to seventy-five feet in width, through the channel of Village Creek, for a distance of about twenty-two miles. The plan also contemplates the construction of six lateral ditches, from twelve to twenty feet in width, through certain creeks or bayous which empty into Village Creek. One of the laterals is called Little Village, another Coon Creek, another Turkey Creek, another Lake Pond, another Lindsay Creek, and the other the White Oak lateral. The statute provides for an assessment of benefits to be made by the commissioners of the district, and, when the list is filed, notice is given and an opportunity for a hearing in the county court. The statute gives aggrieved owners of property in the district the right of appeal to the circuit court from the decision of the county court.

The commissioners completed their assessment of benefits and filed the list with the county court, and notice was given and a hearing was had in that court. There are about eight thousand calls, or items, in the assessment list, and there were numerous protests. The maximum assessment on lands found to derive the greatest benefit was twenty-four dollars per acre, and the minimum, one dollar and fifty cents per acre. The lands bearing the lowest assessment were those which did not overflow from the creek, but, according to the testimony adduced in the case, received general benefit on account of the locality being drained.

The county court approved the assessments made by the commissioners, with a few exceptions, but forty-eight owners of land appealed to the circuit court, and there was a trial anew in that court. In the trial in the circuit court, the assessments of benefits were again approved, with one or two exceptions. Twenty-four of the protesting landowners appealed to this court.

It is contended by counsel for appellee that some of the appeals should be dismissed--two of them for the reason that the transcripts were not lodged in time, and numerous others for the reason that the rules of the court have not been complied with in filing abstracts. We deem it unnecessary to pass upon the question raised on the motion to dismiss the appeal, for the reason that we have reached the conclusion that, even if all the appeals had been perfected and duly prosecuted, the judgment in each instance must be affirmed.

Each of the protests challenges the correctness of individual assessments; most of the protestants, however, being the owners of more than one tract, some of them numerous tracts. The questions as to the correctness...

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