Court Opinion

ID: 7978978
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:03:12.403501+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:59.467615
License: Public Domain

Dibell, C.
Mandamus to the auditor of Lincoln county. The relator demurred to the answer of the auditor and the county. The demurrer was sustained and the auditor and the county appealed.
The relator is the contractor for the construction of a judicial ditch. The engineer gave it a preliminary or progress certificate for work done. By G. S. 1913, § 5541, it is made the duty of the auditor to issue a warrant upon the presentation of the certificate. He refused. His refusal is based upon the claim that the statute is void for want of due process because it does not provide for notice to the county of the application for the warrant; and further, if we get his position, because it does not provide for a notice to the county of the institution of the proceeding sufficient to constitute due process. That section 5541 does not require notice to the county of the application for a warrant was held as a matter of statutory construction in Moody v. Brasie, 104 Minn. 463, 116 N. W. 941. The question of constitutionality was not suggested.
In the drainage scheme of the statute the county is an agency of the state. State v. George, 123 Minn. 59, 142 N. W. 945; Van Pelt v. *30Bertilrud, 117 Minn. 50, 134 N. W. 226; Bowler v. County of Renville, 105 Minn. 26, 116 N. W. 1028. The state may impose upon the county and its officers such duties as are appropriate to the working out of the drainage project. It requires the county to finance the undertaking. If all goes well assessments for benefits will pay the cost of the project. If loss occurs to the county it is incidental to its position as an agency of the state, and such loss carries no suggestion of want of due process. It is clear that the failure to provide for notice to the county in connection with a preliminary or progress certificate, or the issuance of a warrant, does not render the statute unconstitutional for want of due process; nor does such result follow from the failure of the state to provide for service of notice of the ditch proceeding upon the county such as might be necessary to make one a party in a strict or the usual sense. The county is not a party, in the sense that a landowner is, nor in a proprietary capacity, and its property interests are not involved as are those of a landowner whose land is affected by assessments, nor is it a party to the proceeding at all except as an agency of the state charged with the financing and working out of the project. Because of such duties cast upon it the statute requires notice of the proceeding to be filed with the auditor. G. S. 1913, §§ 5553-5561. It is still merely an agency of the state. Viewed as such it is its duty to follow the statute. It is not in the position of a property owner, whose property is taken or affected, it is not an adversary, and the question of the sufficiency of notice to constitute due process is not present. Whether G. S. 1913, §§ 5553, 5555 and 5556, provide for sufficient notice to the county if it were necessary to sustain the proceeding as one against the county in a proprietary capacity, as a party, it is not of interest to consider. That is not what .the statute intends. In State v. District Court of Thirteenth Judicial District, 138 Minn. 204, 164 N. W. 815, reference was made to the complete character of the notices and their sufficiency for the purposes intended. It was there held that G. S. 1913, § 5571, intended that the county should be liable for engineers’ expenses and the like, though the ditch was not established and that so construed, and when notice to the county was not given, an order for their payment was invalid for want of due process; for, as was there said, the county was a *31necessary party to the controversy over it; and it was left for future decision whether an order would be valid if made after due notice to the county and an opportunity to be heard upon an order to show cause or its equivalent. Nothing more was decided. The question whether the county was a party to that proceeding prior to the dismissal thereof, and the subsequent allowance of the bill of costs incurred therein, interested or otherwise, was not involved in that case. There was no intention of deciding it. It is clear that the county was not there an interested party, until it was dragged in-by the ex parte order of the court allowing the claim against it. There is no intimation that when a ditch is regularly established the auditor is justified because of want of due process in refusing to issue warrants on progreás certificates for the reason that the statute does not provide for notice to the county of the application and none is given. Very clearly he is not.
There is no doubt whatever of the constitutionality of the statute assailed.
Order affirmed.