Court Opinion

ID: 7103175
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:17:56.104523+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:28.860542
License: Public Domain

Seevers, J.
Chapter 188, Acts Twentieth General Assembly, provides “ that whenever any person shall desire to construct any tile or other underground drain through the land of another, and he shall be unable to agree with the owner or owners of such land as to the same, he may file with the clerk of the township where said land is situated an application therefor, giving a description of the land or lands through which he may desire to construct the same.” Following this are provisions requiring the clerk to notify the towmship trustees, who are required to fix a time for hearing the application, and notice of the hearing is required to be served on the applicant and land-owner. It is then provided that, at such time, “ the trustees may fix the point or points of entrance and exit or outlet of said tile or other underground drain on said land, the general course of the same through said land, the size and depth of the same, when the same shall be constructed, how kept in repair, what connections may be made with the same, what compensation, if any, shall be made therefor, or any other questions arising in the construction of the same, and they shall reduce their finding to writing, which shall be filed with the clerk of said township, who shall record it in full in his book of records of said township; and said finding and decision shall be final,except as to the amount of damages, if any such shall be awarded.” It is further provided that “ either party may appeal to the circuit court of said county from so much of said finding and order as relates to the amount of damages: * * * *600provided, however, that said appeal shall not delay the construction of said tile or other underground drain, if the applicant shall, in case the land-owner appeals, deposit with the township clerk the amount of damages awarded by the trustees, and, in case the applicant appeals, that he shall first file the appeal-bond required by law.”
Under this statute, William Tannest made the application therein contemplated, stating that he desired-to construct two tile or underground drains through the lands of the plaintiff, describing them. The trustees fixed a day for the hearing, and the requisite notices were served, and they made and reduced to writing their finding, as required by the statute. The trustees found that “ one of said ditches is necessary for the pi’oper cultivation of said lands; that the permanent value will be increased thereby; and that it is necessary, in order to drain said lands and adjacent lands, that said tile ditches should pass through the lands of others than the ■applicant herein.” The trustees also found and directed that the drain should be constructed over the land of the plaintiff, where the same should enter his premises, the depth and size of the drain, the length thereof, and that he would sustain no damages by reason thereof. Afterwards the plaintiff caused to be issued a certiorari directed to the defendants, who are the township trustees, and in their return thereto the foregoing facts' appear. Afterwards the plaintiff appealed from the decision of the trustees to the proper court, so that both the appeal and the certiorari proceedings were pending at the same time. No motion was filed to dismiss either, nor was the pendency of one pleaded in abatement or in bar of the other. In both such proceedings a motion was filed by the plaintiff to dismiss the same, because the statute above referred to was unconstitutional, and therefore the proceedings from the beginning must be regarded as absolutely void. These motions were sustained, and the defendants appeal.
*601i CEK.TIO byappeS-VBr practice. *600I. It is said that the appeal must be regarded as a waiver *601or abandonment of tbe certiorari proceedings. For aught aPPear3> question is presented for the ^rst ^me iQ court, and this cannot be done; hut, conceding the point made to be well taken, the question as to the constitutionality of the law could be raised in the appeal in the manner it was in this case. (Bankhead v. Brown, 25 Iowa, 540.) Besides this, if the statute is unconstitutional, the whole proceeding is void, and no light whatever was or can be obtained thereunder, and the sooner this question is determined the better it will be for all parties.
2. constxtütak&gprivate processor ue law: jury trial. II. No motion was made to dismiss the appeal; therefore, for all purposes of this case, it must be regarded as properly in the court below when the motion was determined. While this is true, it is exceedingly doubtful whether the right to appeal existed. It ° A x will be observed that the trustees found that the plaintiff was in no respect damaged by the construction of the drain over his premises, and the statute provides that the decision of the trustees shall be “final, except as to the amount of damages, if any, which shall be awarded.” This contemplates that an appeal lies only in case damages are awarded. If this be the proper construction of the statute, it is in conflict with section 9, art. 1, Const., which provides that the “ right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate, * * * ” and “ no person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law.” The assessment or non-assessment of damages by the trustees cannot be regarded as “ due process of law,” unless the right of appeal exists to a tribunal where such an assessment can be made by a constitutional jury. But as the main reliance of counsel for the appellee is based upon another provision of the constitution, it is perhaps better that our decision should be grounded on it.
*6023._:-: Uuuis^or °£ private benetit. *601III. It is agreed on all hands that private property, or *602the use thereof, cannot be taken or appropriated for private purposes without the consent of the owner; but it may be taken without the consent of the owner .. , ,. , „ , . , tor public purposes, it such owner is compensated therefor. The contention of counsel is whether the statute contemplates or authorizes the construction of drains for a public purpose, or for the private use and benefit of the applicant. Counsel for the appellant have called our attention to many adjudged cases, in which it is claimed that questions like that in the case at bar have been determined. These cases have all been examined, and they consist of two classes. The first is where the erection of dams across streams of water are authorized by statute for the purpose of creating water-power to propel machinery in mills and manufactories; the effect of such dams being almost invariably to cause the water to flow back and submerge the lands of others. Such statutes have been sustained on the ground of public necessity. They were first enacted prior to the discovery or utilization of steam, and there was no power other than that of animal or water that was known, or at least which in those days could be economically used, for the purpose of procuring food and clothing. The establishment of mills and manufactories, therefore, was a public necessity, as well as a private benefit to the parties who constructed them, and so are railroads, which are now regarded as public necessities. This being so, the power to invoke the right of eminent domain existed, and, if any person was damaged by the erection of such dams, who refused to accept a reasonable compensation for the damage suffered, he could properly be compelled to do so in case his damages were assessed by a jury. But if such statutes were enacted now for the first time, it is possible, if not probable, that they could not be sustained. (Cooley, Const. Lim., 664.)
The second class of cases to which counsel have called our attention is where swamp or overflowed lands have been drained by ditches, or otherwise reclaimed, and in so doing *603drains or ditches have been constructed, under the provisions of a statute, through the lands of others. These cases are not grounded on the right of eminent domain, but on the police power inherent in the state, which, broadly but not accurately (if this can be done) defined, is the power to do whatever may be regarded as being for the interest of all the people of the state. Such definition of the police power is sufficiently accurate for the purposes of the case. If lands are swamp, marsh or wet, disease may be engendered, the public health may require that they should be drained, if necessary, and such drain may be constructed through the lands of others. Such a statute has been in force in this state for several years. (Code, §§ 1217-1225 inclusive.) It may be further conceded, for the purposes of this case, that if land is swamp, marsh or wet, and the proper cultivation thereof so requires, it may be drained through the lands of others, provided compensation is made for the damages sustained. There are well-considered cases which hold that this may be constitutionally done when there are large tracts of such land, and possibly it is within the discretion of the legislature to determine the size or extent of the tracts that may be so drained, and that such determination is conclusive. We, however have no occasion in this case to determine whether such a statute would be constitutional or not. This case is materially different from those we have been considering. It will be observed that the statute in question does not contemplate lands which are swamp or wet, but that any person who may desire to do so may, by pursuing the statutory mode, be authorized to construct a drain through the land of another. He is not required to establish that what he desires is reasonable or proper, or that his lands are swamp or wet, and in this case the applicant simply stated to the trustees that he desired to construct a drain through the plaintiff’s land. It is true, the trustees are required to determine, it may be assumed, whether the drain shall be constructed, but it does not in terms so provide. Conceding, *604however, that the drain cannot be constructed unless it is authorized by the trustees, if they do authorize it, their conclusion is a finality. The statute, therefore, provides that the trustees have the power to finally determine that one person may lawfully enter on the land of another, and dig up the soil, lay a drain, and perpetually maintain it, and, in this instance, cause the water passing through the drain to be discharged into a ditch on the plaintiff’s land, which he must always maintain, for the reason that the trustees ordered that the plaintiff' “ shall not in any manner obstruct the free passage of water through said ditch or the outlet into which it opens.” It would seem, therefore, that the plaintiff has been deprived of the right to use his property as he deems best, and that a burden is cast upon him without a trial by jury, to which he is entitled under the constitution.
But it may be said that the finding of the trustees is final and conclusive, and therefore the statute is constitutional, because the trustees have found that a ditch or drain is necessary and proper for the proper cultivation of such lands; that the permanent value will be increased thereby; and that it is necessary in order to drain said lands and adjacent lands. But it seems to us that the constitutionality of a statute does not depend upon the finding of the trustees in a particular case. If the statute is unconstitutional, it is void, and no valid act can be based thereon. But the trustees have not found that any of the lands are swamp or wet, and, as we understand, the primary thought in their finding is that the proper cultivation of the lands requires that the drain be constructed. The facts upon which their conclusion is based are not in the record. “ It may be for the public benefit that all wild lands should be cultivated, all low lands drained, all unsightly places beautified, all dilapidated buildings replaced by new, because all these things tend to give an aspect of beauty, thrift and comfort to the country, and thereby to invite settlement, increase the value of the lands, and gratify *605the public taste; but the common law has never sanctioned an appropriation of property based on these considerations alone, and some further element must therefore be involved before the appropriation can be sanctioned by our constitutions. The reason of the case, and the settled practice of free governments, must be our guides in determining what is or is not to be regarded a public use.” (Cooley, Const. Lim., 660.) It is true that the statute does not contemplate a taking of property except for a drain; but this is immaterial, for it is nevertheless a taking, for one person’s drain rests on the land of another. It is not our province to say whether the plaintiff has acted as a good neighbor should. This he has the right to determine for himself.
The foregoing views are in accord with and supported by Bankhead v. Brown, 25 Iowa, 540. For the reasons stated, we feel constrained to hold that the first section of chapter 188, Acts Twentieth General Assembly, is unconstitutional and void. Affirmed.