This is an appeal by the Terre Noir Drainage District No. 3 from a judgment of the Clark Circuit Court.. The proceedings were commenced in the Clark County Court, where the judgment was in favor of appellant. Upon appeal to the circuit court, C. S. Thornton, St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company and others filed a demurrer to the jurisdiction, of the court.
The basis of the proceedings was a petition filed in the county court, which, omitting the style of the court and the signatures to it, is as follows: “We, the undersigned petitioners, respectfully state that Terre Noir Creek, running through Clark County, is a very tortuous stream, and by reason thereof the greater portion of the land lying thereon and adjacent thereto is subject to frequent and violent overflows, and especially that part between the points hereinafter mentioned; that we desire said stream altered, widened and straightened for the purpose of properly draining the lands lying thereon and between the points hereinafter mentioned. That said proposed altering, widening or straightening of said stream is to be done by ditch or ditches and excavations of necessary depth, size and dimensions to aid in promptly carrying off the waters of said stream during overflows. That said proposed work is to begin about the southeast corner of section 5, township 8 south, range 21 west, and running in a southeasterly direction with the general course of said stream through township 8 south, range 21 west, and townships 8 and 9 south, range 20 west, and townships 9 and 10 south, range 19 west, and township 10 south, range 18 west, to or near the point where said stream empties into the Little Missouri River, in section 35, township 10 south, range 18 west, as aforesaid; making said proposed improvement covering a distance of about twenty-five miles in length. That we are the owners of land liable to be affected by, or assessed, or re-assessed for the construction of same. That it is desired that bonds be issued for the purpose of making said improvement. Wherefore we pray the court that said stream be straightened, altered and improved as aforesaid; that all proper and necessary orders be made and entered by this court for the purpose of carrying out said proposed improvement, as provided by sections 1414, 1415, 1416 et seq., and as amended, of Kirby’s Digest of the Statutes of Arkansas.”
Section 1414 of Kirby’s Digest confers upon the county court power to cause to be constructed a ditch “when the same shall be conducive to the public health, convenience or welfare, or when the same will be of public utility or benefit.”
Section 1415 provides that the court shall establish the ditch when a petition of a designáted number of landowners, setting forth the necessity therefor, with a general description of the proposed ditch shall be filed with the county clerk.
In construing similar sections of a former drainage act the court, in the cases of St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Ry. Co. v. Dudgeon, 64 Ark. 108, and Cribbs v. Benedict, 64 Ark. 555, held that the jurisdiction of the county court is special, and is to be exercised in a special manner, and for that reason that the petition must set out all the essential facts required by the statute. The necessity contemplated by section 1415 of the Digest is, as shown by section 1414, that the proposed ditch shall be conducive to the public health, convenience or welfare, or will be of public utility or benefit. It is true that the allegations of the petition do not follow the exact language of the statute; but the essential facts are stated, and it is from these facts that the court must find that the proposed ditch will be “conducive to the public health, convenience or welfare,” or will be “of public utility or benefit.”
The petition states that the proposed improvement is the “altering, widening or straightening” of a stream for the distance of twenty-five miles. That, because the -stream is crooked, the land adjacent thereto is subject to frequent and violent overflows, and that .the improvement is necessary to drain the adjacent lands, and to carry off the water during overflows. The starting point, route and terminus of the proposed improvement is set out in the petition. It is manifest that these frequent overflows will -cause the low lands to be filled with water and thus become swamps and marshes; and that the proposed improvement will relieve these low lands of their stagnant water. The result will be to prevent disease and open up for use a large body of land, twenty-five miles in length. The length of the proposed improvement shows the extent of the area to be drained, and-is indicative of its public character. In our judgment this was in substantial compliance with the statutory requirement, and a substantial compliance with the statute is sufficient. Cribbs v. Benedict, supra.
The order or judgment of the county court sets forth in extenso the petition, and finds that it states the necessity of said proposed improvement, and it designates the starting point, route and terminus; and viewers were appointed to make a preliminary survey and ascertain whether it will be conducive to the public health, convenience or welfare. They reported that the proposed improvement was necessary, and that it would be conducive to the public health, convenience and welfare; and the court found from the report in favor of making said improvement, and these facts were recited in its judgment. This was a substantial compliance with the statute, and a substantial compliance, as we have seen, is all that is necessary. Cribbs v. Benedict, supra; Chapman & Dewey Land Co. v. Wilson, 91 Ark. 30.
Therefore the circuit court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the petition, and the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.