Heskin v. Herbrandson

Burke, J.

The plaintiffs, the board of drain commissioners of" Traill county, North Dakota, prosecuted this action to condemn lands-for a right of way for Mikkelson drain No. 13. The trial resulted in a finding by the court that there was a necessity for the drain, and a-; special finding by the jury determining in separate items the amount of the damages to the several tracts and also the amounts that each, tract had been benefited by the drain. The proceedings are conceded! to have been regular to this point. After the return of the findings by the jury, the board asked that judgment be entered in favor of the landowners for the net damages; to wit, the difference between the-damages and the benefits; while the landowners contended that they were entitled to the full damages found by the jury, and that the determination of the benefits was a matter properly to be considered later by the board of drain commissioners. The trial court subtracted the amount of the benefits of each tract from the damages to said tract,. *234and ordered judgment entered for the difference. From this order an .appeal has been taken to this court.

Section 1826, Revised Codes 1905, reads that “upon acquiring the -right of way . . . [they, the drainage board] shall assess the ;per cent of the cost of constructing and maintaining such drain, etc.,” ,and (§ 1831) “shall make a list showing the amount which each . . . tract of land benefited by the drain ... is liable to pay, . . . and the auditor shall thereupon extend upon the tax lists as a special tax, . . . the several amounts shown by the .drain commissioners’ lists.”

Construing the above sections, Judge Spalding, in the case of Ross v. Prante, 17 N. D. 266, 115 N. W. 833, says: “We are of the opinion that a fair construction of the drainage law warrants the conclui.sion that it was not contemplated that the question of benefits should be submitted to the jury. . . . We are fortified in the opinion by consideration of some reasons which appear clearly applicable. 'The benefits of a drain usually extend to land for several miles, and ..apply to different parties. If the jury were to consider the benefits applicable to the property of one owner alone ... it would .have to know the requirements necessary to carry off the water from the particular tract, and ascertain the size of the drain, its slope, and its length, the requirements of all the other tracts affected, and many other facts which it is utterly impracticable to present to a jury.”

These, and other reasons advanced in said opinion, make it clear that the legislature did not intend that the jury in the condemnation suits should consider the benefits to the various tracts. If it were necessary to add to the reasons already given, is it possible to imagino .a case where the benefits to one farm are greáter than the entire cost of the drain? It will not be seriously contended that the owner of .such farm must lose his award of damages for land taken, while his neighbors, not being parties to the suit because not touched by the drain, escape although equally benefited.

Any drain, if properly constructed, should yield benefits many times its cost. Lands many miles back are benefited. The owner of land taken for right of way is entitled to just compensation for the land taken from him, and he is not required to donate his benefits. If he pays his just proportion of the cost of the drain, he is entitled to all ithe new wealth created thereby upon his lands.

*235One other question arises. The drain hoard claims that submission of the question of benefits to the jury tended to confuse the issues, and resulted in a finding of excessive damages. This is only conjecture. 'This appeal is from the order of the trial court in entering judgment upon the verdict. No statement of the case has been settled, and the board has not appealed. The question is therefore not properly before us; but from the verdict we learn that the jury allowed $35 per acre for the land actually taken, and additional amounts for damages done to the remaining farm. The verdict was probably well supported by evidence, and those amounts do not seem excessive.

The trial judge should have treated the finding of the jury as to the several items of benefits as surplusage, and ordered judgment for ithe full amounts of the damages found.

The order appealed from.is modified to conform to this opinion.

Appellants will recover their costs.

All concur, except Morgan, Ch. J., not participating.