In. these two cases, the plaintiff seeks to enjoin the collection of certain ad valorem and acreage taxes, levied by the board of commissioners of the Saline levee and drainage district. Petitioner alleges that it is the owner of 22,957.55 ‘out of a total of 38,278 acres embraced in the whole district; that $100,000 of bonds have already been issued by said district and the proceeds expended without any benefit accruing to petitioner’s property; that the board has no funds; that it has no work in contemplation; that the said taxes are confiscatory, will benefit only a few who have property near-the front on Ked river, and will in no sense be used for the benefit of the great majority of said lands.
In the first of said causes, No. 24604, the action of said board is attacked upon an additional ground, to wit: That Act No. 202 of 1918, purporting to authorize an acreage tax of 25 cents per acre, had not gone, into effect at the time said board made the levy having been promulgated on August 3d, and the Board having acted on August 7th following, or 17 days before the law became effective. The other suit was brought to restrain the collection of the taxes for the yeár 1919, and hence does not involve this latter question.
The lower court sustained the ad valorefn tax in both cases, but declared the acreage tax invalid, defendant has 'appealed, ‘and plaintiff has answered, praying that the ad valorem tax be also annulled.
*323Opinion.
By Act No. 80 of 1906, the Legislature created the Saline levee and drainage district, provided for the appointment of a board of commissioners, and in the title, declared the further purposes of said act to be:
“To authorize the said board to levy, assess and collect a tax or local assessment, or forced contribution; authorizing the levy * * * of an ad valorem tax on all the property within the district; the levying and collection of a specific tax or assessment on each bale of cotton raised in the said district; authorizing the assessment and collection of a tax upon each mile of railroad within the said district; authorizing the said board to provide for the fixing of rules and laws for the government of the levee and drainage district; authorizing the issuing of bonds; .pledging the revenues of the said district to the payment of said, bonds, interest and other monies, to be borrowed in pursuance of the provisions of this act; authorizing and requiring the levying of taxes for the payment of the interest and principal of the same; providing for a sinking fund for the redemption of the bonds; authorizing and empowering the board to borrow money, for the use of the board, and authorizing the mortgage or pledge of the property and things of value, including the revenues for the payment of the amount so borrowed; donating to the levee and drainage distinct certain lands in the district belonging to the state, 'and prescribing the duties of the state board of engineers in connection therewith.”
In section 4 of the act, after prescribing the general .powers of the board, it is further provided:
“The said board shall have authority to buy and hold, or to sell and transfer title to property; to make and execute contracts, and to do and perform any and all acts necessary to carry out the object of this act, namely, the thorough and perfect; protection of the lands of this district from damage by flood, and for the perfect drainage of the same.”
And, in section 5, it is required that:
“They shall devise and adopt rules and regulations for the carrying into effect and perfecting of a comprehensive levee and drainage system, having for its object the protection of the entire district from overflow, from river water or rain water.”
By section 6, they were authorized to levy an ad valorem tax of 10 mills, and in section 7, an acreage tax “not to exceed 5 cents per acre.” Subsequent provisions regulate the issuing of bonds, and the method of their payment.
Section 13, among other things, declares:
“That the issue of the said bonds is hereby declared to create a valid contract between said board of commissioners, and the state and each and every holder of said bonds, which neither the said board of commissioners nor the state shall impair. The said bonds shall be a valid obligation of said board in favor of any holder and no court shall enjoin the payment of the principal or interest thereof, or the levy and the collection of the taxes therefor and the judicial power shall be exercised by any court of competent jurisdiction within the state of Louisiana, when necessary to secure said levy, collection and payment.”
Section 18 requires that a member of the state hoard of engineers shall attend each meeting of said board, when notified to do so, to report and advise the board—
“as to the location, construction and repairs of all levees and drainage canals necessary for the protection of the district, and they [the board of engineers] are hereby authorized to survey and locate and repair and remove or change any and all levees and drainage canals in the district, and are especially authorized to cause to be dosed' by levees, dykes or otherwise, such outlets, bayous or sloughs or to open the same, as in their judgment may be necessary to carry out the objects of this act, and are solely charged with the responsibility of the location of all levees and drainage canals in said district. They shall furnish to, the board a detailed report showing the proper location of the levee lines and drainage canals., and shall furnish plans and specifications, and shall perform all engineering work required by the board of this district.” ,
We have thus quoted and referred to the provisions of the act at length, to show its comprehensive nature, and to demonstrate the features which appear to eliminate the possibilities of local favoritism and discrimination in carrying out its purposes. It will be seen from the section last quoted, that the *325character, location and extent of levee and canal construction, is left to the judgment of the state board of engineers, thereby largely removing the possibility of local influence that might induce the performing of work to the advantage of one portion of the district and to the prejudice of another.
[1, 2] The power of taxation of the character herein complained of was unquestionably conferred upon the board, in so far as it was possible for the Legislature to give it; and the courts are not authorized to interfere, unless there has been a violation of some provisions of the state or federal Constitutions. Certainly we could not interfere to control the discretion of the board and its engineers, as to whether levees or canals were built, or as to their location, so long as they were acting within the powers delegated, and not in violation of the letter or spirit of constitutional provisions.
[3] The theory of the plaintiff is that its property is being taxed to protect and drain the lands of other persons, without the possibility of benefit to its own; and, in support of this position, it has shown that most of the lands are located more remotely from the levee and banks of Red river than those of other persons in the district, and that the work so far done with the proceeds of the first bond issue consists of a levee beginning at the southwest end of the district, and extending down the river in front thereof. All of the district is north and west of Red river, and the effect of this levee (which forms a link in a' chain extending more or less imperfectly in a general northwesterly direction through the state) is to prevent the overflow of the waters of that river at flood stage upon the lands in the district, including those of plaintiff, and by which, to this extent, at least, they are benefited, although the system contemplated has not yet been developed so as to render all of the property or a large portion of it susceptible to cultivation. It is shown that this levee and the work contemplated by this district is a part of a general scheme conceived by the state board of engineers for building levees and draining a large scope of lands within the territory lying between the Red and Mississippi rivers, which, if ever perfected, will benefit all of. the lands, more or less, within that basin. It is true that, if this district always stood alone, and no effort were made to control the waters from the Ouachita and Black rivers and their tributaries, as expressed by one witness, the district would have to be levied all around, except on the west, and then pumped to keep it from being a lake; but this will not be the case, as stated by one of the state engineers, when the general plan is’ perfected and in operation.
There is no charge of fraud in either petition, and none has been proven, plaintiff pitching its claim to relief upon the want of benefits solely (except as to the issue of prematurity in the first case). In this respect, the present cases are clearly distinguishable from that of Myles Salt Co. v. Iberia Drainage District, 239 U. S. 478, 36 Sup. Ct. 204, 60 L. Ed. 392, L. R. A. 1918E, 190. The latter case was one which went to the Supreme Court of the United States on writ of error from this court, and in which the judgment of this court, affirming that of the trial court sustaining an exception of no cause of action, was reversed, upon the ground that the petition charged fraud and the arbitrary abuse of the taxing power, in that a very valuable salt mine or dome, rising nearly two hundred feet above the surrounding lands, had been included in a drainage district, solely for the purpose of augmenting the assessment for the collection of taxes, in order to drain other private property, when there was not a possibility of the salt mine deriving any benefit therefrom. And, even in that case, that high tribunal said:
*327' “There is no doubt that the Legislature of a state may constitute drainage districts and define their- boundaries or may delegate such authority to local administrative bodies, as, in the present case, to the police juries of the parishes of the state, and that their action cannot be assailed . under the Fourteenth Amendment, unless it is palpably arbitrary and a plain abuse.”
It was found in that case, according to the allegations of the petition, that the action of the defendant was “palpably arbitrary and a plain abuse.” No such case is alleged or proven here; but, on the contrary, every possible precaution to prevent arbitrariness and abuse has been provided by the Legislature, and it is shown that the lands of plaintiff have been and will be benefited more as the work progresses in connection with that of other undertakings of like nature in the state* Some eighteen boards of this character have been created in the state, for the purpose of reclaiming alluvial lands like those'within the Saline'levee and drainage district, and if all the property to be taxed had to derive immediate and direct benefit, it would never be possible to begin or complete the work. These levees benefit indirectly the whole people of the state, in that they render susceptible of cultivation many millions of acres of land which would otherwise go to waste, thereby adding to the wealth of the state, and providing a source of revenue through general taxation for schools and other purposes, the benefits of which are enjoyed by all of .its citizens. Again, they aid in protecting the public roads and highways of commerce for the use of the general public, of which, presumably, the taxpayers in every district form a part.
[4] In such matters, the, Legislature and its creatures have a wide discretion, which will not be disturbed by the courts, except in clear cases of abuse of power. George v. Young, Sheriff, 45 La. Ann. 1232, 14 South. 137 ; Myles Salt Co. v. Iberia Drainage Dist., 239 U. S. 478, 36 Sup. Ct. 204, 60 L. Ed. 392, L. R. A. 1918E, 190 ; De Gravelle v. Iberia & St. Mary Drainage Dist., 104 La. 703, 29 South. 302. See, also, Duffy v. Peneguy, 148 La. 407, 87 South. 25, and authorities therein cited.
[5, 6] The Act 206 of 1912 increased the acreage tax to 10 cents, and the Act No. 202 of 1918 again increased it to 25 cents per acre. So that when plaintiff bought its property on April 1, 1918, the ad valorem tax and the acreage tax of 10 cents per acre were already being levied; and, under the ruling in Duffy v. Peneguy, supra, plaintiff is to that extent precluded from resisting them. But, in so far as the increase from 10 to 25 cents per acre for the year 1918 is concerned, the board acted prematurely, for the reason that Act No. 202 of that year was not promulgated until August 3d, and the tax was levied on August 7th, 17 days before it had the power to do so with respect to the increase.
[7] We find nothing in the law to sustain the contention that all members of the board had to reside within the district, even if it were permissible to attack their capacity in this collateral way.
[8] As to the fees of the attorney for representing the tax collector, section 56 of Act No. 170 of 189,8 imposes upon the tax debtor a penalty of 10 per cent, on the amount collected for such fees, and requires the tax collector to collect the same as costs when collecting the judgment. For this reason, we think it. was not necessary that thpre should have been a specific prayer for attorney’s fees, and that the demand for costs was sufficient. However, as to the acreage tax for the year 1918, plaintiff’s demand has been sustained to the extent of three-fifths thereof, and, since it was compelled to enjoin the whole levy for that purpose, we do not think that attorney’s fees are due upon that portion of the judgment.
For the reasons assigned, the judgments *329appealed from are amended so as to dissolve the writs of injunction and to dismiss the plaintiff’s demands, save and except to the extent that the acreage tax for 1918 exceeds 10 cents per acre, as to which excess the injunction is perpetuated and the levy annulled. It is further ordered that the plaintiff pay the costs of appeal, as well as the costs of the lower court in case No. 25029, and that defendant pay the costs of the lower court in case No. 24604; and that the tax collector collect as costs 10 per cent, of the amount of taxes and penalties, as attorney’s fees upon the amount of the ad valorem tax for the year 1918, and upon the whole of the taxes for the year 1919, and, as thus amended, the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.