Verdigris River Drainage District No. 1 v. City of Coffeyville

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Smith, J.:

This was an action to recover money. Judgment was for plaintiff. Defendant appeals.

The plaintiff is a drainage district in Montgomery county. The action is brought to recover money which the drainage district was compelled to expend to repair a floodgate in the dike which was installed, pursuant to the terms of a contract between Montgomery county and the drainage district. The action was originally brought in Montgomery county, against the state highway commission, the city of Coffeyville and Montgomery county. Service was obtained on the state highway commission at Topeka. The commission filed a motion to quash the summons. This motion was overruled and the commission appealed. The judgment of the trial court was reversed in Verdigris River Drainage District v. City of Coffeyville, 149 Kan. 191, 86 P. 2d 592. This court held that the action against the highway commission should have been brought in Shawnee *766county. When the action was tried on its merits the' result was a judgment against both the city and the county. They both appeal.

The trial in the court below was on an agreed statement of facts. This stipulation, after stating the corporate nature of the parties, was as follows:

"rv
“That in the year 1921, and prior thereto, what is now Sunflower street in the city of Coffeyville was a county road, and was being maintained by and was under the jurisdiction of the defendant, the board of county commissioners of Montgomery county, Kansas; that prior thereto the defendant, the city of Coffeyville, had so arranged its streets and alleys and ever since has and does now so maintain them, that in the times of heavy rains the water falling within said city would flow east and cover and flood said county road, causing it to be difficult for defendant, the board of county commissioners of Montgomery county, Kansas, to maintain said road, and keep the same open for travel.
“That the defendant, the board of county commissioners of Montgomery county, Kansas, was desirous of obtaining permission of the plaintiff to cut the plaintiff’s north levee and to install therein a drain and floodgate, which would thereby take care of said flood waters covering said road, and thereupon, on the 20th day of December, 1921, the defendant, the board of county commissioners of Montgomery county, and this plaintiff entered into a written contract, duly executed and delivered by the duly authorized officers of each of the parties thereto, whereby the plaintiff agreed to permit said defendant, the board of county commissioners of Montgomery county, to cut its levee as aforesaid and construct a drain therein, equipped with a floodgate, on condition that defendant, the board of county commissioners of Montgomery county, would, at its own expense, maintain said drain and floodgate and keep it in repair during the existence of said levee, which the defendant, the board of county commissioners of Montgomery county, agreed to do.
“That said contract provided, among other things:
“ ‘It is further agreed that in case first party (the board of county commissioners of Montgomery county) fails or neglects to properly maintain said drain and floodgate, then, that the second party may take such steps as to it shall appear to be necessary to properly maintain and repair the same, at the expense of the first party, and the first party agrees to pay to the second party all of the necessary expenses incurred by the second party in so maintaining and repairing said drain and floodgate.’
“A true and correct copy of said contract is hereto attached, made a part hereof and marked ‘Exhibit A.’
“v
“That defendant, the board of county commissioners of Montgomery county, in pursuance with said contract, constructed said drain in plaintiff’s levee, equipped with floodgate, shortly after the execution of said contract.
"vi
“That thereafter and about the year 1928. the city extended its city limits so as to include a part of said county road which was served and drained by said drain and floodgate through plaintiff’s levee; that the part of said county road *767which was taken into the city is known as Sunflower street and what was formerly said county road is now known as highway 169.
“That ever since 1928, that part of what was formerly said county "road which is within the city, and part of the territory of the city which is not within the boundaries of the plaintiff district, have been and now are being drained by means of said drain and floodgate into the Verdigris river.
“vii
“That thereafter, on April 1, 1929, and pursuant to section 60E681-418, G. S. Kansas, 1925, the defendant, state highway commission, succeeded to the rights, duties and liabilities of the defendant, the board of county commissioners, with reference to said highway 169, and its obligations under said contract.
“vm
“That on or about April 1, 1934, the defendant, the city of Coffeyville, waived its right to collect S250 per mile from the state highway commission of the state of Kansas, and that since April 1, 1934, all of said road which is served and benefited by said drain and floodgate has been and now is under the jurisdiction and supervision and has been maintained by the defendant, the state highway commission, a copy of the resolution of the state highway commission being attached hereto, made a part hereof, and marked ‘Exhibit B.’
“ix
“That section 24-452, G. S. Kansas, 1935, provides as follows:
“‘Sewers Through Levees; Floodgates and Pumping Apparatus; Duty of Cities; Costs. That whenever any drainage district shall include any territory that comprises a part of any incorporated city which has constructed or desires to construct any sewer or drain through any embankment or levee constructed by such drainage district along the bank of any watercourse, so as to have an outlet for such sewers into said watercourse, it shall be the duty of such cities to maintain efficient floodgates and pumping apparatus, and keep the outlet of such sewers closed during periods of high water, so that the water cannot run back through such sewers and cause injury to lands protected by such levee; and if any city shall neglect to perform such duty the board of directors of such drainage district may provide the necessary floodgates and pumping apparatus and collect the cost thereof from such city; and the city shall be liable for all damages, if any, caused by such neglect of duty.’
“Plaintiff’s territory comprises part of the territory of the defendant, the city of Coffeyville, and that the said drainage from the defendant city now empties through plaintiff’s levee into the watercourse of the Verdigris river by means of said drain through its levee aforesaid, and that said drain through its levee and the floodgate therein serve said highway 169.
“x
“That thereafter said drain became out of repair and in such condition that it was unsafe in times of flood upon the Verdigris river, and it was necessary for the protection of the plaintiff district that said drain and floodgate be repaired and plaintiff, in August, 1937, made demand upon each of said defendants that they repair said drain and floodgate, but that each of said defendants *768failed, neglected and refused to do anything about repairing said drain and floodgate.
“xii
“In February, 1938, plaintiff caused a written, itemized, verified claim for said expenses of repairing said drain to be filed with and presented to each of the defendants, and they and each of them have failed and refused to allow or pay said claim, and that the county auditor of Montgomery county has disallowed plaintiff’s claim against said county.”

We shall first consider the appeal of Montgomery county. When the highway commission appealed from the order of the district court refusing to sustain its motion to quash the service of summons upon it, the drainage district argued that since it had obtained service on one or more defendants in Montgomery county who were liable on the claim, its service on the commission in Shawnee county gave the district court of Montgomery county jurisdiction over the commission. This argument necessitated a consideration of the liability of the county. It will be noted from the agreed stipulation that the floodgate was first necessary in 1921 in order that a portion of a county road might be adequately drained, and that the county and the drainage district entered into a contract for the consideration by which it was agreed that the county might construct the floodgate and that if the board of county commissioners should fail to properly maintain the floodgate then the drainage district could repair it at the expense of the county. The drainage district argued before in this court and argues now that the county is liable under the above provision because the county did construct the floodgate, it did get out of repair, and the drainage 'district did expend the amount claimed in repair of the floodgate. We shall lay aside the question of the claimed liability of the city for a moment and consider only the question of the liability.of the county. It will be remembered that the highway, the drainage of which made this floodgate necessary, was a part of a county road and was maintained by the county and was a part of the state highway system, and on April 1,1929, pursuant to G. S. 1935, 68-418, the state highway commission succeeded to the rights, duties and liabilities of the board of county commissioners with reference to county roads that were taken into the state highway system under that section. In the opinion in Verdigris River Drainage Dist. v. City of Coffeyville, supra, this court considered the question of liability of the county *769as it had been considered in McCandliss Construction Co. v. Neosho County Comm’rs, 132 Kan. 651, 296 Pac. 720, and said:

“Moreover, this court remains of the opinion that the statement in the McCandliss case that Neosho county was no longer liable on the contract, was sound, and we hold the county in the instant case is not -now liable on its contract.” (p. 198.)

The first syllabus in Verdigris River Drainage Dist. v. City of Coffeyville, supra, is instructive on this point. It is as follows:

“Under the provisions of section 19, chapter 225, of the -Laws of 1929, the State Highway Commission assumed the rights and liabilities of the various counties of the state on all existing contracts for the construction, improvement, reconstruction or maintenance of state highways and bridges, and the counties are not now liable on such contracts.”

On this point the plaintiff argues that the question of whether the county was relieved of its liability by the enactment of G. S. 1935, 68-418, was not properly presented when the case was here before. This argument is not borne out by the record. A decision of the point was necessary for a decision on the vital point in the case. The question of the correctness of the ruling on the motion to quash turned upon the question of the liability of the county. The question was carefully considered in the opinion of this court. Moreover, the drainage district cites and relies on the case of Roberts v. Nemaha County Comm’rs, 133 Kan. 15, 298 Pac. 754, and that opinion was cited in the former case and distinguished in the. opinion.

The drainage district argues that to give the statute such a construction as to relieve the county from its obligation to perform its contract will render the statute unconstitutional under section 10, article 1, of the United States constitution, which section provides “No state shall . . . pass any bill ... or law impairing the obligation of contracts.” The question of the city’s liability is the only issue which can properly be presented in the instant appeal. The question of the county’s liability was definitely and conclusively set at rest when the case was here before. (Verdigris-River Drainage Dist. v. City of Coffeyville, 149 Kan. 191, 86 P. 2d 592.) (See Syl. ¶ 1 and pp. 197, 198.) The subject of the county’s, liability is not a proper question to be considered here, further than to state that the question of the county’s liability was previously-considered and denied. After our previous opinion the county promptly should have been dropped as a party defendant. That *770decision bound not only the litigants but the trial court as well. The court should not have ignored it.

The next question is the liability of the city of Coffeyville. It will be noted that this floodgate was constructed in 1921. At that time all the territory involved was outside the city limits. In 1928 the city enlarged its limits so as to include a part of the highway in question within the limits of the drainage district, and ever since that date that part of the highway, also known as Sunflower street within the city, which is served and benefited by the floodgate in question has been under the jurisdiction and supervision and has been maintained by defendant, the city of Coffeyville, and the state highway commission. The drainage district contends that the city is liable under G. S. 1935, 24-452. That section provides as follows:

“That whenever any drainage district shall include any territory that comprises a part of any incorporated city which has constructed or desires to construct any sewer or drain through any embankment or levee constructed by such drainage district along the bank of any watercourse, so as t.o have an outlet for such sewers into said watercourse, it shall be the duty of such cities to maintain efficient floodgates and pumping apparatus, and keep the outlet of such sewers closed during periods of high water, so that the water cannot run back through such sewers and cause injury to lands protected by such levee; and if any city shall neglect to perform such duty the board of directors of such drainage district may provide the necessary floodgates and pumping apparatus and collect the cost thereof from such city; and the city shall be liable for all damages, if any, caused by such neglect of duty.”

At the time the floodgate was repaired it was for the benefit of the city. The first requirement of the above statute is that the “drainage district shall include any territory that comprises a part of any incorporated city.” This requirement is met. The next requirement is that the city “has constructed or desires to construct- any sewer or drain.” The drainage district argues that this requirement is met by the fact that the drain in controversy was partly constructed by the city. We can find nothing in the agreed statement of facts to this effect. Paragraph 5 of the agreed statement of facts states the board of county commissioners, in pursuance of the contract, constructed the drain shortly after the execution of the contract.

The plaintiff argues further that the fact that the city has taken over and used the drain and that the drain and floodgate are necessary to the city is a substantial compliance with the statute. No authorities are furnished us wherein such a rule is announced. The question turns upon the construction to be given the statute. The *771city did not construct a drain nor does it now desire to construct a drain. The drain was already constructed before the city ever had any interest in the matter. To give the statute the meaning contended for by the city would be to read into the statute words that are not there. This court does not care to do that.

The judgment of the trial court is reversed with directions to render judgment for the defendants.