Embree v. Kansas City & Liberty Boulevard Road District

"WOODSON1, X

The plaintiffs instituted this suit in the circuit court of Clay county, against the defendants, to enjoin them from issuing $77,000 of bonds, the proceeds of which were to be used in the construction of public highways in the Kansas City-Liberty Boulevard Road District, of Clay county, Missouri.

A trial was had which resulted in a judgment in favor of the defendants, and a dismissal of the bill. After taking the proper preliminary steps therefor, the plaintiffs appealed the cause to this court.

The facts of the case are practically undisputed, and are as follows:

The Kansas City-Liberty Boulevard Road District of Clay county is a special roád district, organized and incorporated under article 7 of chapter 102, Revised Statutes 1900, and the amendments thereto.

There is no pretense but what the district was duly incorporated under the. provisions of said article, but the contention is that the article is unconstitutional, null and void under both the State and Federal constitutions.

In order to intelligently understand the legal propositions here presented, it is necessary to briefly notice the provisions of said article 7.

The first section thereof, being 10611, Revised Statutes 1900', provides that' the county courts of the various counties of the State may divide them into road districts, and authorizes said courts to incorporate with the usual powers of corporations for public purposes, and each to be known as “--road district of-county. ’ ’ Each district is to embrace not less than two thousand acres of contiguous lands,, and may be commensurate with a township, but must be located wholly within the county in which it is organized.

Section 10612 provides that when a petition signed by the owners of a majority of the acres of land within any district proposed to be organized, stating the name *602of the proposed district, giving the boundaries thereof, and the number of acres embraced, and stating the names of the owners of the land, and the number of acres owned by each, and praying for an organization of such public road district in accordance with the provisions of said article and filed in the office of the clerk of the county court thirty days before the first day of the' nest term thereof, the clerk shall give notice that the petition will be heard at the next term of the court, etc., which notice shall state the names of at least three of the petitioners and the boundaries of the proposed district, and notify all owners of the land in said district who may desire to oppose the formation thereof to appear on the first day of said term and file their written remonstrance thereto, etc., which shall specifically state their objections to said organization. That the court shall hear said remonstrance, and may make such changes in the boundaries of such district as the public good may require. That if after such changes have been made it appears to the court that the petition so filed still contains the names of the owners of a majority of the acres contained in the district, the court shall make a preliminary order establishing the district, 'and set out the boundaries thereof. If no remonstrance shall have been filed, the court shall determine whether the petition for the organization has been signed by the owners of a majority of the acres embraced within the proposed district, and if so, shall establish the district with the boundaries given in the petition, or with the boundaries as may be set forth in the amended petition signed by the owners of a majority of the acres affected thereby; and said amended petition may be filed at any time before the preliminary order establishing the district is made, but the boundaries of -the district shall not be .changed so as to embrace any lands not described in the notice given *603by tbe clerk, unless tbe owner shall in writing consent thereto, etc.

Section 10613 provides that after the district has been formed the county court shall appoint three commissioners, possessing certain qualifications, to hold their office until the first Tuesday after the first Monday in January thereafter; “and on said date the landowners in said district . . . shall elect three, commissioners, one of whom shall serve for one year, one for two years and one for three years, and on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in January each year thereafter,” they shall elect one commissioner for a period of three years, etc. Then follows provisions for filling vacancies on the commission, etc.

Section 10614 provides for the qualification of the commissioners, organization of the board, the election of officers, and the times and places for holding meetings, etc. The county treasurer is made treasurer of the road district, etc. The president of the board of commissioners shall preside at all meetings, sign warrants and have general supervision over'the work of the commission, etc., and the secretary shall keep a record of all the proceedings of the board, draw warrants, etc.

Section 10615 provides that the board of commissioners shall fix a fair and impartial value on each tract of land within the district independent of the buildings thereon, and make a tabulated statement of such valuations, according to numbers, and the names of the owners if known, etc., and note what tracts lie within one mile of the road proposed to be improved, those that are a greater distance than one and under two miles, and those over two miles, and when more than one road is proposed to be improved a separate statement as to each shall be made. The statements of valuations shall be signed by the commissioners and acknowledged, etc. Thereupon the board shall request the county surveyor to draw estimates of the *604costs of the road to be improved, etc., who, under the direction of the board, shall make estimates of the various costs of the improvements, etc., and make a report to the board accompanied by maps and profiles, specifying the road or roads to be improved, and the yarious kinds of work and materials to be used, etc., and the proportionate cost to be charged to each separate tract of land for each separate road, and for the whole, according to the valuations previously made, if all are to be paid for at once, and the amount if to be paid in five or twenty years’ equal installments, and the amount of each installment. That each tract of land within one mile of the road to be improved shall be charged in proportion to the valuation fixed thereon as previously directed, and each tract located at a greater distance than one mile and less than two miles from such road shall be assessed at seventy-five per cent of the value thereof, as previously fixed, and all the tracts more than two miles therefrom shall be charged with fifty per cent of said valuation; and in determining the share of any tax-bill or bonds- to be taxed against each and all tracts of land in the road district, the rule of apportionment above stated shall govern the county clerk in extending the taxes on the tax-books kept by him for that purpose.

Section 10616 provides that upon filing said tabulated statement of the valuations, and said report, maps and profiles, the board of commissioners shall call a general meeting of all the landowners in the district, etc., and give twenty days ’ notice thereof. At such meeting the board shall submit the report containing the estimates, together with the maps and profiles, made by the engineer, to the landowners for examination, and shall take a vote of those present on the following propositions:

“First — Shall the roads mentioned in said report be constructed or improved according to any of the plans and out of any of the materials therein set out, *605and the costs thereof to he charged against the lands in the district?
“Second — "What materials shall be used in constructing said road or roads?
“Third — Shall the cost be paid (1) at once, or (2) distributed through five years, or (3) distributed through twenty years?”

Then follows a provision as to the number of votes each landowner has, and the number necessary to carry each proposition submitted.

Section 10617 provides that if the landowners vote, as previously stated, in favor of the improvements and to charge the cost thereof against the lands, as previously stated, then the commission shall make out and sign and acknowledge, etc., a report of the action of the landowners at said meeting, and file the same with the clerk of the county court, and said clerk shall enter the same upon the records of said court, and from the filing of said report said public road district, by the name mentioned in the preliminary order of the court, shall be a political subdivision of the State, for governmental purposes, with all the powers mentioned in said article 7. That if the owners of a majority of the acres of the land in the district do not vote for the construction of the improvements mentioned, then the board of commissioners shall report that fact to the county court, and the court shall make an order rescinding its former preliminary order establishing the district, and order that all the costs thereof be paid out of the general road funds of the county.

Section 10618 provides that after any such road district has been established the board of commissioners shall employ a competent engineer to draw plans and specifications for the construction of the roads and the materials to be used, etc., according .to the vote of the landowners, as in section 10616 directed. That after said specifications have been approved by *606the hoard of commissioners they shall he filed with said commission, and thereupon said commission shall in the name of said district enter into a written contract with the lowest and best bidder, to construct the roads, etc.

Section 10619 provides that if, at the general meeting of the landowners, previously mentioned, they should vote for the payment of the entire cost, by one assessment, the contract should provide for the payment of said work or improvements by special tax bills issued against the lands in the district, in the proportions previously mentioned, and that upon the completion of the work, and the acceptance of the same, etc., the board of commissioners shall make out and certify to the county clerk a statement of the contract price of the entire improvements, a description of each tract of land embraced in the district lying within one mile of the road, and of each that is situated more than one and less than two miles therefrom, and of each tract which is located at a greater distance than two miles, accompanied with a statement of the number of acres in each tract, and the name of each record-owner thereof, and the valuation fixed thereon by the commission, which shall be acknowledged, etc. That thereupon the clerk of the county court shall apportion to each tract its share of the cost of said improvements and make out separate special tax bills against each tract for the amount apportioned to it as provided for by section 10615, which shall be payable to the contractor within sixty days from issue,' etc. That said bills shall be signed by the president of the board and attested by the county clerk, delivered to the contractor and accepted by him in full payment for his work, etc. That said tax bills shall be a lien upon the respective tracts of land against which they are issued, and if not paid when due, the owner may sue thereon in the circuit court at any time within two years thereafter, etc. *607That before issuing said tax bills the county clerk shall enter in a book to be denominated “Special Tax Record of--Road District,” a description of the tax bills by number, amount, payee, date of issue and maturity, and the numbers of the land and the names of the owners, if known, etc. Said record book shall be kept in the office of the county clerk, and a duplicate thereof shall be made by him and deposited with the county treasurer, and he shall give to the owner of each tract if known, or if not known, to the occupant, a notice of the amount due on said-bill and when due.

Then follows a minute provision as to how the tax bills shall be paid, and the release and cancellation of the same.

Section 106201 provides that when the landowners at the general meeting authorized by section 10616 shall, by vote, direct that the cost of said improvements shall be made payable in annual installments extending over five or twenty years, as the ease might be, the board of commissioners shall issue the bonds of the district for the length of time by said meeting-directed, and in an amount not to exceed the estimates submitted to said meeting, plus ten per cent thereof, and-enter into a contract for the construction of said road as directed by sections 10618 and 10619', of this article, except the contract for the improvements shall provide that the cost thereof shall be paid for in money instead of special tax bills. Provided, however, the board of commissioners may use said bonds or any part thereof at par in the payment of said work. That said bonds shall run in the name of the road district, bearing six per cent interest, payable at the .expiration of the time indicated by the landowners at said general meeting, etc. Said bonds shall be signed by the president of the road district and attested by the county clerk, who shall before their delivery register them in a suitable book procured for that-purpose. That whenever the board of commissioners shall *608sell any of said bonds for the payment of any work to be performed under this article, the proceeds thereof shall be paid to the county treasurer, who shall enter the same to the credit of said district, etc., and shall pay the same out on the warrants drawn by the board of commissioners. That the board of commissioners shall make out and certify to the county clerk a statement of the amount of the bond issue, and a description by numbers of each tract of land in the district lying within one mile of the road, and of each that lies a greater distance than one mile and less than two miles, and of each tract that lies a greater distance than two miles therefrom, with a statement of the number of acres contained in each tract, and the valuation placed thereon by them, and acknowledge the same as is provided for acknowledging deeds to real estate, and file the same with the clerk of the county court.

Thereupon said clerk shall apportion to each and all of said tracts, according to the rule prescribed by said section 10615', its share of said bond issue, etc., and enter the same in a book to be denominated “Bond Tax Record of--Road Dictrict,” and shall append thereto his certificate as county clerk, and from said date such apportionment shall be a charge against the tracts of land indicated, until paid.

The county clerk shall in each succeeding year make out a duplicate of so much of said bond record as will indicate the portion of said charge each tract is to pay for that year, etc., and deposit said duplicate record with the collector of revenues of the county, etc., and said collector shall annually make out separate tax bills against each tract for the amount .shown by the duplicate record, and collect the same as other taxes are collected, and receipt for them in the same manner. Each tax bill shall contain the name of the owner of each tract, and if not paid on presentation shall bear interest, etc., and if not paid withiu *609six months, suit may be brought thereon by the collector to the use of the owner thereof, etc. That a judgment in any such suit shall be a lien on the lands described in the tax bills, and sued on, etc. The collector shall deposit all moneys by him collected on said tax bills with the county treasurer, etc;

Then follows a provision fixing the liability of' the collector for the collection of said tax bills, the fees he shall receive for his services, the receipts he is to give in satisfaction of the same when paid, and the release of the tax against the lands, etc.

Section 10621 provides as to how titles to certain lands must be considered, which is not important in this case.

Section 10623 authorizes the board of commissioners to employ county surveyor and bridge commissioner to perform certain work.

Section 10624 provides that the county clerk shall set aside to the credit of the road district the portion of the revenues for working the public roads that may be raised by direct taxation against the property lying therein, according to any existing laws or subsequent enactment, and said revenue shall be spent by said board of commissioners for keeping any road within the district in repair. Also a proper apportionment of any license taxes and poll taxes and city revenue raised and set aside to any special road district organized under this article, is to be made by the county court and turned over to said board of commissioners. That any road overseer who shall be such under any law at the time of the organization of such road district shall turn over to the board ,of commissioners any tools, graders, scrapers or implements of any kind in his possession which may by a proper apportionment belong to such district.

Then follows a provision authorizing the board of commissioners to make contracts for the improve*610ment of the roads of the district from time to time, and paying for the same ont of the funds coming into its hands.

And section 10625 provides that all poll taxes of the district shall be paid in cash and placed to the credit of the district.

- Districts*031^ I. Counsel for appellants ■ first insist that the judgment of the circuit court was erroneous because the taxes levied against their property, im(3er and by virtue of chapter 102, article 7, Revised Statutes 1900, are illegal, for the reason that said article authorized said levy without notice to them, and therefore authorizes the taking of their property in violation of sections 21 and 30 of article 2 of the Constitution of this State, and section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States.

These constitutional provisions, in substance, provide (1) that private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation, and (2) that no person shall be deprived of his property without due process of law.

There is absolutely no merit in either of these contentions.

Regarding the first: This court from its earliest history down to this time, has uniformly held that special taxes or benefits, such as were levied against appellants’ property, under said article 7, are not public taxes within the meaning of the' Constitution authorizing the levy and collection of taxes for public or governmental purposes, but are special taxes assessed against the property for the payment of the improvements made upon the highways in the vicinity of the property, which in legal contemplation adds to the value of the property as much or more than the amount of the taxes imposed.

*611It would serve no good purpose to cite authorities in support of this ruling, save the ease of Ranney v. City of Cape Girardeau, 255 Mo. 514, wherein many of the eases so holding are cited by Judge Lamm-.

Attending the second: This contention is also untenable for the reason that this court and the Supreme Court of the United States have repeatedly held that where these special benefits are levied, and no provision is made for the property-owners ■ to be heard during the proceedings imposing the special benefits, and where they are only collectible by suit, as in the case at bar, then all legal defenses the property-owners' may have, from the inception of the proceedings down to the rendition of the judgment of the court on the tax bills, may be pleaded and contested in the same manner th^it any legal or equitable defense may be made in any other action at law or in equity.

The only procedure prescribed by said article 7 for the collection of these benefits is section 10620, previously mentioned, which only authorizes their collection by suit in the circuit court.

In treating this question, Page and Jones on Taxation by Assessment, section 119, uses this language: “The general rule is that at some time before the assessment becomes an absolute finality there must be a notice to the property-owner and an opportunity for a hearing as to those questions of fact which concern the amount of the assessment to be imposed upon such property, except such as the legislative power ñas authority to determine without special inquiry, and has in fact so determined ... If such notice is not given and under the law the assessment becomes a finality, subject to be enforced summarily, without giving any opportunity for a hearing as to the questions of fact which concern the amount of the assessment other than those which the legislative power has authority to determine without special inquiry, and *612■which the legislative power has in fact so determined, snch assessment then constitutes a taking without due process of law and is invalid as in violation of the constitutional provisions under consideration.”

In section 132, the same authority says: “If the assessment is to be enforced summarily without notice or judicial proceedings, it is evident that no opportunity is thereby given to the property-owner to contest the assessment on its merits ... If notice has not been given at a prior stage of the proceedings so that the property-owner has an opportunity to contest the assessment upon its merits, the proceeding is in violation of the constitutional provision which forbids the taking of property without due process of law.” [Pash v. City of St. Joseph, ante, p. 332.]

In section 773, the same authority says: “If the assessment can be enforced only by an action at law or a suit in equity, and in such proceeding the property-owner is given a full opportunity to be heard upon the question of benefits, the property-owner is not entitled, as of constitutional right in the absence of statutory provision therefor, to any notice, except that of the institution of such proceedings to enforce the assessment.”

In Hagar v. Reclamation Disk, 111 U. S. 701, it is held that: “A law authorizing the imposition of a tax or assessment upon property according to its value does not infringe that provision of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution, which declares that no State shall deprive any person of property without due process of law, if the owner has an opportunity to question the validity or the amount of it, either before that amount is determined or in a subsequent proceeding for its collection. ’ ’

The same ruling has been announced by this court in the following cases: City of St. Louis v. Richeson, 76 Mo. 470; Kansas City v. Huling, 87 Mo. 203; Sax-*613ton National Blank v. Carswell, 126 Mo. 436; Springfield to use v. Weaver, 137 Mo. 650, l. c. 672.

The case of City of St. Louis v. Ranken, 96 Mo. 497, is not in conflict with the principles of law announced in the foregoing cases. In that case the question was, had the provisions of an ordinance of the city authorizing the improvements to be made, and the assessment of benefits therefor, been complied with? Said ordinance provided that notice should be .given of the establishment of the benefit district, the time and place of making the assessments, and giving the property-owners the right to be then heard upon those propositions. This ordinance was wholly ignored and this court held, and properly so, that the assessments were void because those provisions of the ordinance had not been complied with. While it is true, in that case the charter and ordinances of the city provided, as do those of most of the cities of the State, that if any property-owner shall consider himself aggrieved by the award of the commission chosen to assess the damages and benefits, he may file in the circuit court exceptions to the report of the commissioners, which shall be heard by said court, etc. In that class of cases the lawmaking power has deemed it proper to give the property-owners two hearings, one before the commissioners and another in the circuit court. But there is no such provision as there stated provided for in the statutes under consideration in this case.

I am, therefore, clearly of the opinion that there is no merit in either of those contentions of counsel for appellants.

Legislative Assessments. II. If I correctly understand counsel for appellants, they lodge an additional objection against the validity of section 10615; of article 7, chapter 102, Revised Statutes 1909, which A / ’ is closely related to or germane to the *614questions presented and disposed of in paragraph one of this opinion.

In substance, it is contended that said section divides the road district into three benefit zones of one mile each, and further provides that the lands in the first shall be assessed according to their values, say 100 per cent, the second at 75 per cent, and the third at 50' per cent of the values which are to be fixed by the board of commissioners, without notice to the property-owners.

This contention can be more logically considered by dividing it into two elements and considering each separately.

First — It is contended that because said section 10615, of the statute, arbitrarily divides the road district into three beneficial zones, and assesses the lands in each at a different percentage, without giving the property-owners in each notice thereof, and an opportunity to be heard thereon, it is violative of said section 30 of article 2 of the Missouri Constitution and therefore deprives them of their property without due process of law.

In answer to that contention it is sufficient to state that said division of the road district into zones and the fixing of the percentage of benefits to the lands in each are legislative acts which cannot be questioned upon the ground of want of notice to the property-owners.

The reason for this rule is, that the authority to create benefit districts and the percentage of the benefits to be assessed rests solely with the Legislature, which, however, may delegate that authority to certain officers and institutions of the State, such as the common councils of the various cities of the State and the county courts of the various counties thereof, and so long as they act within their legislative authority their acts cannot be questioned because of want of notice in the absence of some charter, ordinance or *615statutory provision to the contrary. Such acts are known as legislative enactments or legislative assessments, as the case may be.

This has been so often decided by this court and the Supreme Court of the United States, that it is no longer open for discussion. The case of Naylor v. Harrisonville, 207 Mo. 341, l. c. 353, reviews some of the cases deciding this question by both this court and the Supreme Court of the United States. There is therefore no merit in this contention.

The second objection before mentioned, namely, that while it may be conceded that the division of the districts into zones and the fixing of the percentage of benefits to the lands in each zone, may be legislative acts, yet, the valuation of the lands by the board of commissioners in each and all of the zones, upon which the percentage of benefits is to be based, was not made or fixed by the Legislature, but by said board, and is therefore subject to question by the property-owners in each and all of them, and if not afforded that right then the proceedings would result in taking their property without due process of law.

It must be conceded that if appellants’ major premise is true, then the sequence must necessarily follow. But is the major premise true? I think not, for the reason, as before stated, namely, that each and all property-owners within the district, who considered himself or themselves aggrieved by- the valuation of his or their lands by the board of commissioners, are offered an opportunity for a full hearing upon that question in the circuit court when suit is brought upon the tax bill, which cannot be collected in any ether manner.

This proposition was fully considered and decided in clause two of paragraph one of this opinion, and there is nothing additional, that I know of, that could with profit be added to what is there stated.

*616I am, therefore, of the opinion that there is no merit in this contention.

Assessment: Exclusive of Improvements. III. It is next insisted by counsel for appellants that said section 10615 of article 7 is unconstitutional, null and void, because, as stated, it is class-legislation, in that it authorizes the taxation of the real estate of the district according to its reasonable value, exclusive of the buildings thereon. In other words, it is contended that the taxation of the lands and not the buildings thereon, is an unreasonable and unjust classification, and therefore, the statute authorizing that to be done is class-legislation, within the meaning of the State and Federal constitutions.

There is no constitutional provision prohibiting legislation which embraces all persons and things that naturally belong to the same class and are similarly situated and upon whom it must operate uniformly and equally. [State ex inf. v. Standard Oil Co., 218 Mo. 1, and cases-cited.]

The case of Corrigan v. Kansas City, 211 Mo. 608, in the majority opinion, goes to the extent of holding that property of the same class, if belonging to different classes of owners, may be exempt from the payment of these special benefits.

I did not then, nor do I now, subscribe to that doctrine, for the reasons stated in the dissenting' opinion at page 633; but independent of that error, as I see it, that case properly recognizes the authority of the Legislature to make reasonable and natural classifications of property for the purpose of assessment, to pay for local improvements.' In fact, that rule of taxation is recognized and enforced by practically all, if not all, of our cities, towns and villages in paying for street and other improvements and the cost of constructing sewers, etc., as is shown by the scores of cases which have reached this court. More*617over, it would be difficult to conceive of a more natural classification of real estate than that of soil, buildings, trees, etc. This classification runs all through, the laws of states and nations; and without it, legislation regarding questions of rents, landlord and tenant, fire insurance, arson, mechanic’s liens, railroads, telegraph and telephone linés, and all classes of local improvements, such as streets, alleys, sewers and public parks in cities, and drainage and levee districts in the country, would have to rest upon totally different foundations than it now does; and to abolish that classification, at this late date, would disturb the whole fabric of our jurisprudence and would inject therein endless confusion and complications.

Even though we should consider orchards, vineyards, and other such betterments added to the soil by the hand of man, as improvements, yet there is a clear distinction between that class of improvements and those known as houses, buildings, etc.

The former becomes not a fixture to the land, but a part of the soil itself, as it were. They owe their life to, and draw their substance, growth and development therefrom, aided by the air, rain and sunshine —without which they would die, perish and return to dust; but not so, as to the latter — they owe no debt to the earth, except for the footstool upon which they stand.

I am, therefore, clearly of the opinion that there is no merit in this insistence.

Excessive Bndnebftdn6SS: Road District. IY. Counsel for appellants also insist that said article 7 is unconstitutional, null and V0^ because it authorizes the road district to create a bonded indebtedness in excess of the constitutional limitation.

The constitutional, provision referred to is section 12 of article 10; and in so far as it is material to this question, reads as follows:

*618“No county, city, town, township, school district or other political corporation or subdivision of the State shall be allowed to become indebted in any manner or for any purpose to an amount exceeding in any year the income and revenue provided for such year, without the assent of two-thirds. of the voters thereof voting at an election to be held for that purpose; nor in cases requiring such assent shall any indebtedness be allowed to be incurred to an amount including existing indebtedness, in the aggregate exceeding five per centum on the value of the taxable property therein, to be ascertained by the assessment next before the last assessment for State and county purposes, previous to the incurring of such indebtedness.”

The assessments authorized by said article 7 of the statute are for the payment of local improvements, denominated special benefits to the land against which the assessments are made; and for that reason this court has uniformly held that such assessments do not constitute an indebtedness within the meaning of the constitutional provision just quoted. [Ranney v. Cape Girardeau, supra.] In fact, I do not understand counsel to contend that they do; but be that true or not, the uniform ruling of this court has been that no such assessment constitutes an indebtedness within the meaning of that provision, but are special assessments made to pay for the special benefits accruing to the property by reason of the local and special improvements — the one offsetting the other.

I also understand from the briefs and arguments of counsel for appellants, that they practically concede that if under said sections 10619’ and 10620’, the property-owners of the district had voted in favor of paying the entire cost of the improvements by one assessment, then a special tax bill would have been issued against each tract of land in the district, which would have constituted a special lien thereon, and would not have constituted an indebtedness of any kind *619against the road district as snch, in any sense; bnt be that as it may, there is no language contained in the said article which remotely indicates that such assessments would be an indebtedness against the district. But upon the contrary, the whole import and meaning of the article is to the contrary.

But the real contention of counsel for appellants is, that since the landowners did. not vote in favor of paying the entire cost of the improvements by one assessment, but by installments, as provided for by said section 10619', then it became the duty of the district to issue its bonds for the amount of the estimated cost of the improvements, plus 10 per cent, and that they be sold in the manner prescribed, and that the proceeds thereof be used in the construction of the roads ordered, etc.

From that premise it is insisted and argued with much force and earnestness, that since the bonds are the bonds of the district, the indebtedness which they represent must also be that of the district, and consequently they must be paid by it.

If that contention is true, then clearly the district would, by said section 12 of the Constitution, be prohibited from issuing the bonds in question, for the reason that their face value would far exceed the constitutional limitation contained therein.

If that is the meaning to be placed upon the statute, then I do not understand counsel for respondent to differ from counsel for the opposition as to what would be the legal effect of the Constitution upon the statute and upon the bonds proposed to - be issued under that authority.

Under that assumption counsel for both parties would be compelled to admit that the statute would be unconstitutional and the bonds would be void. But the record in the ease fails to disclose that counsel for respondents are so generously inclined as to admit that counsel for appellants have correctly interpreted *620said statute; consequently they persist in their contention that the statute is constitutional and that the bonds if issued, would be valid.

The basis of this contention is the same as that, which is practically conceded, as previously stated, if the vote of the landowners had been in favor of paying the entire cost of the improvements by one assessment, then the tax bills would have been a special lien against the respective tracts of land, and not an indebtedness of the road district, as such.

If I correctly read and understand the meaning of sections 10619' and 10620', there is no difference in principle between the character of the indebtedness created for the payment of the special benefits conferred by the improvements or by what hand the same is to be paid, whether it is payable by one assessment and evidenced by a single tax bill issued against each tract of land, and delivered to the contractor, or whether the indebtedness is to be paid for by annual installments evidenced by several tax bills issued against each tract, and collected by the county collector, and the proceeds thereof turned over to the county treasurer for the purpose of paying the bonds as they mature, instead of the tax bill, had they been based upon one assessment, and had been delivered to the contractor in the first instance, as previously stated.

The indebtedness voted by the landowners, whether payable by a single assessment or several, constitutes liens upon the respective tracts of land in the district, in proportion to their respective values, and must be paid severally by each landowner, whether paid in bulk or in annual installments. If in bulk, the payments would have been made payable to the contractor, because in such case the tax bill would have been made payable to and delivered to him, but if in installments, then they would have been payable to the county collector, and by him turned over to the *621county treasurer, and by him paid to the bond-holders, whoever they might be.

This is not controverted by counsel for appellants, but they insist that there is no provision contained in said article 7 of the statutes which authorizes the issuance of such bonds, containing a clause showing that they are only payable out of the special benefits collected, and, therefore, they must be considered and treated as the bonds of the district and not simply evidences of an indebtedness, only payable, as previously stated, out of the proceeds of special tax bills issued for benefits imposed against the several tracts of land in the district, and collected in the manner therein provided for.

This contention is unsound for two reasons: first, because the statute does not undertake to prescribe the form of the bonds to be issued, and the presumption is that the officers charged with their execution will issue bonds in harmony with the provisions of the statutes authorizing their issuance and the purpose for which they are executed and the means of their payment.

If those mandates of the statutes are complied with, the bonds upon their face, as well as the statutes authorizing their execution, which must be read into the face of the bonds, will conclusively show that they are not the bonds of the roau district, but simply evidences of an indebtedness payable out of the proceeds of the special tax bills issued against the lands embraced in the district, for the benefits mentioned.

And the second reason mentioned for saying that said bonds are not the obligations of the road district is this: That in considering the nature and character of the bonds in question it is the duty of the court and all parties dealing with them, to read and consider in connection therewith the entire article of the statute bearing thereon and authorizing their execution; and by so doing it will clearly appear that no authority is *622given to any officer of the county or road district to levy or collect any tax with which to pay said bonds, except the special assessments authorized for the improvements mentioned, which are for the benefit of the respective landowners, and not for the benefit of the district itself. Moreover, the district as such, has no means out of which it could pay said bonds, nor any authority to make assessments therefor, except in the manner previously stated, which conclusively shows that the indebtedness is against the lands and not against the road district.

The principle underlying these observations was presented to this court in the case of State ex rel. v. Gordon, 223 Mo. 1. There one of the questions presented was regarding the form of the bonds to be issued. The bonds were issued under the statutes authorizing the issuance and sale of bonds for the purpose of building school houses and furnishing them. One of the points made was that the bonds issued should have shown upon their face (which they did not do) that they were issued for the purpose of building school houses and for furnishing the same. This court in a very carefully considered opinion, written by Judge Lamm, held that the bonds issued were valid, notwithstanding the omission from the face thereof the purposes for which they were issued. Judge Graves dissented from the entire opinion for several reasons, ■one of which was, that the recital mentioned did not appear on the face of the bond, impliedly holding that the recital should have been made. Counsel for neither party nor did any member of the court contend or hold that such a recital in the bonds would have been improper, but, with the exception of Judge Graves, were of the opinion that the bonds were not invalid because of such omission — believing that the statutes should be read into the face of the bonds, which would be as effectual as if the recital had been actually written in the face of the bonds.

*623I am, therefore, of the opinion that this contention is without merit, and it is ruled against appeHants.

Y. It is also insisted by counsel for appellants that said article 7 is unconstitutional, for the reason stated, “that it turns over the care and maintenance of the public highways to a body of landowners and also confides to them the expenditure of public moneys.”

This is clearly a misconception of the statute. Section 10617, in clear and unambiguous language, declares that after the meeting of the landowners, and their votes are cast in favor of the propositions contained in the previous section, the district ‘ ‘ shall be a political subdivision of the State for governmental purposes with all the powers mentioned in this article and such others as may from time to time be given it by law.” The board of commissioners are in the first instance appointed by the county court, and thereafter elected by the landowners of the district.

Under these statutes all such road districts are public corporations, organized under the unquestioned authority of the Legislature. [Harris v. Bond Co., 244 Mo. 664.]

And as was held in that case, the commissioners appointed or elected in the manner provided for by section 10613 are public officers for the purposes mentioned in said article 7.

Moreover, all of our drainage districts are organized and administered by a board of commissioners in pursuance to statutes practically similar to these under consideration. This being true, there remains no foundation whatever for this insistence to rest upon; and it is accordingly ruled against the appellants.

Entertaining these views of the case I am perfectly satisfied that the statutes in question are valid, and that no error was committed by the circuit court in the trial of the cause.

*624The judgment is affirmed..

Graves, Bond and Walker, JJ., concur; Lamm, G. J., dubitante; Brown, J., dissents; Paris, J., not sitting.