State ex rel. Parsons v. Winkleman

GOODE, J.

By an act passed February 27, 1855, the Egyptian Levee Company was incorporated for the purpose of reclaiming and protecting from overflow about eleven thousand acres of' land in Clark county lying between the Des Moines and Fox rivers and near the Mississippi (Sess. Acts 1855, p. 73; Local Laws and Private Acts 1855, p. 281). Said company was authorized to exercise the power of eminent domain and to make and repair levees, ditches and embankments to prevent the inundation of lands within the levee district, to levy taxes to a fixed limit to pay for the construction of such protective earthworks and also taxes to keep them repaired. The original act of incorporation was amended several times by special acts prior to the adoption of the Constitution of 1875, and since then has been subject* to the changes made by general laws passed in regard to overflowed lands. Most of the amendments have no bearing on this case and will not be noticed.

Section 18 of the original act is as follows:

“Said company shall have power and authority after the said levee, ditches and embankments are constructed, for the purpose of keeping the same in repair and use, to levy off of the landowners within the limits of said charter, whatever tax they may deem necessary, and not exceeding ten cents per acre per annum, the same to be assessed -and collected as in the assessment and collection of taxes for the purpose of constructing-said levee, ditches and embankments, and as hereinbefore provided for.”

A statute was passed March 31, 1883 (Sess. Acts 1883, p. 108; Revised Statutes 1899, sec. 8370), containing the following provisions:

“1. The board of directors of any corporation which has been or may hereafter be organized for the purpose of reclaiming swamp or overflowed lands, may, when it is satisfactorily shown that the tax per acre now authorized by law to be levied for the purpose of repairing levees, ditches and embankments, is insufficient to pay the costs of such repairs, then such board *228of directors shall have power and authority to levy on the land within the limits of their charter, an additional tax of fifteen cents per acre, per annum, to be paid by the owners thereof.
“2. As the property within the limits of the existing corporations mentioned in the preceding section, is liable to suffer great injury, unless this act take effect immediately, an emergency exists; therefore this act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.”

E. D. Parsons did work on the levees in the year 1885, asserted by appellant’s counsel to have been repairs and which we will treat as such, and he received in payment a warrant which he afterwards assigned to the relator, who recovered judgment on it in 1897 for three hundred and sixty dollars and took out an execution that was returned nulla bona. The respondents, who are the directors of the Egyptian Levee Company, refused to levy a special tax to pay the judgment, and in October, 1898, the relator sued out an alternative writ of mandamus to compel them to take that step, but at the hearing of the cause a peremptory writ was denied and the relator appealed.

The' evidence showed that both the ten and fifteen cent levies for repairs authorized by the statute were made and exhausted during 1898, prior to the bringing* of this action, but that both of them had rarely been ordered in preceding years, though the relator admits both were ordered and used in paying other debts in 1885, when the work was done. His position is thus stated by counsel in their brief:

“The relator contends in reply that respondents have power and authority to levy a tax to pay his judgment for the reason that they have not as contemplated by Act of 1883, which was in force at the date of issuance of the warrant in judgment, levied a tax sufficient to pay for the repair done on the levee for which this, warrant was issued. That said levy has been omitted for many years subsequent to the year 1885, the date the work was done. That under the evidence in the *229case the work was done on a portion of the levee in ■order to repair a portion that had washed into the river and hence afforded no protection to the land lying within the levee district without this necessary and emergency work contemplated by said act, and that the •directors under their charter had and have full power and authority to levy the tax to pay this warrant reduced to judgment.”

The main question propounded for solution is, therefore, whether the directors of the levee company can be compelled by this proceeding, begun in 1898, to levy an assessment on the lands in the district to pay this judgment debt, due for work done in 1885, because either the ten or fifteen cents levy was omitted for most •of the years between 1885 and 1898?

Several intricacies of the Gordian-knot variety were suggested by the respondents’ counsel in regard ■to the effect on the powers of the directors of an amendatory statute enacted in 1872, granting to the taxpayers ■of the district the right to vote on proposed improvements and assessments, which we will either untie or cut when we have to in order to decide a case; but we •do not have to at present, so we shall pass over them.

The laws under which assessments to pay for repair work must be made by the directors of the company prescribe a maximum limit of twenty-five cents an acre, which may not be exceeded in any year, whether the tax must be voted in every case by the •landowners or not; and as that amount had been already ■collected and exhausted in the year 1898, no further levy could be lawfully ordered to pay the relator’s judgment. The limitations contained in the various statutes under which the levee company exists and acts, exert ■a restraint on its power to lay and collect taxes similar to that exerted by our constitutional limitations on the taxing power of counties, and should receive the same •construction; and the rule above stated is the one declared in regard to the effect of constitutional and •special legislative limitations as to taxation by counties, State ex rel. v. Macon County Court, 56 Mo. 126; *230U. S. ex rel. v. Id., 99 U. S. 582; Book v. Earl, 87 Mo. 246; Barnard v. Knox County, 105 Mo. 382. The intention of the Legislature was to confine the authority of the levee company to contract for repairs in any year, inside the maximum of taxes permitted to be laid to pay for that kind of work during one year, to-witr twenty-five cents an acre on the land lying within the district, and to prohibit the making of such extensive repairs as would run the total cost above the amount that could be thus realized; and contractors were bound to take notice of that intention as expressed in the statutes. State ex rel. v. Macon County Court, and Barnard v. Knox County, supra; Winkleman v. Drainage District, 170 Ill. 37; Ahrens v. Drainage District, 170 Ill. 262; First Nat. Bk. v. Union District No. 2, 82 Ill. App. 626.

Appellant invokes the doctrine of Sheridan v. Fleming, 93 Mo. 321, in which it was ruled that a contractor who had dug a ditch to reclaim swamp lands under contract with the county court of Polk county, and whose warrant for the work remained unpaid because the estimate of the cost of the work turned out to> be too low,'so that the taxes levied to defray the cost as thus estimated were inadequate to defray the actual cost, was entitled to a writ of mandamus to compel the county court to make an additional levy. But that doctrine, while sound in that case, where the tax authorized to be collected to pay for the work was not. limited to the amount of the original estimate, but further levies permitted, is inapplicable to the case in hand, for here there is a limitation; the very statutes which empowered this company to contract for the repairs made by appellant’s assignor, provide a limit on the amount of taxes to be assessed in any year to pay for repairs. When the amount of taxes that may be laid to pay for improvements ordered by the public authorities is unrestricted, assessments may be made to meet the cost, however large; but if it is restricted, the prescribed limit must be respected by the authorities, and all persons seeking contracts for work must take notice of the *231limit and accept no work when the cost of it, added to the cost of other similar work already done, will exceed the revenues to which contractors must look for payment. State ex rel. v. Macon County Court, and U. S. ex rel. v. Id., supra.

The warrant on which the appellant obtained judgment was not shown to have been issued after the exhaustion of the repair levy of 1885 and, therefore, is not void, but represents a debt payable out of any repair fund the Egyptian Levee Company may have in excess of its current needs for any year, we think, in analogy to general county warrants (Andrew County v. Schell, 135 Mo. 31); but it'would be a violation of the purpose and letter of the statutes to require a special levy in any year to meet the debt, when assessments to the full amount permitted for repairs have been already laid and exhausted, merely because in previous, years full levies were not made. Otherwise, whatever debts of the company may be outstanding for years past, might be imposed on the present landowners of the district in a mass and to an amount equal to the aggregate difference between what taxes might have been raised and what actually were raised during those past years; which result manifestly the law never intended.

The judgment is affirmed.

Bland, P. J., and Barclay, J., concur.