1. A decree dismissing suit to enjoin special tax assessments
which in terms is without prejudice to the right of the plaintiff
to contest the matters in question as though the suit had not been
instituted or the decree entered does not bar subsequent litigation
of the same question. P.
276 U. S.
569.
2. Due process of law does not require notice of a proceeding to
determine merely whether an improvement shall be constructed if
land owners are later afforded an opportunity to be heard and to
show that their property should not be assessed. P.
276 U. S.
573.
3. A landowner who, being duly notified, fails to avail himself
of an opportunity afforded by a state statute to be heard upon the
question whether his land will be benefited by a proposed public
improvement and upon the constitutionality of including it in the
proposed improvement district cannot raise the question in this
Court in a suit attacking the resulting assessment. P.
276 U. S.
574.
Affirmed.
Appeal from a decree of the district court refusing an
interlocutory injunction against apportionment and assessment of
benefits on appellant's land for the maintenance of a drainage
system.
Page 276 U. S. 568
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit brought by appellants, receivers of the Chicago,
Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company, in the District Court for
South Dakota against the appellees, county commissioners of
Minnehaha County, to enjoin the apportionment and assessment of
benefits upon appellants' land for the maintenance of a drainage
system under the state agricultural drainage statutes, S.Dak.Laws
1907, c. 134, reenacted as S.Dak.Rev.Code 1919, §§
8458-8491, as amended by S.Dak.Laws 1920 (2d Sp.Sess., c. 46), on
the ground that the statutes and the proceedings had under them are
in conflict with the Fourteenth Amendment of the federal
Constitution. From an order of the district court, three judges
sitting, denying an application for an interlocutory injunction,
the case comes here on direct appeal. Jud.Code, §§ 238,
266;
Smith v. Wilson, 273 U. S. 388.
One phase of the controversy now presented, and the statutes
involved, were before this Court in
Risty v. Chicago, Rock
Island & Pacific Ry., 270 U. S. 378. In
that case, it appeared that the railroad company, which is
represented by the appellants here, owned lands in Minnehaha
county, some of which had not been included within an established
drainage district known as "Ditch No. 1 and Ditch No. 2." Those
ditches having been seriously damaged by floods, a proceeding had
been begun before the county commissioners for the enlargement and
reconstruction of the system, now described as "Drainage District
No. 1 and 2," with the object of assessing the benefits and cost of
the work on lands of the railroad
Page 276 U. S. 569
company and others lying both within and without the original
drainage district.
The suit was begun by the railroad company in the District Court
for South Dakota to enjoin the county officers from making any
apportionment and assessment of benefits affecting the property of
the railroad company, on the ground that the drainage statutes of
South Dakota and the proceedings under them violated the Fourteenth
Amendment of the federal Constitution. The district court held that
the statutes were valid and constitutional, but that the
assessments for reconstruction and maintenance of the existing
drainage system, so far as applied to lands outside the original
drainage district, were unauthorized by the state statutes.
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Ry. v. Risty, 282 F.
364. No appeal was taken by the railroad company from the decree of
the district court, but, on appeal by the county officials, so much
of the decree as involved the construction of the drainage statutes
and their application to lands outside of the original drainage
district was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the
Eighth Circuit, 297 F. 710, and by this Court in
Risty v.
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Ry., supra.
Following the decision in this Court, the appellants began the
present suit, in which they raised anew the questions as to the
constitutionality of the South Dakota drainage statutes and sought
relief the effect of which, if granted, would be to enjoin those
assessments on the land of plaintiffs within the original drainage
district which had been left undisturbed by the decree in the
earlier litigation.
Appellees, on the present application for an interlocutory
injunction, have set up that decree as
res judicata as to
all questions presented here. But an examination of the decree of
the district court in the earlier litigation, set out in the
present record, discloses that, by its terms,
Page 276 U. S. 570
the decree was "without prejudice to any and all rights of the
plaintiff to contest any such apportionment of benefits, or any
assessment which may be made" affecting the land of appellants
within the original drainage district and saving the right of the
railroad company in this regard as though "this suit had not been
instituted or this decree entered." Although reliance is placed
upon this decree as
res judicata, neither the record nor
the briefs disclose the reason for the insertion of these
provisions, and no reason is suggested why its language is not to
be taken at its face value as saving to appellants the right to
litigate anew the questions now presented.
Since our decision in
Risty v. Chicago, Rock Island &
Pacific Ry., supra, the Supreme Court of South Dakota, in
State v. Risty, 51 S.Dak. 336, has had occasion to pass
upon the construction and the constitutionality of the South Dakota
drainage statutes. Taking a different view from that of this Court
and the lower courts in
Risty v. Chicago, Rock Island &
Pacific Ry., supra, it held that the proceedings involved in
that litigation and in this, for the assessment of benefits upon
lands both within and without the original drainage district, were
authorized by the statutes of South Dakota. It held that the action
taken for reconstruction of the old drainage ditches was not a
proceeding for maintenance or repair of the old system, but a new
and independent proceeding, and that the statutes authorized the
establishment of a new drainage district embracing all the lands
benefited, whether included in the old district or not. It also
construed the sections regulating the proceedings for assessing the
benefits and costs of the reconstruction and enlargement of the
drainage ditches, and, as construed, held them constitutional. This
construction of the state statutes by the highest court of the
state we, of course, accept.
Sioux County v. National Surety
Co., 276 U. S. 238;
St. Louis & Kansas City Land Co. v. Kansas City,
241 U. S. 419,
241 U. S.
427.
Page 276 U. S. 571
As determined by the state supreme court in
State v. Risty,
supra, the proceedings resulting in the proposed assessment
now assailed were taken and authorized under S.Dak.Rev.Code (1919),
§§ 8458-8463, as amended. Under § 8459, upon
petition of the owners of land "likely to be affected by the
proposed drainage," the board of county commissioners, under §
8460, caused a survey to be made of the proposed drainage project
and, under § 8461, upon the filing of the surveyor's report
with the commission, fixed the line of the proposed drainage ditch
as that of the preexisting ditches No. 1 and No. 2, but increased
the width of the ditch from approximately 40 feet, as originally
established, to 90 feet. Notice of hearing upon the petition was
given by publication and posting, as required by § 8461,
printed in the margin. [
Footnote
1]
Page 276 U. S. 572
The notice as required described "the route of the proposed
drainage and the tract of country likely to be affected thereby in
general terms," and specifically included the lands of the
appellant, which are described in the present bill of complaint.
Upon the hearing, the board of county commissioners, acting under
§ 8462, made its order establishing the drainage as prayed.
Proceeding under § 8463, printed in the margin, [
Footnote 2] the board then fixed tentatively
the proportion of benefits of the drainage among the lands
affected, and particularly described and gave published notice of
the time and place for all owners of the land to be heard on
equalization of the benefits.
Page 276 U. S. 573
At the outset, appellant challenges the constitutionality of the
statutes and proceedings on the ground that the notice of the
hearing on the petition for the establishment of the drainage
project fell short of constitutional requirements. It is said that
notice to all persons affected by the proposed drainage, describing
only "the route of the proposed drainage and the tract of country
likely to be affected thereby in general terms," is too vague and
indefinite to constitute notice to any landowner other than those
through whose land the drainage ditch is to be constructed.
If it were necessary to our decision, we should hesitate to say
that the required notice was insufficient, at least as to the
owners of land embraced within the old district. For it showed
unmistakably that the projected improvements were, in substance, an
enlargement of a drainage ditch for the construction of which the
lands within the district, including appellants,' had already been
assessed. No particular form of notice is necessary to satisfy
constitutional requirements. If it be such as fairly apprises the
landowner of what is proposed, and affords reasonable opportunity
to be heard, it suffices.
North Laramie Land Co. v.
Hoffman, 268 U. S. 276,
268 U. S. 283.
No one who, like appellants, had paid assessments for the original
construction of the ditch could have doubted that his lands were
within the tract "likely to be affected" by the proposed
reconstruction.
But, in any case, there is no constitutional reason why any
notice need have been given, for the purpose of the first hearing
is not to determine what lands are to be included in the assessment
district. It was said by the Supreme Court of South Dakota in
State v. Risty, 51 S.Dak. at 354:
"The hearing upon this notice is not for the purpose of
determining the particular land that may be benefited by the
construction of ditch, nor the extent to which any
Page 276 U. S. 574
tract of land may be benefited, but to determine whether the
proposed drainage or any variation thereof shall be 'conducive to
the public health, convenience, or welfare, or necessity, or
practical for draining agricultural lands.' If the board finds that
such drainage will be conducive to the public health, convenience,
or welfare, or necessary or practical for draining agricultural
lands, the board may establish the drainage accordingly and proceed
to let contracts for the work. It then becomes necessary to
determine the particular tracts of land that will be benefited by
the drainage, and the extent to which it will be benefited."
Due process of law does not require notice of a proceeding to
determine merely whether an improvement shall be constructed,
without at the same time establishing the boundaries of the
assessment district. It is enough if landowners who may be assessed
are later afforded a hearing upon the assessment itself.
Londoner v. Denver, 210 U. S. 373,
210 U. S. 378;
Goodrich v. Detroit City, 184 U.
S. 432,
184 U. S. 437
et seq.; Voight v. Detroit, 184 U.
S. 115,
184 U. S. 122;
Embree v. Kansas City Road District, 240 U.
S. 242;
Soliah v. Heskin, 222 U.
S. 522.
No objection of substance is made to the sufficiency of the
notice of the hearing on the equalization of benefits. The lands of
the railroad, described in the complaint, were described in the
notice as required by the statute. At that time, no assessment
district had been established, and no lien had attached to them,
nor would any attach until a final assessment had been made.
Section 8464;
Risty v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Ry.,
supra, 276 U. S. 388.
As the statute was construed by the Supreme Court of South Dakota
in
State v. Risty, 51 S.Dak. at 354, upon the hearing for
the equalization of benefits under § 8463,
"an interested party may appear and show any reason why his
property should not be assessed that he could have shown at the
hearing for determining whether the drainage
Page 276 U. S. 575
should be established. If his property will not be benefited by
the establishment of the drainage, this may be shown at either
hearing, and if shown at either hearing, his property will not be
assessed."
The state court further held that, upon this hearing, the
landowner may be heard upon the question whether his lands are
benefited by the drainage system and the extent of those benefits,
if any, or whether the proposed assessment was unjust or
unwarranted, and may raise all constitutional objections to the
assessment, citing
Milne v. McKinnon, 32 S.D. 627,
631-632;
State ex rel. Curtis v. Pound, 32 S.D. 492. From
determinations of the board on either hearing, appeals lie to the
circuit court under § 8469.
Appellants did not appear or file objections on the date set for
either hearing, and, under the state statute as interpreted in
State v. Risty, supra, thus lost their right to urge any
objection to the assessment. As the inclusion of appellants' lands
in the new assessment district depended wholly upon their being
benefited by the proposed improvements, their failure to avail of
the opportunity afforded by the statute to make the objections to
the assessment now urged forecloses all consideration of those
objections here.
Farncomb v. Denver, 252 U. S.
7;
Milheim v. Moffat Tunnel Dist., 262 U.
S. 710;
Gorham Mfg. Co. v. Tax Commission,
266 U. S. 265;
First National Bank v. Weld County, 264 U.
S. 450.
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
"§ 8461. Surveyor's Report-Notice of Hearing. -- The
surveyor shall report in writing to the board of county
commissioners, and his report shall be filed with the petition.
After personal inspection or after the receipt of the surveyor's
report, the board shall determine the exact line and width of the
ditch, if the same shall not be fixed in the petition, and shall
file its determination with the petition. The board shall then fix
a time and place for the hearing of the petition, and shall give
notice thereof by publication at least once each week for two
consecutive weeks in a newspaper of the county, to be designated by
the board, and by posting copies of such notice in at least three
public places near the route of the proposed drainage. Such notice
shall describe the route of the proposed drainage and the tract of
country likely to be affected thereby in general terms, the
separate tracts of land through which the proposed drainage will
pass, and give the names of the owners thereof as appears from the
records of the office of the register of deeds on the date of the
filing of the petition, and shall refer to the files in the
proceedings for further particulars. Such notice shall summon all
persons affected by the proposed drainage to appear at such hearing
and show cause why the proposed drainage should not be established
and constructed, and shall summon all persons deeming themselves
damaged by the proposed drainage or claiming compensation for the
lands proposed to be taken for the drainage to present their claim
therefor at such hearing."
[
Footnote 2]
"§ 8463. Equalization of Benefits. -- After the
establishment of the drainage and the fixing of the damages, if
any, the board of county commissioners shall fix the proportion of
benefits of the proposed drainage among the lands affected, and
shall appoint a time and place for equalizing the same. Notice of
such equalization of proportion of benefits shall be given by
publication at least once each week for two consecutive weeks in a
newspaper of the county, to be designated by the board, and by
posting copies of such notice in at least three public places near
the route of the proposed drainage. Such notice shall state the
route and width of the drainage established, a description of each
tract of land affected by the proposed drainage, and the names of
the owners of the several tracts of land as appears from the
records of the office of the register of deeds at the date of the
filing of the petition, and the proportion of benefits fixed for
each tract of property, taking any particular tract as a unit, and
shall notify all such owners to show cause why the proportion of
benefits shall not be fixed as stated. Upon the hearing of the
equalization of the proportion of benefits, the board of county
commissioners shall finally equalize and fix the same according to
benefits received. The proportion of benefits which any county,
city, town, or township may obtain by the construction of such
drainage to highways or otherwise, and the benefits which any
railroad company may obtain for its property by such construction,
shall be fixed and equalized, together with the proportion of
benefits to tracts of land. Benefits to be considered in any case
shall be such as accrue directly by the construction of such
drainage or indirectly by virtue of such drainage being an outlet
for connection drains that may be subsequently constructed."