
    Jordan Land Company and others, Appellants, vs. Freeborn and others, Respondents.
    
      March 14
    
    April 3, 1912.
    
    
      Drainage districts: Organisation: Who may petition: Corporations are “adult owners’’ of land: Statutes construed,:
    
    Corporations owning land in a proposed drainage district are “adult owners” of such lands within the meaning of sec. 1379 — 11, Stats. (Supp. 1906: Laws of 1905, ch. 419), and as such may petition for the organization of the district.
    Appeal from a judgment of the circuit court for Juneau county: Byron B. Park, Judge.
    
      Reversed.
    
    This is a proceeding to establish the Cutler drainage district in Juneau county. It appearing that certain lands had by mistake been included within the boundaries of the proposed drainage district, the circuit judge made an order amending and changing the boundaries of the proposed district as set forth in the original petition. The proposed district as thus changed embraced 20,800 acres.
    The petition for the organization of the district states that the petitioners are all more than twenty-one years of age and are the owners of more than one half of the lands embraced within the proposed district. The president of the Jordan Land Company signed in behalf of the company. The Jordan, Land Company, it appears, owned 11,480 acres of land in the proposed drainage district and the other signers owned 1,450 acres. The Jordan Land Company is a corporation duly organized under the laws of this state. It appeared during the pendency of the petition that Certain owners of lands affected by the proposed organization had not been notified. They were duly notified.
    The court found that the petition did not contain the signatures of a majority of the adult owners of lands within the proposed drainage district who were of lawful age and represented one third in area of the lands to be affected by the work, and that the petition did not contain the signatures of the adult owners of more than one half of such lands. This holding of the court was upon the ground that the Jor-dcm Land Company was not authorized to sign the petition as an adult owner.
    This is an appeal from the judgment dismissing the petition and discontinuing the proceedings.
    For the appellants there was a brief by Yeeder & Yeeder, attorneys, and Adams, Bdbb & Adams and OUn & Butter, of counsel, and oral argument by J. M. Olin.
    
    
      ■ For the respondents there was a brief by H. J. Mortensen and McFarlcme & Price, and oral argument by Mr. Mortensen.
    
   Sibbeokee, J.

. The drainage district statute (secs. 1379 — 11 et seq., Stats. Supp. 1906: Laws of 1906, ch. 419) provides that “whenever a majority, of the adult owners of lands within any district of land,” representing one third in area of the lands therein, or whenever the adult owners of more than one half of the lands within such district, desire to organize a drainage district, for the purposes and upon the conditions prescribed by law, they may file a petition containing the requisite allegations with the appropriate court, praying for the organization of the district to carry out the powers and functions authorized by the statutes. As indicated in the foregoing statement, this is a proceeding to create such a district. It is set forth in the record that the Jordan Land Company owned 11,480 acres of the 20,800 acres of land embraced in the proposed district and that the petition was signed by the president of the company. The other signers of the petition owned 1,450 acres of the land. Remonstrants to the petition objected to its sufficiency upon the ground that the law does not authorize the land company, as an owner of lands in a proposed district, to petition the court for the organization of such a drainage district. The contention is that a corporation owning such lands is not within the class of landowners designated in the statute as “adult owners of lands within any district of land” which may be organized into a drainage district. The trial court held that the words “adult owners of lands,” as used in the act, indicated a legislative intent to exclude corporations owning such lands from the right to petition for the organization of drainage districts, The phraseology of this section of the statutes originally conferred the right to petition for this purpose upon “owners of lands . . . who shall have arrived at lawful age,” and there was similar language in the amendments thereto before the amendments by ch. 419, Laws of 1905, which dropped from the foregoing section the words “who shall have arrived at lawful age” and inserted the word “adult” before the word “owners.” Manifestly, the word “adult” and the phrase “who shall have arrived at lawful age” were employed as equivalents in these statutes. The use of the word “adult,” or the equivalent phrase, no doubt designates in common speech only persons who have arrived at full age or the years of manhood, and when so used does not include artificial beings such as corporations. The significance of the word “adult” is not necessarily restricted to such general meaning when employed in a statute. It is familiar that the word “person,” though commonly restricted to a human being, may be applied to and include artificial beings, when employed in a statute. Instances without number exist where words in legislative acts must be interpreted as the legislature used them, though this may enlarge, restrict, or qualify their commonly accepted meanings. As instances, see Reiche v. Smythe, 13 Wall. 162, wherein, under a revenue act, singing birds were held not to be living animals, and Silver v. Ladd, 7 Wall. 219, where the words “single man” were construed to include “an unmarried woman.” The particular inquiry, therefore, is not what is the abstract or colloquial meaning of the word “adult/’ but in what sense was it used in the act-before us. We must collect the meaning of the word from the context and the purpose of the act in dealing with the subject matter under consideration. It is obvious from the statutes dealing with the subject of drainage that the legislature, in dealing with the right to petition for the organization of drainage districts, was disposed to confer it upon those most interested in such enterprises, namely, the landowners. A view of all the provisions to accomplish this purpose manifests, the dominant idea of the legislature that the landowner is to be empowered to do what is necessary to establish drainage districts or to oppose their establishment, and to bear the accompanying burdens and obligations. To carry out these objects and determine upon their feasibility is as vital to the interests of corporate landowners as of individual landowners. These facts and conditions tend strongly to show that the legislature did not intend to exclude corporate landowners from the right to petition. The words “adult owners,” as used in the statute, are sufficiently flexible to admit of including corporate owners within such legislative purpose and aim. Again, the sense of the word “adult,” as here used, taken in association with the clauses in another section of the act referring to minors and others incompetent to act for themselves, indicates a grouping of these classes and that “adult” was used to distinguish this class of owners from such legally incompetent classes. All of these considerations are in harmony with and tend to bring this word within the statutory rule embodied in sec. 4971, Stats. (1898), providing that “tlie-wbrd ‘person’ may extend and be applied to bodies politic and corporate as well as to individuals,” and the rule of construction specified in subd. 2, sec. 4972, Stats. (1898), which provides that “the word ‘person’ shall extend and be applied to bodies corporate unless plainly inapplicable.” Another consideration supporting the view that corporate owners are embraced within “adult owners” is the fact that such corporate-owners bave every other right, duty, burden, or obligation of other landowners within a district. This is of weight as tending to show that the legislature, in conferring on landowners the right of petition as the process for instituting proceedings to establish drainage districts, intended to include corporate owners. We are persuaded that the trial court erred in holding that corporate landowners were not authorized to petition for the organization of a proposed drainage district.

By the Court. — The judgment appealed from is reversed, and the proceeding is remanded with directions to the court to entertain the petition for the organization of a drainage district.

WiNslow, C. J., and Maeshall and BakNes, JJ., dissent.  