Beach v. Franklin Township

103 N.E. 498, 56 Ind. App. 220, 1913 Ind. App. LEXIS 10
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 9, 1913
DocketNo. 7,929
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 103 N.E. 498 (Beach v. Franklin Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beach v. Franklin Township, 103 N.E. 498, 56 Ind. App. 220, 1913 Ind. App. LEXIS 10 (Ind. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Felt, J.

This is a suit by appellants to enjoin Franklin Township, Henry County, Indiana, Thomas White, trustee of the township, and Ernest Rogers, supervisor of a certain road district in the township, from casting surface water on appellants’ lands and failing to provide an outlet therefor. The gist of the complaint is that there is a township road running along the west side of appellants’ lands; that the road is graded and runs across a certain valley with gutters on both sides of the road from twelve to fifteen inches deep; that the surface water from lands on the west side of the highway runs toward the road and accumulates in the ditch or gutter on the west side thereof; that the natural flow of the surface water is south and east across [222]*222appellants’ lands; that appellants constructed tile drains on their lands sufficient to carry the water that came upon them and the same were sufficient until destroyed by excess of water collected and turned upon the lands as hereafter stated; that in ordinary rainfall the water collected on the west side of the highway and remained there until it was carried away by percolating through the soil; that in time of extraordinary rainfall the water sometimes overflowed the roadbed but went over in wide sheets and was drained off without washing away the soil or injuring the land; that four or five years before this suit was begun the township officers placed under the roadbed at four points, all within seventy-five rods of each other, four large sewer tile and iron tubes eighteen inches in diameter, which carried the water from the ditch on the west side to the ditch on the east side of the highway and poured the same in increased quantities and in a concentrated manner on the east side without providing an outlet for the escape of the water, and unlawfully cast the same in a concentrated stream on appellants’ land and washed channels in the soil from three to twelve feet wide and from eighteen to thirty inches deep and washed the dirt away from over the tile drains and ruined same for drainage purposes and damaged the lands and will continue to do so unless appellees are restrained from casting the water on the lands as aforesaid; that there were no watercourses or channels on appellants’ land before the water was poured on the same as aforesaid. Prayer for $1,000 damages and that appellees be perpetually enjoined from concentrating the surface waters and easting the same on appellants’ land as aforesaid. The complaint was answered by general denial of all the appellees.

Upon request, the court made a special finding of facts, which is in substance as follows: That on February 22, 1909, Elias B. Beach died testate owning the real estate which is alleged to have been damaged; that he bequeathed the land for life to his wife with the fee in remainder to [223]*223his children, the plaintiffs; that Franklin Township, one of the defendants in the canse, is a corporation and a political subdivision of Henry County, Indiana; that defendant White was at the time of the beginning of this suit the duly elected, qualified and acting trustee of the township; that defendant Eogers was at that time the duly elected, qualified and acting supervisor of road district No. 4, in which the lands are situated, and for four years prior to the trial of this cause, as such officer, had charge of the construction, maintenance and repair of the highways in his road district, under the control of the township; that on the west side of the lands there is now and has been for more than forty years a public highway, running north and south, under the control of the township; that more than thirty-five years ago the road, under the direction of proper authorities, was graded along plaintiffs’ lands by taking the dirt to the center of the highway and making side ditches; that there is a lane leading from the highway to the dwelling on plaintiffs’ lands; that the lands on both sides of the highway are agricultural lands, tiled and in cultivation; that about the middle of plaintiffs’ lands there is a depression or valley, through which, before the roadbed was made, the surface water falling on a portion of the land both east and west of the line of the highway, in time of heavy rains and freshets, naturally flowed to the depression and southeast through it across plaintiffs’ lands; that about the time the highway was graded for the purpose of taking care of the water collected at that point, the legal authorities having charge of the highway, constructed across the same three wooden culverts which have from time to time been repaired and replaced, and at the present time three iron pipes constitute the eulverts; that about the year 1903, the proper officers of the township, for the purpose of protecting the grade of the highway, placed a sewer drain across the same at a point two rods south of the aforesaid lane and about three rods south of [224]*224one of the culverts; that the sewer and three iron pipes across the highway are the only drains through which water flows from other lands or the highway over and across plaintiffs’ lands, that on plaintiffs’ lands there is a depression which has a gradual descent to the southeast; that prior to the construction of the highway, surface water, on a portion of the land west thereof, and on a portion of plaintiffs’ lands, naturally collected in and flowed through the depression; “That after the construction of said highway and the placing of culverts and drains therein as set forth, the volume of water that would otherwise have flowed over plaintiffs’ lands was not increased, nor the course thereof, down and over the plaintiffs’ land as above described, was not substantially changed”; that there has been no change in the construction or manner of maintenance of the highway and drain since 1903; that at the time the highway was graded, and at the time all the culverts and drains above described were placed therein, and at the time of the subsequent changes therein as aforesaid; Elias Beach, from whom plaintiffs claim title, was the owner, and in possession of the land and he had knowledge of the original construction, and of all the subsequent changes and repairs, of the culverts and drains aforesaid at the time they were made; “that he made no objection thereto, but stood by without protest, and thus tacitly acquiesced therein”.

On the foregoing' finding of facts the court stated as its conclusions of law “that the law and equities in the case are with the defendants, and that the plaintiffs are not entitled to the relief prayed for in their complaint.” Prom a judgment on the foregoing conclusions of law the plaintiffs appeal to this court and have assigned as error: (1) that the court erred in overruling appellants’ motion to modify the special finding of facts, to find specially on certain facts, and to make the finding more specific on facts within the issues; (2) that the court erred in overruling the [225]*225appellants’ motion for leave to withdraw the request for a special finding of facts; (3) that the .court erred in its conclusions of law and in each of them; (4) that the court erred in overruling appellants’ motion for a new trial.'

1. The first assignment as above stated presents no question, because it is not ground for independent assignment of error. Motions to modify, strike out or add to special findings are not recognized by our code of procedure. Where any of the facts found are not sustained by ufficient evidence, or the ’decision is contrary to law, or where facts within the issues should have been found, but were not, the remedy is by motion for a new trial. Chicago, etc., R. Co. v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 N.E. 498, 56 Ind. App. 220, 1913 Ind. App. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beach-v-franklin-township-indctapp-1913.