Blemel v. Shattuck

33 N.E. 277, 133 Ind. 498, 1893 Ind. LEXIS 33
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1893
DocketNo. 16,107
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 33 N.E. 277 (Blemel v. Shattuck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blemel v. Shattuck, 33 N.E. 277, 133 Ind. 498, 1893 Ind. LEXIS 33 (Ind. 1893).

Opinion

McCabe, J.

This was a proceeding by way of petition, [499]*499ill tlie Circuit Ooui’t, under the provisions of the drainage act approved April 6, 1885. Elliott’s Supp., section 1284.

The petition was referred to the drainage commissioners, pursuant to the provisions of the second section of said act. On objection by the appellant, to the competency of said commissioners, the order referring the petition to them was set aside, and new commissioners were appointed, and the petition was referred to them. They afterwards reported :

First. That the drainage proposed is practicable.

Secondly. That the drainage, if accomplished, will improve public health, benefit public highways, and be of public utility.

Thirdly. That the costs, damages, and expenses of effecting such proposed drainage will largely exceed the benefits to the owners of the lands likely to be benefited by tlie proposed drainage.

After an unsuccessful motion by the appellants to set aside this report, the same was approved by the court below, and the petition was dismissed pursuant to section 3 of the act of April 6, 1885. Elliott’s Supp., section 1186.

Erom this final order the petitioners appeal to this court, and assign for error these rulings:

The petitioners moved to set aside this report and refer the matter to neiv commissioners, because, first, the report was not verified; second, it does not set out the estimated cost of the proposed work; third, it does not set out the benefits arising from said wprk; fourth, that Cyrus Brake and Gaston Brake, owners of land affected by the proposed drainage, are second cousins to James Pound, one of the new commissioners, and that the petitioners had no knowledge of such relationship until after said Pound was appointed; fifth, that Briggs, one of the new commissioners, while engaged in his duties as such, accepted invitations from 'VVilford Shaw, and dined with him on several occasions while so engaged, the said Shaw owning land affected by the proposed work, and has counsel employed to defeat [500]*500tlie same; sixth, that during the time the commissioners were engaged in making inspections of the lands and deliberating concerning their report, a large number of the defendants followed said commissioners, constantly kept up their clamor and talk against said proposed work, in the hearing of said commissioners; seventh, that said commissioners were all three taken from a list of names presented to the court by the defendants, plaintiffs having no voice in the matter, and the commissioners being prejudiced against the plaintiffs from the time of their appointment until the making of their report, the said commissioners having permitted the clamor and talk before mentioned, and permitted defendants to talk to them about their poverty, and that the work would confiscate their lands and bankrupt them; and that said commissioners hoarded and lodged with Lafayette Drake, a defendant and land owner affected by the work, and opposed thereto, all of which influenced said commissioners.

The record then recites that “afterwards, to wit, on the -day of Pebruary, 1891, the defendants moved the court to strike out said complaint,” * * * and thereupon plaintiffs gave notice to the court and the defendants of their intention to save, by a bill of exceptions, the questions of law arising on the rulings of the court on said complaint and motion to strike out, for an appeal to the Supreme Court upon a bill of exceptions only of so much of the record as presents said questions of law, as provided by section 630, R. S. 1881; and that afterwards, to wit, on the 31st day of March, 1891, the following further proceedings were had in this cause, wherein the court sustained said motion of defendants to strike out said pleading, to wit: “ Come again the parties, by attorneys, and the court being advised, sustains the motion of the defendants to strike out the complaint of the plaintiffs to set aside the report of the commissioners herein, to which ruling of the court the plaintiffs «except; and thereupon the court now [501]*501approves said report, and this cause is now dismissed; * * * to which order of dismissal the plaintiffs object and except, and now pray an appeal,” etc.

This recital, and, in fact, the whole of so much of the record in this cause as is brought to this court on this appeal, is embraced in a bill of exceptions.

The appellees insist that no question is presented by the record because the petition for drainage is not embodied therein, and they cite Miller v. Seligman, 58 Ind. 460, in support of that proposition.

That was a case in which the attempt was made to appeal on a reserved question of law, upon a bill of exceptions only, as in this ease. The error complained of in that ease was -a refusal of the trial court to allow the appellant to file a certain answer set out in the bill of exceptions, hut the complaint was not embodied in the bill of exceptions, the case having originated before a justice of the peace. This court said (Justice Niblack delivering the opinion):

“Without the complaint before us in some form, we are unable to judge of either the relevancy or the materiality of the matters alleged in the answer which the appellant asked leave to file; and without the transcript, or an authorized synopsis of it, we are unable here to know what occurred before the justice.” * * “We have no such statement in the record as is necessary to enable us ‘to apprehend the particular question involved.’ ”

It is obvious that the question involved here is whether the trial court made the proper disposition of the objections to the report of the commissioners. Those objections in no way called in question anything contained in the petition, nor did the validity of those objections at all depend on the petition or anything contained in it. It was, therefore, wholly unnecessary to embody the petition in the bill of exceptions. The statute only requires that the “Court shall thereupon cause the hill of exceptions to be so made [502]*502that it will distinctly and briefly embrace so much of the record of the cause only, and the statement of the court, as will enable the Supreme Court to apprehend the particular question involved.”

In Shugart v. Miles, 125 Ind. 445, this court said concerning this provision, that “ The statute is in furtherance of justice — it is remedial; it tends to simplify procedure; it lightens the burdens of litigants without injustice to any one, and, when properly followed, questions may be presented to this court unclouded by a mass of useless verbiage, and unobseured by voluminous matters of immaterial evidence.”

Accordingly, we hold that only such parts of the record need be embodied in the bill of exceptions, in an appeal of this kind, as will enable this court “to apprehend the particular question involved.” Therefore, it was not necessary to embrace the petition in the bill of exceptions, in order to present the questions reserved.

The first error assigned is “Sustaining the motion of the defendants to strike out the complaint of the plaintiffs to set aside the report of the commissioners.” The paper here referred to as a complaint was a motion to set aside the report of the commissioners, though it is designated elsewhere in the record as .both a motion and a complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
33 N.E. 277, 133 Ind. 498, 1893 Ind. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blemel-v-shattuck-ind-1893.