Board of Commissioners v. Loeb

68 Ind. 29
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 68 Ind. 29 (Board of Commissioners v. Loeb) 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
Board of Commissioners v. Loeb, 68 Ind. 29 (Ind. 1879).

Opinion

Biddle, J.

The appellees filed their account before the Board of Commissioners of Fountain County, for clothing furnished to poor persons, a part of which ivas for burial purposes, by order of the township trustee of Troy Township, amounting to thirty-eight dollars and sixty cents. The board allowed five dollars of the account, but refused to allow the balance.

The appellees appealed to the circuit court. Iu the circuit court, the board moved to dismiss the appeal. The motion was overruled. The board then demurred to the complaint, upon the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The demurrer was overruled.

Answer iu five paragraphs. Demurrers alleging a want of facts were overruled to the second and fourth paragraphs of answer, and sustained to the third and fifth paragraphs.

Reply in genei’al denial. Trial by the court, and finding for the appellees, for thirty-nine dollars and sixty-four cents. Motion for a new trial overruled ; judgment on the finding, and appeal.

The record presents, and the parties discuss, the following points:

1. That the court erred iu overruling the motion to dismiss the appeal.

[31]*31The ground taken for this motion is, 1. That all the papers in the cause were not filed in the circuit court; 2. That there is no sufficient appeal bond filed in the case ; and, 3. That it is a case in Avhich an appeal Avill not lie.

What papers in the case >vere not filed in the circuit court does not appear. If they Avere of any importance, they could have been obtained on motion of either party, if in existence; if not, they could have been supplied.

The objection taken against the-bond is, that it is made payable to Eountain County instead of to the Board of Commissioners of Eountain County. In appeals from the board of commissioners, the statute declares that the case shall not be dismissed on account of a defect in the appeal bond, but that the appellant, “ Avhen required by the coui’t to Avhich such appeal is taken,” shall file a sufficient bond. If the board of commissioners Avanted a better bond, they could have had it on motion, doubtless; but the defect in the bond -was not ground for the dismissal of the appeal. Acts 1875, p. 112, sec. 1.

The case is one in AAdrich an appeal will lie. No appeal will lie from the decision of the board of commissioners, in making alloAvances for services voluntarily rendered, or things voluntarily furnished for the public use, but this is not such a case. The court Avas right in overruling the motion to dismiss the appeal. 1 R. S. 1876, p. 63, sec. 9.

2. The ground taken in support of the demurrer to the complaint is, that the account is made out against Fountain county, instead of the Board of Commissioners of Fountain county, and does not show the full names of the -appellees. The form of the account is as folloAvs :

“Fountain County, Indiana,
“ To L. & J. Loeb, by C. W. Clark, Dr.”

The items are then stated. This form of account is sufficient before the board of commissioners, and, being [32]*32sufficient there, is sufficient in the circuit court on appeal. No particular form of pleading is required in such a case. It is quite different from bringing the board of commissioners into another court by process. The board can not mistake its own identity, nor the identity of the county it represents. The case of The Board of Commissioners of Fountain County v. Wood, 35 Ind. 70, is in point. See, also, The Board of Commissioners of Blackford County v. Shrader, 36 Ind. 87; and The Board of Commissioners of Jennings County v. Verbarg, 63 Ind. 107.

The affidavit attached to the account, by which it is sworn to, states the full names of the appellees. This is sufficient. Perhaps, the account could have been made more certain on motion, but it is not subject to demurrer for want of facts. Jameson v. The Board of Commissioners of Bartholomew County, 64 Ind. 524.

3. Sustaining the demurrer to the third paragraph of the appellant’s answer.

This paragraph avers that the board of commissioners, on the 10th day of December, 1875, at a regular session, made and entered of record the following order :

“ Ordered, That, from and after this date, no bills for burial clothes for paupers will be allowed when said bills exceed the sum of five dollars per suit; and it is further ordered that the above order be published — one insertion— in the ‘Attica Ledger ’ and ‘ People’s Friend.’ ”

That said order was published as ordered, and that Charles W. Clark, the trustee of Troy township, had notice of said order at the time the articles were purchased of the appellees; but the paragraph contains no avermeut that the appellees had notice of said order at the time they furnished the goods. t-

Without deciding what would be the effect of such order, if notice of it had been traced to the appellees before they sold the goods to the township trustee, it is clear that [33]*33without they had such notice before they furnished the goods, the paragraph is insufficient. The demurrer to it, therefore, was properly sustained.

4. The fifth paragraph of answer sets out a different order passed and published by the board of commissioners, but it brings no notice of the order to the appellees before they furnished the goods to the township trustee. It is, therefore, insufficient for the reasons given above, if upon no other ground.

It may be mentioned that the second paragraph of answer, upon which issue of fact was taken, includes all the averments contained in the third paragraph, to which the demurrer was sustained; and that the fourth paragraph, upon which issue of fact was taken, contains all the averments in the fifth paragraph, to which the demurrer was sustained and that neither of the paragraphs amounts «to any thing more than a denial of the claim, except as to five dollars. As the general denial was pleaded, we can not see how the appellant was injured at the trial by the conditioia of the pleadings.

5. But a more serious and difficult question remains to' be decided. It is claimed that the appellant was denied! the right of trial by jury, although it was at the time demanded. A bill of exceptions brings before us the following facts :

A jury was placed in the box, each juror of which, upotn his voire dire, stated that he was a resident and tax-payer of Fountain county, in the State of Indiana. Upon this-state' of facts, the appellant challenged each juror for canse. The; challenge was properly sustained. Hearn v. The City of Greensburgh, 51 Ind. 119. “And thereupon the court asked! the defendant if she would try or submit said cause for trials to any jury, or to any persons selected as jurors from the' resident citizens and taxpayers of Fountain county, Indiana ; and the defendant answered that she would; not, butt [34]*34would challenge every such jury, and such persons selected as jurors, for the reason that such jury, and such persons and jurors, would be interested in the result of the suit. The plaintiffs then demanded a trial of said cause by the court, -without the intervention of a jury.

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68 Ind. 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-commissioners-v-loeb-ind-1879.