Burnet v. Trustees of the Wabash & Erie Canal

50 Ind. 251
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 50 Ind. 251 (Burnet v. Trustees of the Wabash & Erie Canal) 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
Burnet v. Trustees of the Wabash & Erie Canal, 50 Ind. 251 (Ind. 1875).

Opinion

Downey, J.

Complaint by the appellant against the appellees, alleging that the defendants under and by virtue of a deed 05 patent, dated July 31st, 1847, made to' them by the Governor of the State of Indiana, as provided by the act entitled, an act to provide for the funded debt of the State [252]*252of Indiana, and for the completion of the Wabash and Erie Canal to Evansville,” approved January 19th, 1846, and the act supplemental thereto, approved January 27th, 1847, by which said trustees are created a corporation, became the owners in feesimple and possessed, as therein provided, among other, of certain real estate, which is particularly described in the complaint, in Clay county, Indiana, the said lands having been'ceded by the United States to the State of Indiana, by an act of Congress entitled, “an act to grant certain lands to the State of Indiana the better to enable said State to extend and complete the Wabash and Erie Canal from Terre Haute to the Ohio river,” approved March 3d, 1845; that underand by virtue of said act of the General Assembly, approved January 19th, 1846, said lands included in said deed or patent of said governor were, by- said defendants, to be classified, under the direction and supervision of the governor, into three classes, taking into view quality and location; and the lands of the first class were at all times to be subject to sale at a price not exceeding two dollars and fifty cents per acre; the lands of the second class were at all times to be subject to sale at a price not exceeding two dollars per acre; and the lands of the third class were at all times to be subject to sale at a price not exceeding one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre; but none of said lands were to be sold at a price less than is provided in the act of Congress donating the lands.

It is then alleged that the defendants, in pursuance of said act of the General Assembly, did, on the 6th day of December, 1847, report to the General Assembly of the State of Indiana a tabular statement, exhibiting the number of acres of land which they held, under and by virtue of said deed or patent from said governor, in the Vincennes land district in said State, the counties in which they were situated, and the classification of them, as above required by said law; that said classification showed at that time that they had in Clay county, Indiana, thirty-six thousand six hundred and twelve and sixty-three hundredths acres; that there were in the first class twenty-five thousand five hundred and forty-two and fifty-six [253]*253hundredths acres, in the second class ten thousand six hundred and seventy-six and sixty-five hundredths acres, and in the third class three hundred and ninety-two and forty-two hundredths acres; that the lands described were embraced within said classification, but as said classification reported to the General Assembly, as aforesaid, does not show what particular lands were embraced in each class, and as that particular classification is in the possession of the defendants, and not in the possession of complainant, he cannot give the court a copy of the lands in Olay county embraced in each classification as aforesaid, and cannot therefore show to the court in which class said lands above described are and were embraced, and at what price they were to be sold per acre. a

It is then stated that said defendants were required by said last named act to establish at least one land-office for the sale of said canal lands, owned by them as aforesaid, at some convenient point in said State, and for the transaction of all business connected with their said trust; that after said classification of said lands as aforesaid, said defendants, for the use of their said canal, constructed two reservoirs, one known as Splunge creek reservoir, in which were embraced part of said lands which are particularly designated in the complaint, and the. other known as Birch creek reservoir, in which were embraced the residue of said lands particularly described in the complaint.

It is then averred that the defendants fully completed said canal, but were afterward perpetually enjoined by the United States Circuit Court for Indiana, at the suit of the bondholders, from using any part of the proceeds of the sale of said lands, conveyed by the governor as aforesaid, for keeping up the repairs of said canal, and by reason of the tolls and other revenues arising from said canal being insufficient to keep up repairs and maintain said canal, the trustees were compelled to and did abandon all of said canal between Terre Haute and Evansville, and for want of needful repairs the same has gone into decay, and has become completely destroyed, and it is now [254]*254impossible to repair and maintain said canal with the means at the command of defendants.

It is further alleged that said canal and said reservoirs, as feeders thereto, have not-been used by said defendants from Terre Haute to Evansville, in said State, since the year 1862, but the same have been wholly abandoned by them, and the locks, dams, feeders, reservoirs, and embankments of said canal have been entirely destroyed, and a part of the lands in said Splunge creek reservoir, since its abandonment, as aforesaid, have been selected and sold by the State of Indiana as swamp lands, under and by virtue of an act of Congress, approved September 28th, 1850, granting certain lands to said State, known as swamp lands; and most of the residue of said lands in said reservoir, with the knowledge of said defendants, are now, and since its abandonment have been, cultivated in corn and other grain; that south of Terre Haute, and particularly through the lands in question, no location of the precise line of said canal had been made, and the right of way therefor had not been obtained, and no work thereon had been done prior to the passage of said act of the 19th day of January, 1846 ; but afterward, for that part of said canal said defendants secured a mere easement of the right of way, and not a fee simple interest in the lands through which they constructed the said canal; that the only office” of said defendants known to complainant, used for the entry of their said lands and the transaction of business connected with their said trust, under said acts of the General Assembly, is situated in the city of Terre Haute, Indiana, in the building on Sixth street, near Main, known as Dowling’s Hall building, and Thomas Dow-ling, who resides in said city of Terre Haute, is the resident trustee, and is charged with the management of all business connected with the sale and entry of said lands, and the general management of the business of defendants connected with their said trust in the absence of the other trustees; that on the 12th day of August, 1873, said lands above described, then being the property of said defendants as aforesaid, and being subject to sale and entry as aforesaid, complainant did, on [255]*255that day, go to.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Ind. 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burnet-v-trustees-of-the-wabash-erie-canal-ind-1875.