Campbell v. Dwiggins

83 Ind. 473
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1882
DocketNo. 10,258
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 83 Ind. 473 (Campbell v. Dwiggins) 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
Campbell v. Dwiggins, 83 Ind. 473 (Ind. 1882).

Opinion

Howk, J.

In this case the appellants, thirty-eight in number, sued the appellees, thp treasurer of Montgomery county, Madison township, of said county; and Thomas Wilson, trustee of said township, and Sugar Creek township, of said county, and James M. Griffin, trustee of the last named township, in a complaint of one paragraph. The joint demurrer of the appellees to the complaint, upon the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, was sustained by the court. The appellants excepted to this decision, and, declining to amend their complaint, the court rendered judgment against them for the appellees’ costs.

The decision of the circuit court, in sustaining the demurrer to their complaint, is the only error assigned by the appellants in this court. This error calls in question the sufficiency of the facts stated in the complaint to constitute a cause of action, in favor of the appellants. In their complaint they alleged, in substance, that they were severally the owners of real estate in Madison township, in the county of Montgomery, and were citizens of said county and the persons mentioned in certain pretended statements of assessments of real estate in said township, thereinafter fully set out; that, in the years 1869 and 1870, the Lye Creek Drainage Association, formed and organized under the provisions of the act of May 22d, 1869, to authorize and encourage the construction of levees, dikes and drains, etc. (Acts 1869, Spec. Sess., p. 82), constructed through said Madison and Sugar Creek townships a ditch or drain, and that the lands of the appellants, particularly described in said pretended statements, were assessed for the cost and expense of the construction of said ditch or drain and its several tributaries; that, on the 12th day of October, 1881, the appellee Wilson, as the trustee of Madison township, employed one Charles Dilden to clean out and put in proper repair the main line and the several tributaries of said ditch or drain; and 'that, to raise the money necessary to pay for the cleaning out and repairing of said ditch or drain, the said Wilson, as such trustee, apportioned and assessed the estimated cost thereof [475]*475upon the lands in said township which, in his opinion, would be benefited by such repairing and cleaning, according to his ■opinion of the benefits received by each tract of land on account of the repairing and cleaning out of said ditch or drain, and, on the 14th day of December, 1881, made out a pretended .statement of such assessments, and, on said day, delivered the same 'to the auditor of said county, and which pretended statement was in the words and figures following: (Here followed a copy of the statement of assessments.)

This statement was addressed to the auditor of Montgomery county, and therein the appellee Wilson, trustee of Madison township, certified “ that, for the repair of certain works heretofore made for the drainage of lands, to wit, the Lye Creek ditch and tributaries, he has apportioned, to cover the costs •of such repairs, against lands benefited thereby, as below, said lands being in said county and State, and in township 20 north, of range 4 west.” And then follows a list of “ Names- of Owners,” with the “Description of Lands,” and the amounts of the assessments, in dollars and cents, set opposite the names of the respective owners; and the statement is signed, “ Thomas Wilson, trustee Madison township.”

The appellants then alleged, that under and in pursuance of said pretended statement of said assessment, and on no other authority or proceedings whatever, the auditor of said county made out a special tax duplicate, embracing all the lands in said pretended statement described, together with the names of the owners of said lands, and extended them on and assessed each of said tracts of land with the amounts in said pretended statement set opposite thereto, and that said special tax duplicate had no other tax or assessment whatever therein; that on the— day of January, 1882, at the request of the appellee James M. Griffin, he and the appellee Wilson met at the latter’s office in Madison township, and then proceeded to apportion upon and assess said lands with an additional amount •of benefits received by the same cleaning out and repairing of said ditch and tributaries, on account of which said lands [476]*476had theretofore been assessed as aforesaid by said Wilson; and that on the 27th day of January, 1882, the said Wilson and. Griffin, as trustees, jointly made out and delivered to the auditor of said county a pretended statement of said last assessment, in the words and figures following: (And here followed a copy of said last statement of assessment.)

This'statement was also addressed to the auditor of the county, and the trustees of Madison and Sugar Creek townships jointly certified, that for the repair of certain works heretofore made for the drainage of lands, in said townships, they have apportioned, to cover the costs of such repairs,, against the lands below, in said Montgomery county, in township 20, in range 4 west, and in township 20, in range 3 west, the said cost being for the repair of the Lye Creek drain and its tributaries, and the said assessment being on the lands benefited by said repair as follows,” and then follows a list of assessments, similar in form to the one annexed to the first assessment. At the close of the last assessment the two trustees jointly certified, that at the request of said Griffin, trustee of Sugar Creek township, they met together in Madison township, at the office of said Wilson, trustee of said township, and viewed the lands assessed, and jointly made the said assessment; and that they assessed the lands in Madison township the amounts they believed them benefited by the repairing of the Lye Creek drain, in said Sugar Creek township, the outlets for said drain and tributaries being in the latter township, and that the lands assessed were benefited by the repair of said drain. This certificate was signed by the trustee of each of said townships.

The appellants further alleged, that the appellee Wilson owned, and for ten years last past had owned, real estate in said Madison township, which was affected by said ditch or drain, and was by him, as such trustee, actually assessed for its estimated share of the costs of said cleaning out and repairs of said ditch or drain; that, under and in pursuance of said last statement of such assessment, and on no other au[477]*477'thority or proceeding whatever, the auditor of said county made out a second special tax duplicate, embracing all the lands in «aid last pretended statement described, together with the names of the owners of said lands, and extended them on and assessed each of said tracts of land with the amount in said last pretended statement set opposite thereto; and that said last special tax duplicate had no other tax or assessment whatever thereon; that the said auditor, on or about the — day of January, 1882, delivered said special tax duplicate into the hands of the appellee Dwiggins, as the treasurer of áaid county, for collection, as State and county taxes were to be by him •collected; and that said special assessments were each an apparent lien and cloud upon the said lands of the appellants; that the said treasurer was about to proceed with said special ■duplicate to collect said taxes or assessments off of the property of the appellants severally, and would so collect the same unless restrained by the judgment and decree of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
83 Ind. 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-dwiggins-ind-1882.