City of Peru v. Gleason

91 Ind. 566, 1883 Ind. LEXIS 416
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1883
DocketNo. 9476
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 91 Ind. 566 (City of Peru v. Gleason) 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
City of Peru v. Gleason, 91 Ind. 566, 1883 Ind. LEXIS 416 (Ind. 1883).

Opinion

Black, C.

— The appellee sued the appellant. A demurrer to the complaint, assigning as causes want of sufficient facts and defect of parties plaintiffs and defendants, was overruled, and this ruling is the first alleged error assigned.

The facts shown by the complaint were, in substance, as follows:

On the 22d of June, 1867, the appellee was the owner of a tract of land embracing seventy-five acres, in Miami county, and he was still the owner thereof at the commencement of this suit. Adjoining said tract on the west, one Daniel R. Bearss owned a tract; next on the west, Dema L. Tyner owned a tract; and next on the west said Bearss owned another tract. All said lands adjoined the northern corporate limits of the city of Peru. Next east of the appellee’s said tract one Ebenezer P. Loveland owned a certain tract, north of and adjoining out-lot No. 19 in Godfroy’s addition to said city, which out-lot was owned by one James M. Statesman. From said out-lot Benton street, one of the streets in the eastern portion of said city, extends southward through said ■city to the Wabash and Erie Canal, which runs from east to [568]*568west through said city. Said lands so owned adjoining the northern boundary of said city were of a low, wet, swampy and marshy character, a portion thereof being covered with stagnant water during the greater part of the year. A part of the territory of said city, lying adjacent to said low lands, was likewise low, wet, swampy and covered with stagnant-water ; and said low lands within the city and so adjoining it, in such condition, were highly prejudicial and injurious to the health and comfort of the inhabitants of said lands and of said city. The natural slope of a portion of the territory of the city, including its said low ground, is northward, and the only natural and convenient outlet for the surface drainage thereof is over and through said low lands on the north.

On said 22d of June, 1867, said Bearss, Tyner, the appellee, Loveland, and Statesman and the appellant executed a contract, in writing, for the purpose of draining said lands outside of the city and said territory within the city, by a cpntinuous ditch extending from a point on said most western tract thence eastwardly through said other tracts and said out-lot, and thence down Benton street, so as to conduct the water into the canal. Said contract, which was made an exhibit, was as follows:

“ This memorandum of agreement, made this 22d day of June, 1867, by and between the common council of the city of Peru, Miami county, Indiana, in council assembled, of the first part, and James M. Stutesman, Ebenezer P. Loveland,, Newell Gleason, Daniel R. Bearss and Dema L. Tyner, all of the county and State aforesaid, of the second part, Avitnesseth, that an agreement has this day been made and entered into by and between said parties to drain the wet ground lying in the north and northeast portions of said city, and the low lands of said parties of the second part, adjoining the limits of said city, by the deepening and enlarging the ditch now constructed on Benton street, in said city, from the Wabash and Erie Canal northAvardly, and the continuation of said ditch from the northern terminus thereof, as here[569]*569inafter provided, through the lands of said parties of the second part. For the purpose of effectually carrying out said agreement, the said party of the first part hereby agrees: First. To cut said ditch on said Benton street, along its entire length, about four feet deeper than it now is, of sufficient depth to insure the proper drainage of all the grounds herein contemplated, to a point on out-lot number nineteen, in the Godfrey addition to said city (said lot being' now owned by said Statesman, party hereto), where it shall intersect the natural channel of the water from the low lands aforesaid, and to slope the sides of said ditch at an angle of near thirty-three degrees, and of proper width on the bottom to effect the purpose herein contemplated; Second. The enlargement and deepening of said ditch on Benton street to be done at the expense of said city of Peru; the entire work of enlarging and deepening the same to be completed on or before the 1st day of August, 1867. And the said party of the second part agrees: First. To dig and construct a ditch corresponding in fall and proportionate in depth and dimensions with said ditch on Benton street, from the northern terminus of the same, angling through the out-lot of said Statesman aforesaid, thence through the low lands of said Loveland, Gleason and Bearss, following as near as may be the natural channel of the water thereon, to a point on the Peru and Mexico turnpike road, at or near a small culvert or drain across the same, situated northwardly from the toll-house of said turnpike company, and thence westwardly through the low lands of said Tyner and Bearss to the summit, — on condition, and it is hereby understood by and between all the parties hereto, that each of the persons composing said party of the second part contracts for himself to dig and construct said ditch through his or her own lands, and neither of said persons shall be held liable for the failure of or-violation of these .agreements, or any part thereof, to said city, by any party other than himself or herself, it being understood that each of the parties of the second part is held liable as individuals to said city and to [570]*570each other. Second. Each of the persons composing said party of the second part binds himself, his heirs, executors, administrators or assigns, to grant a perpetual right to said party of the first part and their successors in office, to drain into said ditch at any point on his own land on the following terms .and conditions, to wit: If the ditch for drainage as aforesaid shall be constructed along any street or highway leading or extending to said ditch herein contracted to be built, then the same may be left open; but if it shall run into said ditch through the private grounds of said parties of the second part, then it shall be sunk to such depth and covered so as not to interfere with the'cultivation of the soil, provided that no ditch or drain shall be dug or so located as to interfere with or run under any building that may be situated on said lands; and provided, further, that the expense of digging, constructing and covering said ditches shall be paid by said parties of the first part. Third. That the expense of digging and constructing said ditch from its northern terminus on Benton street aforesaid, to the summit west of the Peru and Mexico turnpike, shall be joaid by each of the parties composing said party of the second part through his own lands; and the said ditch shall be completed by the 1st of November, 1867; it being hereby agreed by all the parties of the second part that each will, in the order in which their lands lie with reference to said termination of the said ditch on Benton street, dig and complete their portion respectively in such proportionate period of time between the completion of the portion thereof by said city of Peru and the time above specified for its entire completion as the amount of work by them to be done shall compare with the whole amount to be done by said party of the second part, so as to enable all of the parties of the second part to complete said ditch by the time aforesaid. And it is further agreed by and between all of the parties hereto : First. That said ditch, along its entire length, shall be of uniform fall and proportionate "width and depth, to be determined by the engineer of said city, and all of said [571]

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Bluebook (online)
91 Ind. 566, 1883 Ind. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-peru-v-gleason-ind-1883.