City of Richmond v. Miller

107 N.E. 550, 58 Ind. App. 20, 1915 Ind. App. LEXIS 95
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 28, 1915
DocketNo. 8,491
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 107 N.E. 550 (City of Richmond v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Richmond v. Miller, 107 N.E. 550, 58 Ind. App. 20, 1915 Ind. App. LEXIS 95 (Ind. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Caldwell, J.

Appellee on May 5, 1911, filed her ex parte petition in the trial court, under the terms of §3 of the act of 1907 (Acts 1907 p. 617, §8910 Burns 1914), praying for the vacation of a designated part of a public alley in the city of Eichmond. The petition alleges among other things that the section of alley sought to be vacated is half a block in length, and that petitioner owns all the lands and lots immediately adjoining and abutting thereon. Notice that such petition was pending and that it was set for hearing on May 31, 1911, was given by publication addressed to the city and its citizens, as by the act required. On January 3, 1912, appellant city appeared to the proceeding, and filed a demurrer to the petition, stating as grounds that the court was without jurisdiction of the subject-matter, which demurrer the court overruled. This ruling presents the first question on this appeal.

Appellee concedes that the jurisdiction of the circuit court to hear and determine petitions such as the one involved here is conferred solely by §3, supra, while appellant city contends that such section applies only where the municipality is dormant. The section, as far as is material to the present discussion, is as follows: “Whenever any person * * * interested therein, or the owner * * * of any lot * * * in any incorporated city or town or which is not a corporation in active operation shall desire to vacate any street, alley or public ground therein or any part thereof adjoining such lot * * *, such person * ® * shall file with the circuit court * * * his * * * petition”, etc. Appellant’s argument is that the word “or” following the word “town” should be read as “and”, and [22]*22lienee that the statute, as so read, confers on circuit courts jurisdiction to determine a petition for the vacation- of a street or alley only where such street or alley is situated within'the corporate limits of a city or town, which is not “in active operation” as such; that since the city of Richmond is .a municipal corporation performing’ its functions as such, the trial court was not clothed with jurisdiction of the subject-matter of this proceeding. Appellant, at least by implication, concedes that if “and” should not be substituted for “or”, as indicated, it is wrong in its position. To sustain such contention, two arguments are advanced: First, that otherwise, the expression “in any incorporated city or town or which is not a corporation in active operation”, and especially the relative clause contained therein, is without meaning; and second, that in cases where municipal corporations are maintaining their full quota of officials, and are conducting all. their departments of government, the statutes independent of §3, supra, makes full .provision for the vacation of streets and alleys, and hence, that the section should be construed as not .applying to such cases.

'1. 2. It is apparent that the section is not a model of verbal or grammatical accuracy. However, we should not be warranted in doing violence to its language unless to do so is necessary in order that it may be rendered intelligible, and that only thereby may the wording employed be made to harmonize with the evident legislative intent. A situation may arise in either an active or a dormant municipal corporation, calling for the vacation of a public street or alley. The section provides merely that the lot owner may file with the proper circuit court a petition to that end, regardless of whether the particular city or town is “in active operation” as a governmental subdivision of the State. If the electorate of the municipality should be so negligent or indifferent as to permit vacancies to -arise and exist in the various public offices of such municipality, then, as long as such a situation con[23]*23tinues, a street or alley in such municipality could be vacated only by conferring power to that end on some outside tribunal. There is no basic reason why such a tribunal should be clothed with such power only in case the particular municipality is dormant. In our judgment the section is reasonably intelligible, without the substitution of the words contended for. Such substitution would merely narrow, rather than clarify the section.

It is true that prior to the passage of the act of 1907, supra, the legislature had provided a method, yet in force, by which streets, alleys and public lands in cities and towns might be vacated, as by action of the board of public works or common council of a city, or board of trustees of a town (§§8696, 8697, 8700, 8960, 8961, 9005 Burns 1914, Acts 1905 p. 219, §§93, 94, 97, 266, 267, Acts 1909 p. 369), and since for obvious reasons, recourse could not be had to such method where the municipal corporation/ was not in active operation it is true that thereby the necessity arose to create a new method to that end. However, it does not follow, as already indicated, that such new method must of necessity be confined to cases where the municipal corporation is not in active operation. Giving the section the- broader construction, and the result is that in the ordinary case, where the vacating of a street or alley is deemed desirable, that is, where the corporation is in active operation, -recourse may be had to either one of the two proceedings. Such result seems to have been within the legislative contemplation, in that by §13 of said act (Acts 1907 p. 617, §8920 Burns 1914), it is provided that such act shall have no repealing effect “but shall be supplementary to all other laws or parts of laws on the subject hereof.” The situation here presented is not unusual in the science of the law. It is at least closely related to the doctrine of the election of remedies: as where a person has suffered a wrong from a certain act of which he complains, he has in many instances a right to choose between different remedies the one which he will pursue. [24]*24Our statute affords us a number of examples of cumulative remedies, or of more than one procedure by which the same or a similar,end may be attained: as in establishing public ditches and their repair; bringing into the record the court’s instructions to the jury; contesting the validity of wills, etc. “Two or more separate laws may establish the same right, or provide redress for the same wrong. And the person seeking to enforce the right or avenge the wrong may proceed on the law he chooses.” Robinson v. Rippey (1887), 111 Ind. 112, 12 N. E. 141. See, also, Sefton v. Board, etc. (1903), 160 Ind. 357, 66 N. E. 891.

In the matter under consideration, some weight should be given to the fact that §3, supra, as by us construed herein, has been actually applied by both the Supreme Court and this court, although the question here under discussion was not there presented. City of Peru v. Cox (1909), 173 Ind. 241, 90 N. E. 7; Southern R. Co. v. Town of French Lick (1913), 52 Ind. App. 447, 100 N. E. 762. We hold that the court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter of this proceeding.

[25]*253. [24]*24In order to discuss properly the remaining points presented, it is necessary that we set out certain provisions of said act, and especially on the question of notice. Section 3, supra, requires that “notice of the filing and pendency of said petition shall be given as in this act provided. ’ ’ Section 9 (Acts 1907 p.

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Bluebook (online)
107 N.E. 550, 58 Ind. App. 20, 1915 Ind. App. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-richmond-v-miller-indctapp-1915.