Crapo v. Hazelgreen

93 F. 316, 35 C.C.A. 314, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2003
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 8, 1899
DocketNo. 528
StatusPublished

This text of 93 F. 316 (Crapo v. Hazelgreen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crapo v. Hazelgreen, 93 F. 316, 35 C.C.A. 314, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2003 (7th Cir. 1899).

Opinion

WOODS, Circuit Judge,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

It is well settled by the decisions of the supreme court of Indiana that the averments of the bill to the effect that notice was not given according to law, or that no notice whatever was given, are insufficient and unavailing as ground for the relief sought. The circuit court in which the proceedings were had being a court of general powers, the presumption in favor of its jurisdiction in the particular case, notwithstanding it was a special statutory proceeding, will be conclusive against a collateral attack upon its judgment. When, therefore, it was sought to annul or to restrain proceedings to enforce the judgment in question on the ground that it is void for want of notice, it was not enough to allege that notice was not given according to law, or that no notice whatever was given. The bill should have stated what the record of the judgment assailed shows in respect to notice, so that it could be determined whether, upon the face of the record, the proceedings were valid; every fact, where the contrary did not appear, being presumed in favor of the jurisdiction. As stated in Long v. Ruch, 148 Ind. 74, 47 N. E. 156, “the circuit court being one of general jurisdiction, the presumption is that it had jurisdiction especially as to parties, until the contrary is made to appear.” To the same; effect, see Kleyla v. Haskett, 112 Ind. 506, 14 N. E. 387; Bailey v. Rinker, 146 Ind. 129, 45 N. E. 38. Containing as it does no averment of what the record of the proceedings in question shows on the subject, the bill before us does not present the question whether, for any reason, the notice actually given or attempted to he given, as shown by the record, was so far defective in respect to Mandell as to subject the proceedings to collateral attack by his executor. The bill does not aver that the lands of Mandell were occupied by tenants, nor that the occupants were not served with notice, nor does it state what the record shows concerning notice to occupants. For all that is alleged, the record may show a Unding that the lands were unoccupied, or that there were occupants on whom proper notice had been served. In all these respects, in the absence of proner averment to the contrary, the presumption is in favor of the jurisdiction. If the bill had set out just what the record shows on the subject, whether evidence that there were; tenants upon the land who Were not given notice would have been admissible, and what the effect of the proof offered, would have been important questions; but, on the bill as framed, they do not arise. It remains, therefore, to consider only whether, as contended, no valid notice could have been given to Mandell, because he [322]*322was not a party to the ’ proceedings, and no action was pending against him, upon which notice could be based.

Mandell had no land within four miles of the drain proposed in the petition. He was not named, nor any of his land described, in the petition. He was named nowhere in the proceedings, except in the notice served by the sheriff on persons not here concerned,- and in a like notice, copies of which were posted at the court-house door in Lake county, and at three places along the line of the ditch; and while the ditch as relocated is shown by the report of the commissioners to pass over three tracts of his land, without benefit or injury thereto, each tráct is described as owned by Josephus Collett, a former owner, though the proper transfers had been made, and the title of record and the entries on the tax duplicates had long been in Mandell’s name. The first section quoted of the statute requires that the petition shall describe the lands to be affected, by forty-acre tracts, or other subdivision specified, “and give the names of the owners thereof, if known, and if unknown shall so state”; but “such petition,” it is further provided, “shall be sufficient to give the court jurisdiction over all lands described therein and power to fix a lien thereon, if they are described as belonging to the person who appears to be the owner according to the last tax duplicate.” The next section, after prescribing the notice to be served or posted, authorizes a reference to the drainage commissioners, who are empowered to determine the method of drainage, the termini, route, and location of the work, to assess the' benefits or injury to each separate tract of land to be affected, and to make report to the court. In respect to lands embraced in the report, but not named in the petition, it is added that the court shall fix the time for hearing the report; that the petitioners, at their own cost, shall give 10 days’ notice to the owners of such lands of the filing (and of the time of hearing) of such report, in the same manner as is therein required to be given of the filing and docketing of the petition; that the court shall continue the hearing of the entire report until such notice has been given; and finally that “the same proceedings shall be had in regard to such report as if all the lands mentioned therein and the owners thereof had been named in the original notice of the filing of the petition.” It is to be observed that many requirements of the statute in respect to lands described in the petition are not expressly repeated in respect to lands first mentioned in the report of the commissioners. In the petition, for instance, the description must be by forty-acre tracts, while in respect to lands of the other class the only requirement is that the commissioners shall “assess the benefits or injury as the case may be to each separate tract of land to be affected.” In the petition, too, the name of the owner, if known, must be given, and if, not being known, it is given according to the last tax duplicate, it will be enough to confer jurisdiction; but there is no express requirement that the commissioners shall report the names of the owners, if known, or according to the tax duplicate, if unknown, of lands included in the report which were [323]*323not included in the petition. So, too, written notice is required to be given to resident owners or occupants of lands described in the petition, and to nonresident owners by posting written or printed notice; but, in respect to lands first mentioned in the report, nothing is said of occupants or of tax duplicates, the provision being simply that notice shall be given to the owners of such lands of the filing of the report in the same manner as is therein required to be given of the filing and docketing of the petition. Other differences might be pointed out.

The argument of the appellant, in substance, is that the whole statute must be construed together; that, by fair construction, the report of commissioners is the foundation of the action, as regards new parties, constituting the declaration or complaint against them, as the petition, is the eonrplaint and declaration, and the foundation of the action against those named in it, and hence the report must show the same facts concerning new parties as the petition must show against original parties,' — that is to say, “it must describe their lands by forty-acre tracts or less and must name the owner of each tract, or if the name be unknown it must be so stated and [each tract] must be alleged to be the land of the person in whose name it stands upon the last tax duplicate or transfer book of the county.” In fortification of this argument, it , is urged that but one mode is recognized in Indiana for the commencement of an action by one person against another; that section 316, 1 Burns’ Kev. St.

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Related

Young v. Wells
97 Ind. 410 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1884)
Sisk v. Crump
14 N.E. 381 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1887)
Kleyla v. Haskett
14 N.E. 387 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1887)
Bailey v. Rinker
45 N.E. 38 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1896)
Long v. Ruch
47 N.E. 156 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1897)

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Bluebook (online)
93 F. 316, 35 C.C.A. 314, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2003, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crapo-v-hazelgreen-ca7-1899.