Fleming v. Hight

101 Ind. 466, 1885 Ind. LEXIS 347
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 1885
DocketNo. 11,925
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 101 Ind. 466 (Fleming v. Hight) 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
Fleming v. Hight, 101 Ind. 466, 1885 Ind. LEXIS 347 (Ind. 1885).

Opinion

Colekick, C.

The appellees presented to the board of commissioners of Monroe county their petition for the construction of a free gravel road, under the statute authorizing the construction of such roads (R. S. 1881, section 5091, etc.), accompanied with a bond, as required by the statute, and, thereupon, the board appointed viewers and a surveyor to view the proposed route, and, if they found that the improvement petitioned for would be of public utility, to lay out and .mark the road, and designated a time and place for the meet[467]*467ing of the viewers and surveyor for that purpose, and directed the auditor of the county to give notice by publication of the time and place of said meeting, as provided by law, which notice was properly given, as directed. Afterwards the viewers and surveyor reported to the board that they had viewed the proposed road, and, having determined that the improvement prayed for would be of public utility, had laid out and marked said road as described in their report; and they presented with, and as a part of, their report, a list of the lots and lands that would be benefited by the improvement, and which ought to be assessed for the expenses of the same. The board approved the report, and ordered the improvement to b'e made. No one at any time appeared before the board in opposition to the proceeding. After said order was made, and before any further steps were taken in the matter, the appellants, within the time allowed by law .for that purpose, appealed from the decision of the board ordering said improvement to be made to the circuit court, by filing with the county auditor an affidavit and bond, which, under the statute, entitled the appellants to such appeal.

In the circuit court the appellees moved to dismiss the appeal upon the alleged grounds :

1. That the appeal had been prematurely taken, that is, before the proceeding had been finally disposed of by the board of commissioners.

2. That the matters presented by the affidavit filed by the appellants to obtain their appeal were such as could not be tried in the circuit court.

3. That no questions except those of a jurisdictional character were presented by the record, and that by reason of the non-appearance of the appellants to the proceedings before the board of commissioners, all objections to the questions thus presented had been waived.

4. That as the appellants did not appear before the board of commissioners, the affidavit and appeal bond did not make them proper parties to the cause in the circuit court. [468]*468The motion to dismiss the appeal was sustained, and from that decision the appellants appealed to this court, where the judgment of the court below was reversed. See Fleming v. Sight, 95 Ind. 78. It was then said by this court, Niblack, J.: “ The order of the board of commissioners establishing the road laid out and marked by the viewers, and directing its construction, was such an order as might be appealed from to the circuit court,” and, after citing many decisions of this court to that effect, continued: “These cases, with others which might be cited, also recognize, and, in various ways, affirm, the legal proposition that, upon an appeal from the decision of a board of commissioners in a case like this, the circuit court takes jurisdiction of the proceedings appealed from as an original cause, and not as an appellate court charged with a. review merely of those proceedings upon specific objections urged, or errors assigned, by the appellant, and the appellant is not precluded by the proceedings from which he appeals, except in preliminary or incidental matters to which, when opportunity was afforded him, he failed to make objection before the commissioners. Therefore, the cases cited by counsel, which hold that certain proceedings had before boards of commissioners are impervious to collateral attack, have no application to cases in which such proceedings have been directly appealed from to the circuit court, and consequently stand for trial de novo in that court.”

Upon-the remanding of the cause to the court below, it reconsidered its action in dismissing the appeal and overruled the motion to dismiss the same, and thereupon the appellees made another motion, founded upon other alleged grounds, to dismiss the appeal, which motion, to which we will hereafter more fully refer, was overruled. The cause was then tried by the court, and at the request of the parties the court made a special finding of the facts therein and .stated its conclusion of law thereon, as follows:

“1. I find that on the 25th day of April, 1883, the following petition was filed before the board of commissioners [469]*469of Monroe county.” (Here the petition which was presented to the board by the appellees for the construction of the proposed gravel road was set forth.)
2. I find that said petition was signed by Wallace Hight,. Emily Hight, William A. Rogers, James M. Howe, H. C. Duncan and William Burke, Jr., and that said subscribers are land-holders, whose lands will be assessed for the cost of said improvement.
“ 3. I find that said petitioners filed a bond as required by law, signed by Wallace Hight and Henry Henley, which bond was approved by the board.
“4. I find that thereupon the board appointed William Lyford, John Harrell and William Strean, who were disinterested freeholders of Monroe county, to act as viewers, and Henry Henley to act as surveyor and engineer, and appointed the 21st day of May, 1883, for said viewers and engineer to examine, view, lay out and straighten said road.
5. I find that the auditor of said Monroe county gave notice of the filing of said petition, and the appointment of said viewers and said engineer, as required by law, which notice is in the words and figures as follows: ” (Here the notice referred to is recited.)
6. I find that on the 7th day of June, 1883, said viewers and engineer filed their report before said board, which report reads in the words and figures as follows: ” (Here the report is fully- set forth.)
“7. I find that upon the filing of said report the following proceedings were had before said board, as shown by the records of said board, as follows:” (Here the order of the board of commissioners ordering said improvement to be made, and specifying the manner in which it should be made, and appointing viewers to apportion the estimated expenses of the improvement upon the real estate described in the report of the first viewers according to the benefits to be derived therefrom, was set forth.)
“ 8. I find that at no time during the pendency of said [470]*470proceeding did any one appear before said board and object to any part of said proceedings.
“ 9. I find that on the 7th day of July, 1883, Lewis Weymer and Stephen Fleming filed the following affidavit in the auditor’s office of said Monroe county: ” (Here the affidavit that was filed by the appellants, to enable them to appeal from the decision of the board, is set forth) • and also on said 7th day of July, 1883, they filed the following appeal bond: ” (Here the bond is recited.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 Ind. 466, 1885 Ind. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleming-v-hight-ind-1885.