Goddard v. Stockman

74 Ind. 400
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1881
DocketNo. 9371
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 74 Ind. 400 (Goddard v. Stockman) 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
Goddard v. Stockman, 74 Ind. 400 (Ind. 1881).

Opinion

Woods, J.

The appellants, who were plaintiffs in the-circuit court, sued as taxpayers of Clinton township, Decatur county, to enjoin the collection of a tax levied for the purpose of aiding the Vernon, Greensburg and Eushville Eailroad Company, by subscribing, on the part of the township, to $11,000 of its capital stock.

[402]*402A demurrer to the complaint was sustained by the circuit court, and final judgment was rendered upon it in favor of defendants.

The substance of the complaint is as follows : That plaintiffs were taxpayers of the township ; that on the 19th of July, 1879, a petition, purporting to be signed by twenty-five or more freeholders of the township, was filed in the county auditor’s office, asking the county commissioners to make the appropriation ; a copy of the petition is set out; that on the 21st of July it was presented to the commissioners, who ordered it spread upon the records, and thereupon made an order in the premises, which is set out in the complaint. It recited that proof was made that twenty-five of the petitioners were freeholders of the township. It directed (he holding of an election on the 25th day of August, 1879, and that the auditor should give notice of the election.

. The complaint states that that part of the order reciting that proof was made that twenty-five of the petitioners were freeholders of the township is an interpolation made subsequently, but does not state by whom made ; that the record entry of the order was not sigucd by the commissioners or any of them, nor attested by the auditor, until thirty days after the date it purports to have been signed ; that no proof was made that the petition had been signed by twenty-five freeholders, and that it had not, in fact, been so signed; that the-auditor gave notice of the election, .a copy of which is set out; the certificates of the sheriff as to posting and publishing the notice are set out; that on the 25th day of August, 1879, a pretended election was had in Clinton and Washington townships, there having been a like petition from the latter township ; that the officers of election of the two townships met on the 28th of August, at the courthouse, as a pretended canvassing board, and canvassed the vote of Clinton township, and certified the result to the auditor — 67 for and 66 against the appropriation ; their cer[403]*403tifíente is set out; that on June 10th, 1880, the commissioners, in regular session, ordered a levy of one per cent, on the taxablcs of Clinton township ; the order is set out; that the tax has gone on the duplicate, and the treasurer is about to enforce collection; that the taxablcs of the township on the duplicate of 1878 amounted to $590,000, and for 1880 to $492,000 only.

The complaint then assigns twelve objections to the validity of the tax, mostly matters of law. One of them, however, the eighth, states as fact that ten persons who voted for the appropriation were not residents or legal voters of the township, so that upon the legitimate vote there was a majority of nine against the measure.

The first objection assigned is that the board had no right ■or authority to consider the petition nor to order the election or levy the tax.

The fourth objection is, that the board, prior to ordering the election, were not satisfied that the petition had been signed by twenty-five freeholders, and that the petition was not in fact so signed.

In appellants’ brief these two objections are treated as raising the same.point, and are considered together.

The order of the county board recites as follows: “And proof being made that twenty-five of the petitioners are freeholders of Clinton township.”

It is said that this means nothing more than that some evidence to that point was introduced, but that it docs not show that the board “was satisfied with the proof.” It is also said that the recital does not show that the “Clinton township” referred to in the recital, was in Decatur county. When a tribunal having jurisdiction to decide as to the existence of a fact finds that it is proved, there would seem little room for doubt as to its being satisfied that the fact existed. When the commissioners of Decatur county, in •considering a petition purporting to.be signed by freehold[404]*404ers “of Clinton township, in said county,” find that the petitioners were freeholders of “Clinton township,” there is little room to doubt that they referred to Clinton township-in their own county.

But it is said that the recital referred to was an interpolation, made subsequently to the making of the other portions-of the entry.

The complaint copies the order of the commissioners, and this recital appears as a, part of it. It was placed there presumably bjr the auditor, with the sanction of the board — at least nothing to the contrary is alleged. The only complaint made is, that it was written after the other portion of the-entry, and after the day upon which the order was made-It is not even charged that it was placed there fraudulently,, or by an unauthorized person.

The mere fact, that the words were interpolated after the other part of the entry had been completed, in no manner affects the validity of the entry, or of the interpolated part. See Larr v. The State, ex rel., 45 Ind. 364; Anderson v. Mitchell, 58 Ind. 592; Blair v. Lanning, 61 Ind. 499; Jones v. Carnahan, 63 Ind. 229; Kent v. Fullenlove, 38 Ind. 522.

No statute has been called to our attention or come under our observation, which requires that the proceedings of the board be signed by the members of the board, though it is-doubtless the common usage, and the better practice, that the-proceedings be so signed and authenticated. The auditor of the county is required to “attend the meetings of such-commissioners, and keep a record of their proceedings,” and “The commissioners of each county shall use a common seal; and copies of their proceedings, when signed and sealed Iry the said auditor, shall be sufficient evidence thereof, on. the trial of any cause in an}? of the courts of this State.” 1 R. S. 1876, p. 351, secs. 7 and 10. But, conceding the propriety and necessity of the signatures of the commissioners, we are clear that unsigned orders of the board are not void, and [405]*405when properly signed, within any reasonable time, become valid from the time when made. See authorities cited supra.

The next objection is, “Because the petition presented to the board of commissioners of said county does not ask that Clinton township make the appropriation of $11,000, but that the commissioners make the same.”

The petitioners represent themselves as freeholders of Clinton township. The petition represents that the road xuns through that township, and asks that the “board make an appropriation of eleven thousand dollars for the purpose •of aiding in the construction of said road, by taking stock in said company, for said Clinton township.”

The next objection is founded on the fact that the petition •did not ask. for the annexing of any conditions to the appropriation.

This court had decided, in The Indiana, etc., R. W. Co. v. The City of Attica, 56 Ind. 476, that it was not competent for a city to annex conditions to a donation as a consideration for making it. This was at the May term, 1877. At the next session of the Legislature, the act of March 8th, 1879, Acts 1879, p.

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Bluebook (online)
74 Ind. 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goddard-v-stockman-ind-1881.