Grover v. Frantz

408 N.E.2d 567, 77 Ind. Dec. 536, 1980 Ind. App. LEXIS 1621
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 11, 1980
DocketNo. 2-1079A316
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 408 N.E.2d 567 (Grover v. Frantz) 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
Grover v. Frantz, 408 N.E.2d 567, 77 Ind. Dec. 536, 1980 Ind. App. LEXIS 1621 (Ind. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinions

CHIPMAN, Judge.

Appellants Frederick and Nova Grover appeal from a decision of the Grant Circuit Court, which entered summary judgment in favor of the appellees, members of the Wells County Drainage Board (hereinafter collectively referred to as “the Board”). On appeal Grovers attack the lower court’s decision, arguing that material issues of fact remained for trial.1 We hold summary judgment was improperly granted in this case.

Reversed and remanded.

This controversy arises out of proceedings initiated by the Wells County Drainage Board for the reconstruction of a legal drain. Ind.Code 19-4-3-1 through 19-4-3-5. The drain, known as the “Stites Drain,” runs through land owned by appellants Frederick and Nova Grover.

On April 12, 1976, the Board referred the Stites Drain to the county surveyor for a reconstruction report. After the report was completed and filed, the Board issued a schedule of assessments for the project. As required by Ind.Code 19-4-3-2(1), this schedule contained a description of each tract of land to be benefited by reconstruction of the drain and listed the percentage of the total cost of the improvements to be assessed against each tract of land, the percentage based upon the benefit to the land resulting from the improvement.

Following hearings on the reconstruction report and schedule of assessments, appellants filed a petition for judicial review claiming the Board failed to find their land would be damaged as a result of the reconstruction project.2 The Board responded by filing a motion for summary judgment, which was granted. This appeal follows.

Ind.Code 19-4-3-2 requires that in addition to considering the benefits associated with the reconstruction of a drain, the Board must consider any damage sustained by a land owner as a result of the improvement. IC 19-4-3-2 provides:

“Whenever the surveyor has filed his reconstruction report he shall consult with the board and the board shall:
[569]*569(2) determine the amount of damages sustained by any owner as a result of the improvement, and shall prepare a schedule of damages containing the name and address of each owner determined to be damaged and a description of the owner’s land as shown by the surveyor’s report, the amount of each owner’s damages, and an explanation of the injury upon which the determination was based. The surveyor shall in his report add the damages to all lands as determined by the board to his estimated costs and expenses of the improvement and the result shall constitute the total estimated cost of the improvement;” (emphasis added)

An affected landowner who feels the damages assessed to his land are inadequate may file written objections with the Board which will be considered at a subsequent hearing. If the owner remains dissatisfied with the Board’s damage assessment, Ind. Code 19-4-8-5 provides for judicial review of the agency’s determination:

“Whenever a petition for judicial review is filed on the ground ... (2) that petitioner’s lands would be damaged by a proposed improvement and the board failed to so find, or that the board found petitioner’s lands would be damaged but the amount of damages awarded were inadequate, then the court shall proceed to hear the issue of . damages de novo.”3

In their petition for judicial review appellants claimed the Board failed to find their land would be damaged by reconstruction of the drain. The record discloses that the Board never prepared a schedule of damages as required by IC 19-4-3-2(2). The Board’s position on this issue is somewhat befuddled. In a response to the Grovers’ interrogatories the Board stated the improvement would not result in any damage to the Grovers’ land. However, in its appellate brief the Board argues that while the Grovers’ property was damaged by reconstruction of the Stites Drain, those damages were considered in calculating the net benefit to the land and in arriving at the corresponding assessment against the property.4 Notwithstanding this apparent inconsistency, the fact remains that Grovers were entitled to a trial de novo on the issue of damages.

In his affidavit in response to the Board’s motion for summary judgment, Frederick Grover alleged that as a result of the reconstruction of the Stites Drain his land has been damaged as follows:

“[Ojver one-and-one-half (VA) acres of . valuable real estate have disappeared due to the widening of the ditch, numerous field-tile drainage outlets into the ditch have been damaged and incorrectly re-installed, fences have been recklessly and carelessly destroyed, the debris from the ditch reconstruction has been piled on Petitioner’s lands rendering such lands incapable of producing a normal crop for a period in excess of twenty-five (25) years if left in its present state, and . sizeable portions of the remainder of Petitioners’ lands, outside the seventy-five (75) foot easement, now drain less efficiently than they did prior to the reconstruction;”

The easement to which Grover refers in his affidavit is in fact a right of entry recognized by Ind.Code 19-4-6-1:

“The surveyor, or the board, or any duly authorized representative of either the surveyor or the board, in the performance of any duty required or permitted under the provisions of this act, shall have the [570]*570right of entry over and upon lands lying within seventy-five [75] feet of any legal drain, the seventy-five [75] feet to be measured at right angles to the center line of any legal tile ditch, and to be measured at right angles from the existing top edge of each bank of a legal open ditch as determined by the surveyor.”

Because all reconstruction work on the drain was completed within this seventy-five foot right of way,5 the trial court held the damages alleged by the Grovers were not recoverable under the Indiana Drainage Code. Specifically, the lower court found:

“5. That Indiana Code Edition 19-4-6-1 states, in pertinent part, that any crops grown on said seventy-five (75) foot right-of-way are at the risk of the landowner, and if necessary in the reconstruction or maintenance of said ditch, may be damaged or destroyed without liability on the part of the Surveyor, the Wells County Drainage Board or their representatives.
6. That the entire ditch reconstruction project, as it affected the land of Petitioners, was completed within the seventy-five (75) foot easement referred to in Indiana Code Edition 19-4-6-1.
7. That there exists no issues in this case relating to a material fact which should be tried, either by the Court or by a jury, for the reason that the Respondents have completed their work on Petitioners’ land within the statutorily granted right-of-way.”

We believe the trial court’s interpretation of IC 19-4-6-1, i. e., that any damage to land located within the Board’s seventy-five foot right-of-way may not be considered by the court, was erroneous.

First, we acknowledge that IC 19-4-6-1 does impose certain restrictions on the use of land located within the Board’s right-of-way. Generally, the land may be used “in any manner not inconsistent with the proper operation of the drain . . . .” Id.

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Mattingly v. Warrick County Drainage Board
743 N.E.2d 1245 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 2001)

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Bluebook (online)
408 N.E.2d 567, 77 Ind. Dec. 536, 1980 Ind. App. LEXIS 1621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grover-v-frantz-indctapp-1980.