Hardy v. McKinney

8 N.E. 232, 107 Ind. 364, 1886 Ind. LEXIS 353
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 17, 1886
DocketNo. 12,068
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 8 N.E. 232 (Hardy v. McKinney) 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
Hardy v. McKinney, 8 N.E. 232, 107 Ind. 364, 1886 Ind. LEXIS 353 (Ind. 1886).

Opinion

Niblack, J.

On the 31st day of December, 1880, John McKinney filed his petition before the board of commissioners of the county of Carroll, representing that he was the •owner of a particularly described tract .of land in that county, upon which, and the adjacent lands of Alexander Hardy, Thomas Hardy and William Hardy, there was a shallow and ¡stagnant pond of water, covering for the greater part of each year about fifteen acres of ground; that during wet seasons said pond rendered nearly, if not quite, twenty acres of valuable land unfit for cultivation; that during the summer months such pond was very injurious to the health of the neighborhood; that there was no natural outlet to the pond in question, but that it, together with other contiguous wet land, could be drained by the construction of a proposed .and particularly defined ditch, of about two and one-third miles in length; also representing that such a ditch would be conducive to public health and a work of public utility, and praying that proceedings might be taken for the construction of the ditch as proposed.

At a special^meeting of the board of commissioners above named, held in January, 1881, viewers were appointed, who, in April following, reported in favor of the construction of ¡a ditch as prayed for by the petition. Notice of the pendency of the petition was thereupon given in accordance with the provisions of the second section of the act of March 9th, 1875, concerning the reclamation of wet lands, and the 8th day of June, 1881, was fixed for the hearing of the matters contained in the petition.

At the time fixed for the hearing, the Hardys entered an appearance, and moved to dismiss the proceeding upon the ground that it had been instituted and prosecuted under the provisions of the act of March 9th, 1875, supra, instead of [366]*366the later act of March I3th, 1879, then and previously in force; but their motion was overruled. The Hardys then-filed a remonstrance against the construction of the proposed ditch; also a claim for compensation. The following weroassigned as causes of remonstrance:

First. That the proposed ditch is identical with, and in fact the same ditch heretofore established by this board, having the same beginning and the same ending, the same average depth, same slope, and the same fall per mile.

Second. That there is now constructed a ditch on the identical line of said proposed ditch, having the same length, depth, and fall per mile of the proposed ditch for the distance of 11,194 feet computed from the terminus of said proposed ditch, which is now in successful operation, and no-ditch is therefore necessary or required upon said portion of said line.

Third. That all persons mentioned in- said petition as being interested in the construction of said proposed ditch, and owning lands liable to be assessed for the construction thereof;, have heretofore, by order of this board, been assessed, and. most of them have paid such assessment, and can not be-again assessed for the same ditch.

Fourth. That the construction of said proposed ditch will not be necessary and conducive to public health, convenience or welfare, and will not be of public utility, and is not necessary.

Fifth. That all of said proposed ditch, excepting about eighty rods at the upper end thereof, has heretofore been dug and fully completed in accordance with the specifications of said proposed ditch; that the excavation of the said eighty rods of ditch would drain a pond of valuable stock water on the lands of said remonstrants and greatly damage them in. the business of stock herding and raising, in which they are: largely engaged; that said remonstrants are now constructing a tile ditch by which said pond of water-will be drained to another part of their lands, where they can- utilize it for [367]*367stock water, and wholly remove it from the lands of said McKinney; that, if removed by the excavation of said eighty rods of said proposed ditch, it would damage the said remonstrants in the sum of $2,000; that the construction of said eighty rods of ditch by the said McKinney, and all others, has been forbidden and forever enjoined by the order of the judge of the Carroll Circuit Court, and can not now be constructed but in contempt of said order, which order is now of record, unreversed and unappealed from and in full force.

Sixth. That the assessment made by said viewers of $1,-760.^5 for the cost of constructing said proposed ditch is false and fraudulent in this, to wit, that 11,194 feet of said proposed ditch is already completed and will cost nothing to make, and that the eighty rods of said proposed ditch at the upper end yet to be made would comprise the whole cost of said proposed ditch, which, according to the report of said viewers, would not cost more than the sum of $424.85.

Reviewers were thereupon appointed, who- reported,, in general terms, against the Hardys, and the board of commissioners ordered the establishment and construction of the ditch.

The Hardys appealed to the circuit court, from which there was a change of venue to the White Circuit Court, where the venue was again changed to the Cass Circuit Court. During the progress of these latter proceedings William Hardy died intestate, and Mary C. Hardy, his widow, and Wilson A. D. Hardy, Juniata M. Hardy and William Hardy, Jr., his only children, were substituted as parties to the appeal.

The Hardys also renewed their motion to dismiss the petition, and all the proceedings which had been taken upon it, and their motion was again overruled.

After obtaining jurisdiction of the cause, the Cass Circuit Court proceeded to try the issues presented by the petition and the remonstrance, and, after hearing the evidence, made-a finding “for the petitioner, John McKinney, and against the remonstrators, the Hardys, as to damages.” Motions for a [368]*368venire de novo, for a new trial, and in arrest of j udgment, being first severally overruled, judgment was rendered upon the finding as follows: It is therefore considered, ordered and adjudged by the court, that the ditch described in the petition filed by John McKinney before the board of commissioners of the county of Carroll, * * * * is of public utility; that it will be conducive to the public health; that the construction thereof will cause no damage to the remonstrants and appellants herein, and that the same ought to be, and is hereby, established in accordance with the prayer of said petition, and the action of said board of commissioners in the premises is hereby confirmed and the cause is hereby remanded to the board of commissioners of the county of Carroll, * * * * who are hereby ordered to take such further steps as by law may be required in the construction of said ditch subsequently to the time the proceedings before said board in this proceeding were arrested. by said appeal; and it is further adjudged and decreed that all further steps as against the original appellant, William Hardy, on account of his death pending the proceedings, be now waged against his heirs at law, Mary C. Hardy, Wilson A. D. Hardy, Juniata M. Hardy and William Hardy.” This-was followed by a judgment against the Hardys for costs, and an order that the clerk should transmit a certified transcript of the proceedings had upon the appeal, together with the original papers, to the board of commissioners of Carroll •county. Objections to the judgment were interposed by the Hardys, and exceptions were reserved.

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.E. 232, 107 Ind. 364, 1886 Ind. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardy-v-mckinney-ind-1886.