Indianapolis Brewing Co. v. Claypool

48 N.E. 228, 149 Ind. 193
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1897
DocketNo. 18,311
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 48 N.E. 228 (Indianapolis Brewing Co. v. Claypool) 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
Indianapolis Brewing Co. v. Claypool, 48 N.E. 228, 149 Ind. 193 (Ind. 1897).

Opinions

McCabe, C. J.

The legislature of 1895 passed an act approved March 1, 1895, entitled “An act to establish a department of public parks in cities having more than one hundred thousand population, according to the last preceding United States census, and a board of park commissioners, defining the powers and duties of such board and matters connected therewith, and declaring an emergency.” Sections 7240-7261 Horner’s R. S. 1897, (Acts 1895, p. 63). The appellant brought suit against the appellees, who are the acting members of said board, and certain other officers appointed by the circuit court at the instance [194]*194of said board, under the provisions of said act, to enjoin them from further acting by virtue of any-authority conferred on them by said act. The circuit court sustained a demurrer to the complaint for want of sufficient facts; and, the plaintiff refusing to plead further or amend its complaint, the court rendered judgment that the plaintiff take nothing by its suit. That ruling is called in question by the assignment of errors as the only error complained of by the appellant. The ground on which the complaint seeks an injunction is that the act is unconstitutional. The first section thereof provides, inter alia, that in all cities of 100,000 inhabitants, as shown by the last preceding United States census, in addition to the executive departments now established by law in such cities, there is hereby established, as one of the executive departments of such city, a department of public parks, which shall be under the control of a board of five members, to be appointed by the mayor of such city, •to be known as the “Board of Park Commissioners,” and who are required to serve without compensation except their actual expenses. They are each required to take an ordinary official oath before entering upon the discharge of the duties of their offices respectively. The second section provides that the first members of said board shall hold office respectively, one, two, three, four, and five years, from and after the first day of January, 1895, and annually thereafter the mayor shall appoint one such commissioner to hold office for the term of five years, beginning with the first day of January in the year of his appointment; and if any vacancy occurs in said board by resignation or otherwise, the mayor shall appoint one or more commissioners for the residue of the term, or terms. The complaint alleges inter alia: That plaintiff is the owner of ten and one-half acres of land within the corporate [195]*195limits of the city of Indianapolis, which land is particularly described; and that the then mayor, the Honorable C. S. Denny, appointed the defendants Clay-pool and Perry and three other persons, namely Frank A. Maus, William H. Leedy, and Henry Clay Allen, as a board of park commissioners of said city, who all qualified by taking the official oath; that thereafter said Maus resigned and said mayor appointed Sterling R. Holt in said Maus’ place. That said Holt qualified in like manner, and he afterwards, upon the expiration of his term, was reappointed January 1, 1896, That said William H. Leedy resigned, and the then mayor, the Honorable Thomas Taggart, appointed in his place Albert Lieber, who qualified by taking the official oath, and upon the expiration of his term was reappointed January 1,1897. That thereafter the said Henry Clay Allen resigned as one of said board, and said last mentioned mayor appointed in the place of said Allen, William E. English, who also qualified by taking the oath of office. That Claypool’s appointment dates from his qualificaton, April 20, 1895; Oran Perry’s from March 13, 1895; Sterling R. Holt’s reappointment from January 1,1896; Albert Lieber’s reappointment from January 1,1897; and William E. English’s appointment from December 11, 1896. That the respective terms of said appointees would expire under the statute and said appointments as follows: Edward Claypool on January 1, 1898; Oren Perry on January 1, 1900; Sterling R. Holt on January 1, 1901; Albert Lieber on January 1, 1902; and William E. English on January 1, 1899.

That after said defendants had qualified as aforesaid, and assumed to discharge the duties and exercise the powers devolved on them by said act, they gave out that they will continue to exercise such powers as aforesaid, and they selected for the purpose of public [196]*196parks, along with real estate of other owners, the real estate hereinbefore described, and, pursuant to said act procured the Marion Circuit Court to appoint the defendants Joseph Flack, Charles E. Coffin, and Daniel Burton as assessors to assess damages and benefits to the owners of the property, aforesaid, proposed to be taken for public parks, and property beneficially affected by such public parks. That said assessors accepted said appointments, and, as provided in said act, they are now publishing in the Sun newspaper a notice to this plaintiff and the other owners of real estate to be affected, that they will on’June 23, 189-7, begin the assessment of said real estate for the aforesaid purposes. That the aforesaid park commissioners give out that, after said assessment shall have been made, they will proceed, in accordance with said act, to apply to the circuit Court for the confirmation of such assessment, and thereupon to determine what, if any, part of the damages awarded shall be paid out of the funds set apart for the use of said board of park commissioners by the common council for such purpose, to the end that, in pursuance of section twenty-two of said act, the title of said real estate shall become fixed and vested in said city for the purposes of public parks. Similar allegations are made as to the assessment of benefits by said assessors. That said proceedings and acts of said board and said assessors are taken without-warrant or authority of law, for the reason that said act of the legislature is unconstitutional and void.

The first reason urged for the unconstitutionality of the act is that it is an amendment of the act approved March 6, 1891, concerning the incorporation, etc., of cities of more than 100,000 population, and does not, as required by section twenty-one of article four, of the constitution, set forth and publish at full [197]*197length the act as revised or section as amended. But the recent case of State v. Gerhardt, 145 Ind. 439, and cases there cited, settled the law that the statute in question was not an amendment of the act referred to. But a much more serious question is presented by appellants’ contention that the act violates the last clause of section two of article fifteen of our state constitution (section 224, Burns’ R. S. 1894; 224, R. S. 1881), providing that “the General Assembly shall not create any office the tenure of which shall be longer than four years.” We approach the consideration and decision of that question fully impressed with the delicacy of the task, and that the well settled rule that requires us to solve all doubts in favor of the action of the legislature is salutary and wholesome; and yet the solemn duty of declaring an act of the legislature or a part thereof, void, because of its plain and unquestionable violation of an inhibition in the constitution, is equally imperative. To permit such an act or a part thereof to escape judicial condemnation, and to stand as law, is fraught with as much danger to the perpetuity of our republican form of government as the overthrow of statutes by judicial power merely because the court, doubts their constitutionality.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Newblock v. Bowles
1935 OK 120 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)
State Ex Rel. Landis v. Green
144 So. 681 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1932)
Bemis v. Guirl Drainage Co.
105 N.E. 496 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1914)
Wells v. State ex rel. Peden
94 N.E. 321 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1911)
Attorney General v. Tillinghast
89 N.E. 1058 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1909)
State ex rel. Lamar v. Dillon
42 Fla. 95 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1900)
State ex rel. Harrison v. Menaugh
43 L.R.A. 408 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 N.E. 228, 149 Ind. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indianapolis-brewing-co-v-claypool-ind-1897.