Kirsch v. Braun

53 N.E. 1082, 153 Ind. 247, 1899 Ind. LEXIS 40
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1899
DocketNo. 18,374
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 53 N.E. 1082 (Kirsch v. Braun) 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
Kirsch v. Braun, 53 N.E. 1082, 153 Ind. 247, 1899 Ind. LEXIS 40 (Ind. 1899).

Opinion

Baker, J.

Appellee sued the board of commissioners, the auditor and the treasurer of Benton county, and also appellants, to recover from the county that part of the proceeds of certain gravel-road bonds which the county had appropriated to its own use, to compel the auditor and treasurer to put upon the duplicate and collect the assessments against the lands of appellants and other proprietors and pay appellee’s bonds therefrom, and to establish the validity of the assessments by overturning a judgment of the Benton Circuit Court which had annulled them. Appellants are the landowners in whose favor was rendered the judgment that appellee successfully undertook in this case to have set aside. The assignments of error respecting the pleadings and respecting the conclusions of law on the facts specially found present the same questions.

The special finding discloses these facts: At the regular March session, 1889, of the board of commissioners of Benton county, there was presented to the board a petition, praying for the construction of a free gravel road, setting forth particularly its location, and signed by more than five resident landowners whose lands would be assessed for the cost of the improvement. The petitioners filed their bond. The board found that the petition and bond were in compliance with the statute, and appointed viewers and an engineer to meet on April 16, 1889, and proceed to examine the highway proposed to be improved and report at the regular June session, 1889. The auditor notified the viewers and engineer of the time and place of their meeting, and also gave notice by publication in a newspaper printed in the county for three consecutive weeks next prior to the meeting, of the time and [250]*250place of meeting, the kind of improvement asked for, and the place of beginning, intermediate points and place of termination. The viewers and engineer met at the time and place appointed and proceeded to make their view.

On the third day of the June session, 1889, the viewers and engineer filed with the board their written report, finding that the improvement would be of public utility, estimating the cost at $20,000, and déscribing by sections and sectional subdivisions the lands that would be benefited and ought to be assessed.

On that day the board found and entered'of record that due notice as required by statute had been given of the time and place of the meeting of the viewers and engineer; that public utility required that the road be constructed; that the report of the viewers and engineer be accepted and approved; that the petition was signed by persons owning a majority of all the acres of land, and by more than a majority of the resident landowners whose lands were reported as benefited; and that the road should be constructed upon the route described in the petition. The order of the board also stated the kind of improvement to be made, the width and extent thereof, and a description of the lands benefited.

Some of the landowners appealed from that order of the board to the Benton Circuit Court. The appeal was dismissed on February 18, 1890. At the regular June session, 1890, the board made and entered of record an order, ratifying and confirming all orders theretofore made in the cause, appointing John P. Doyle, a competent engineer, to superintend the-construction of the road, and directing Doyle to give notice that a contract for the construction of the road would be let on July 8, 1890. The contract was let on that day. On July 10, 1890, the board made and entered of record an order, directing that $12,000 of gravel-road bonds be issued to meet the expenses arising from the construction of the road; that the bonds should be made payable to bearer at the banking house of Winslow, T^anier & Co.,New York City, and [251]*251should, recite on their face that they were issued pursuant to an order of the hoard and pursuant to an act approved March 3, 1877, in relation to free gravel roads and acts amendatory thereof and supplemental thereto, and that théy were issued for the purpose of building the H. C. Harris free gravel road in Benton county.

This order of the board further provided that the treasurer of the county should sell the bonds. The bonds were prepared and certified by the auditor and signed by each member of the board under the seal of the county and were delivered to the treasurer in August, 1890, and were in the form prescribed by the hoard. The treasurer sold the bonds in August to Lamprect Bros., of Cleveland, Ohio, for $12,193 cash, which sum was placed by the treasurer in the general fund to the credit of the H. C. Harris free gravel road.

After the bonds were so sold, they were put upon the market and appellee in August, 1890, bought them for $12,615.20, in the usual course of business, before due, and under the full belief that they were valid and issued pursuant to law and without any defect in the proceedings. Appellee still owns the bonds. Ho part of the principal or interest has been paid, except the interest for the first year.

About four and three-quarter miles of the road was constructed before July 1, 1891, the greater part of which was completed before January, 1, 1891. A large part of the remaining portion was graded prior to July 1, 1891. The orders of the hoard directing that $12,000 of gravel-road bonds be issued and sold and prescribing the terms, conditions and forms of the bonds were entered of record as a part of the proceedings of the cause, and the landowners were parties to the proceedings and had knowledge of all the facts and never took any steps to enjoin the sale of the bonds, knowing at the time that the bonds would be put upon the market, that they recited upon their face that they were issued pursuant to the statutes of the State, and that they were made payable to bearer. $10,993 of the money arising from the sale of the [252]*252bonds was expended in the construction of the road to the advantage and betterment of the lands assessed to pay for the improvement.

On December 6, 1890, the board appointed a committee to apportion the cost of the road on the lands benefited. On January 26, 1891, this committee reported that other lands, in addition to those reported by the viewers as benefited, ought to be assessed, and thereupon the board ordered that all lands within two miles of the improvement be assessed. On March 13, 1891, the report of the committee was submitted to the board and was set aside, and the board then ordered that only such lands as were originally reported as benefited be assessed, and a new committee was appointed to make the apportionment. The new committee failed to qualify.

At a special session held in April, 1891, the board found and entered of record that the viewers in their report, through inadvertence and mistake, omitted from their report certain described lands lying within the territory sought to be assessed, that the property omitted would be benefited, and that these lands should be assessed in addition to the lands reported as benefited by the viewers. The board also at that session appointed three disinterested freeholders a committee to apportion the estimated expense of the improvement upon the lands benefited, and this committee was ordered to meet at the auditor’s office on May 4, 1891, and to proceed to make the apportionment.

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Related

Meridith v. Crowder
142 N.E. 876 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1924)
Nisius v. Chapman
99 N.E. 785 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1912)
Galey v. Board of Commissioners
91 N.E. 593 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1910)
Smyth v. State ex rel. Braun
62 N.E. 449 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1902)
Hibben v. Smith
62 N.E. 447 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1902)
State v. Sopher
61 N.E. 785 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 N.E. 1082, 153 Ind. 247, 1899 Ind. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirsch-v-braun-ind-1899.