Lake Erie & Western Railroad v. City of Alexandria

55 N.E. 435, 153 Ind. 521, 1899 Ind. LEXIS 75
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1899
DocketNo. 18,697
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 55 N.E. 435 (Lake Erie & Western Railroad v. City of Alexandria) 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
Lake Erie & Western Railroad v. City of Alexandria, 55 N.E. 435, 153 Ind. 521, 1899 Ind. LEXIS 75 (Ind. 1899).

Opinion

Dowling, J.

This proceeding was instituted by the appellee, the city of Alexandria, before the board of commissioners of Madison county, for the purpose of annexing a tract of unplatted land contiguous to said city, constituting a part of the real estate and right of way of the appellant. The appellee, by its common council, filed a petition before the board of commissioners setting forth the reasons for annexation, and notice of said petition was given by publication in the planner prescribed by the statute. Over appellant’s objection to this petition, the board entertained jurisdiction of the cause, and ordered the annexation to be made. The railroad company appealed to the circuit court of Madison county, and moved to dismiss the proceeding for want of jurisdiction. The court overruled the motion and, 'after-wards, such proceedings were had that the court affirmed the action of the board of commissioners. A motion for a new [523]*523trial was overruled. On this appeal, the errors assigned are:

(1) The overruling of appellant’s motion to dismiss the petition for want of jurisdiction. (2) That the hoard of commissioners of Madison county had no jurisdiction in the cause. (3) That the circuit court had not jurisdiction of the cause of action, or of the person of the appellant. (4) The overruling of appellant’s motion for a new trial.

The appellant, in its motion to dismiss the proceeding, alleged a number of reasons why jurisdiction could not he entertained by the board of commissioners, or the circuit court, hut as counsel discuss only two of these, the remainder must he treated as waived.

Appellant contends that as the petition of the common council shows upon its face that it was authorized at an adjourned special session of that body, it is therefore insufficient to give jurisdiction to the hoard, or to the circuit court. The question, therefore, is presented, has the common council power, at an adjourned special session, to order the presentation of a petition to the hoard of commissioners for the annexation of territory to the municipal corporation, where it does not appear from the record that the special session was called for that particular purpose?

Every presumption must he indulged in favor of the regularity of the action of the common council in the proceedings which are now collaterally attacked; and, if it were true that no business could he transacted at the adjourned special session of the common council, save that for whicli such session had been called, and that notice to all members of the council and to the public regarding the purposes of the special meeting was essential to the validity of its acts, we must assume, the contrary not appearing, that this special session was called for the purpose of acting upon this petition and authorizing the resolution in question, and that such notice as was necessary was duly given. Carrick v. State, 18 Ind. 409.

[524]*524It is questionable if in such summary proceedings as the annexation of territory to a city, any notice from the common council to. the parties in interest is required prior to the adoption of the petition. All persons affected by the annexation are afforded opportunity to be heard before the board of commissioners, and, if aggrieved, have the right of appeal to the circuit court. ' No good purpose would be subserved by notifying the party whose land is sought to be annexed that the common council, at the special session, intended to consider the matter of annexation. But, if there was any irregularity in these preliminary proceedings at the adjourned special session of January 26, 1897, they were subsequently cured by the adoption of the petition by the council at its regular meeting on the 8th day of February, 1897. The requisites of such a petition are thus stated in Huff v. City of Lafayette, 108 Ind. 14: “The petition must be by the common council — must be an act of the common council when in session, representing the city.” Agreeably to this test, the petition in the present case is unobjectionable in point of form.

Appellant next contends that the reasons stated in the petition of the city are insufficient. Proceedings for the annexation of. territory to towns and cities are well nigh summary in their nature. The statute gives the common council absolute power to annex contiguous platted territory, and the act has been liberally construed by this court. In Edmunds, Treas., v. Gookins, 24 Ind. 169, the court says that, even where school land has been platted into lots and streets, and the plat recorded by a school commissioner, not for the purpose of annexation, but to enhance the value of the lots, and thereafter the city is extended to the lots, the common council, by mere resolution, may annex the territory under 1 R. S. 1852, page 220.

In Collins v. City of New Albany, 59 Ind. 396, the city was permitted to annex land which had been platted into “blocks”, although it appeared by the recorded plat that the [525]*525owner did not intend the plat to be complete, but proposed subdividing the “blocks” into “lots”. The term “lots” as used in the statute was liberally construed so as to include “blocks”. The statute, §§3659, 3660 Burns 1894, also empowers cities to annex unplatted land contiguous to the corporate limits in cases where the owner of the territory will not consent to the annexation. This mode of annexation is hardly less summary than that prescribed for the annexation of territory platted into lots. The consent of the owner is not a prerequisite in cases covered by the latter clause of §3659. Although he may earnestly oppose the annexation, he is brought before the board of commissioners by mere publication of notice, and is required to make his objections to the proceedings. He need not even be named in the published notice, but is bound by the decision of the board, or, in case of appeal, of the circuit court, if the land be described with sufficient accuracy. Woodfill v. Town of Greensburgh, 18 Ind. 203; Elston v. Board, etc., 20 Ind. 272; Powell v. City of Greensburgh, 150 Ind. 148.

It has also been held that the judgment of the board of commissioners cannot be collaterally attacked except upon the ground of want of jurisdiction. Town of Cicero v. Williamson, 91 Ind. 541; City of Terre Haute v. Beach, 96 Ind. 143; Hiatt v. Town of Darlington, 152 Ind. 570, and cases cited. See, also, Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. City of Indianapolis, 147 Ind. 292.

It has also been decided that the motives actuating the city in annexing the territory cannot be inquired into upon appeal. City of Logansport v. Seybold, 59 Ind. 225; Glover v. City of Terre Haute, 129 Ind. 593.

These decisions indicate the summary nature of proceedings for the annexation of territory to cities. The question is then presented, will this court pass upon the validity of the reasons stated in the petition for annexation, after the board of commissioners and the circuit court have adjudged those reasons sufficient? This inquiry has arisen in several [526]*526instances on appeal to this court, and in no case which we have been able to find have the reasons as such been held insufficient. In Grusenmeyer v. City of Logansport, 76 Ind.

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Bluebook (online)
55 N.E. 435, 153 Ind. 521, 1899 Ind. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-erie-western-railroad-v-city-of-alexandria-ind-1899.