Oakland Coal Co. v. Wilson

149 N.E. 54, 196 Ind. 501, 1925 Ind. LEXIS 75
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 7, 1925
DocketNo. 24,284.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 149 N.E. 54 (Oakland Coal Co. v. Wilson) 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
Oakland Coal Co. v. Wilson, 149 N.E. 54, 196 Ind. 501, 1925 Ind. LEXIS 75 (Ind. 1925).

Opinion

Ewbank, J.

Appellant was adjudged guilty of a contempt of court and sentenced to pay a fine of $500 and the costs of prosecution. The proceeding was commenced by filing in the Gibson Circuit Court, on Sep *503 tember 23, 1922, an affidavit which, was entitled “Heber D. Wilson v. The Oakland Coal Company,” and averred, in substance, that on May 23, 1922, “plaintiff procured a judgment and restraining order in said court,” a copy of which was recited in full in the affidavit, by which the court “adjudged that the defendant be and is hereby now permanently enjoined from pumping to the surface of plaintiff’s lands through water holes number 1 and 2 any water that first appears in said mine in vein number 5 on lands other than the lands of the plaintiff described in his complaint herein. That the defendant be and now is here enjoined from emptying any water pumped from said mine through water hole number 1 into the old channel of Keg creek, and that the defendant be and now here is permanently enjoined from pumping water through either of said water holes to the surface of the plaintiff’s land after all the coal more than sixty feet below the surface of the plaintiff’s land has been mined by the defendants”; but alleged that, in disobedience thereof, said defendant “has continued to pump water from what was designated as well No. 1 into the old Keg creek ditch, and that said defendant has continued to pump water through both of said wells described in the original complaint hereof and as set out in said order from under lands adjacent to the lands owned by this plaintiff as described in the foregoing order.”

But the affidavit did not describe nor indicate the location of any lands so referred to, only mentioning them as “lands of plaintiff described in his complaint herein,” and as “other lands,” or as “lands adjacent to the lands of this plaintiff,” without stating in what section, township, range, county or state any of them were situated. And it did not indicate the location of “water holes numbered 1 and 2,” nor of “well No. 1,” nor indicate what, if any, relation there was *504 between the “water holes” and the “wells.” And it did not in any manner describe nor give the location of “the old channel of Keg creek” nor “the old Keg creek ditch,” nor indicate what relation, if any, the “old channel” bore to the “ditch.” It did not charge that any of the water pumped by defendant had been pumped “to the surface of plaintiff’s land,” but, so far as appears from the affidavit, such water may have been pumped into pipes or tile (as a witness testified at the hearing) , which may have been laid beneath the surface, and the water may have been discharged from the tile at a place not on his land. And it was not averred that in pumping water “from the lands adjacent to the lands owned by plaintiff” appellant had pumped any “water that first appeared in said mine in vein number 5 on lands other than the lands of plaintiff.” And no attempt was made to charge that all the coal more than sixty feet below the surface had been mined from under plaintiff’s land, or that any water had been pumped after the coal was so taken out. The place where the acts complained of were alleged to have been done was not stated, except as being on plaintiff’s lands, and the time was not stated, further than by indicating the date when the injunction was granted, four months before, and alleging that defendant had refused to obey it and had continued to pump the water, as above stated.

A rule was entered in general terms, requiring appellant to appear and “show cause why he (it) is not in contempt of court by refusing to obey said order.” Appellant moved to discharge the rule for the reason, among others assigned, that the petition “does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action,” and reserved an exception to the order overruling its motion. Answers were filed, and after a hearing, the court found appellant “guilty of a contempt of this court as charged in said verified information,” and sentenced it to pay *505 a fine of $500. A series of motions to modify the judgment having been made and overruled, an appeal was duly perfected.

Overruling the motion to discharge the rule because of alleged failure of the petition to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action is the first error assigned. The alleged failure and refusal to obey the order of court did not occur in the immediate presence of the court nor so close to where it was sitting as to interrupt or disturb its proceedings, but constituted, at most, an indirect contempt. §1078 Burns 1926, §1042 Burns 1914, §1007 R. S. 1881, §3, Acts 1879 p. 112.

It is provided by statute that: “in all cases of indirect contempt the person charged therewith shall be entitled, before answering thereto or being punished therefor, to have served upon him a rule of the court against which the alleged contempt was committed; which said rule shall clearly and distinctly set forth the facts which are alleged to constitute such contempt, and shall specify the time and place of such facts with such reasonable certainty as to inform the defendant of the nature and circumstances of the charge against him. * * * No such rule as hereinbefore provided for shall ever issue until the facts alleged therein to constitute such contempt shall have been brought to the knowledge of the court by an information, duly verified by the oath or affirmation of some officer of the court or other responsible person.” §1083 Burns 1926, §1047 Burns 1914, §1012 R. S. 1881, §8, Acts 1879 p. 114. Counsel for appellee do not contend that either the verified information or the rule to show cause in this case did set forth the facts alleged to constitute the contempt, clearly, distinctly or intelligibly, or that either of them specified the time or place of such acts with certainty or at all. But they take *506 the position: (1) That since the information charged disobedience of an order of the court made in a civil action the title of which was indorsed on the information, the court had .judicial knowledge of its record containing the decree of injunction and of the facts shown by that record; and (2) that since the information merely charged appellant with having violated private rights of an individual litigant by disobeying an injunction issued for the protection of his property, and did not allege that he had disobeyed a decree in the enforcement of which the general public had an interest, the statute quoted above has no application. But the statute is merely declaratory of the common law, as repeatedly laid down by decisions of the Supreme Court of Indiana before it was enacted. Whittem v. State (1871), 36 Ind. 196, 213; McConnell v. State (1874), 46 Ind. 298, 300; Wilson v. State (1877), 57 Ind. 71, 72, 73.

In each of the cases cited, it was expressly declared that “the proceeding against a party for a constructive contempt must be commenced by either a rule to show cause, or by an attachment, and such rule should not be made or attachment issued, unless upon affidavit specifically making the charge.” Wilson v. State, supra, citing authorities.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 N.E. 54, 196 Ind. 501, 1925 Ind. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oakland-coal-co-v-wilson-ind-1925.