Orton v. Tiller

10 N.E. 936, 110 Ind. 131
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1887
DocketNo. 11,849
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 10 N.E. 936 (Orton v. Tiller) 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
Orton v. Tiller, 10 N.E. 936, 110 Ind. 131 (Ind. 1887).

Opinion

Howk, J.

At the June term, 1883, of the board of commissioners of LaPorte county, appellees, John F. and Walter S. Tilden, presented to such board their petition in writing,, [132]*132wherein they, as citizens of Cass township, in such county, represented that in the year 1857 a public highway was established by the board of trustees of such township, described as follows, to wit: Commencing on the west side of section 2, at the half-mile stake, and running thence north on the section line dividing sections 2 and 3, township 34 north, of range 4 west, there intersecting a road, in Clinton township, leading to Bigelow’s mills; that the highway so laid was then and there by said trustees established of the width of forty feet; that said highway had, since the action of said trustees ■of Cass township, been travelled and worked as a public highway, and had been, and still was, a work of public utility and of great convenience to the public; and that said highway was not sufficiently described on the record of said trustees, nor was the order locating said road full and ample, as by law required. Wherefore the appellees asked, that said highway be ascertained, surveyed and entered of record, as by statute provided.

Appellants Orton and Black appeared and filed their remonstrance before the county board. Thereafter, after hearing the evidence, the county board found that the highway, described in appellees’ petition, was attempted to be established by the trustees of Cass township, and that the same had been used as a highway more than twenty years, but that the same was not sufficiently recorded; and thereupon the board ordered that the same be established as a highway, forty feet wide, and that the same be recorded as such.

From this order of the county board, all the appellants herein, Orton, Black and Bowman, appealed to the LaPorte ■Circuit Court. There the cause was tried by a jury, and a verdict was returned finding that the road, mentioned and ■described in the petition herein, had been used and laid out ■as a public highway, but not sufficiently described, to the width of thirty-five feet. Over the appellants’ motion for a new trial, the court adjudged and decreed that the road in the petition described, to wit: (Description omitted), had been [133]*133used and laid out as a public highway, but not sufficiently described, to the width of thirty-five feet, and that the same-ought to,, be ascertained, described and entered of record, as such public highway, in.the proper record of the board of commissioners of LaPorte county; and such board was directed to so ascertain, describe and enter of record the said highway. It was also adjudged that appellees recover their costs and charges herein, taxed, etc., of and from the appellants.

Errors are assigned here by appellants, which were intended to call in question the overruling (1) of their motions to dismiss the proceedings herein, (2) of their demurrer to appellees’ petition, (3) the sufficiency of the facts stated in such petition to entitle appellees to the relief asked for, and (4) the overruling of appellants’ motion for a new trial.

Under our decisions, appellants’ assignment of errors, predicated upon the overruling of the motions to dismiss and of the demurrer to the petition, presents no question here for our consideration. All three of the appellants, Orton, Black and Bowman, joined in one and the same assignment of errors, and this assignment constituted their joint and only complaint in this court. It was necessary, therefore, that each paragraph or specification of error, in such joint assignment, should be founded upon a ruling against all the appellants, and of which all of them had the right to complain, or it would not be good as to any of them. Like a complaint in the trial court, the assignment of errors here must be good as to all who join therein, or it will not be good as to any of them. This is the settled rule, as declared in many of our decided cases. Eichbredt v. Angerman, 80 Ind. 208; Feeney v. Mazelin, 87 Ind. 226; Williams v. Riley, 88 Ind. 290; Boyd v. Pfeifer, 95 Ind. 599; Robbins v. Magee, 96 Ind. 174; Hinkle v. Shelley, 100 Ind. 88; Boyd v. Anderson, 102 Ind 217.

Appellants have also assigned here, as error, that appellees’ petition herein was insufficient to entitle them to the relief prayed for, in that it did not state facts sufficient there[134]*134for. Appellees’ counsel insists that this error can not be considered here, because such petition does not appear in the record, save as it was copied into the transcript of the proceedings bfefore the county board, which transcript, was sent up to the court below, on the appeal thereto, and is set out in the record now before us. Counsel claims that, after the case reached the court below, the petition was amended by appellees, and that this amended petition ought to have appeared in the record of this cause. If this be true, and it was important to the appellees that the amended petition should be brought into the record, they should have applied to this court for a certiorari for that purpose. But the clerk of the court below has certified that the record before us is “a full, true and complete transcript of all the pleadings filed and proceedings had” in this cause. To us this record so certified, in the absence of any showing to the contrary, “imports absolute verity.” We are bound to conclude, therefore, that the petition appearing in the record was the only pleading filed on behalf of the appellees in this cause, and that it is the same petition, the sufficiency of which is challenged by appellants’ assignment of error in this court.

It must be borne in mind, that the error we are now considering calls in question the sufficiency of appellees’ petition after verdict and judgment thereon, for the first time in this court. In such a case, of course, it must appear that material facts, essential to the existence of the cause of action attempted to be stated, have been wholly omitted, before this court would be authorized to reverse the judgment below for error assigned here upon the alleged insufficiency of the petition. Laverty v. State, ex rel., 109 Ind. 217, and cases cited. For, if the defects in the petition were such as might have been obviated by the evidence on the trial, they must be held to have been cured by the verdict and judgment on the petition, when it is sought to take advantage of such defects by the error assigned here. Burkett v. Holman, 104 Ind. 6, and cases cited. The only objection urged by appel[135]*135lants to the sufficiency of the petition is, that it does not set forth the names of the owners of the lands, through which ■the alleged highway passes. Whether or not the names of' such owners should be stated in a petition, under section ■5035, E. S. 1881, to have the county board Ascertain, describe and enter of record an alleged public highway, is a mooted question, in regard to which our decisions are not very harmonious. The section as it now reads has been in force since March 5th, 1867, and provides as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
10 N.E. 936, 110 Ind. 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orton-v-tiller-ind-1887.