Randall v. Board of Commissioners

131 N.E. 776, 77 Ind. App. 320, 1921 Ind. App. LEXIS 191
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 10, 1921
DocketNo. 10,623
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 131 N.E. 776 (Randall v. Board of Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Randall v. Board of Commissioners, 131 N.E. 776, 77 Ind. App. 320, 1921 Ind. App. LEXIS 191 (Ind. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinions

Enloe, C. J.

This was an action to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by appellants to certain real estate owned by them, located just west of the Wabash River and immediately south of the west end of the wagon bridge across said river, which said bridge is at the west end of Main street, in the city of Lafayette.

To an amended complaint in two paragraphs a demurrer was sustained, and appellants, refusing to further plead, judgment was rendered against them for costs, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

The errors assigned challenge the correctness of the rulings on said demurrer.

The paragraphs of complaint are each quite lengthy, but the following material facts appear from the averments thereof:

In 1863 a corporation known as “The Main Street Bridge Company,” was duly organized under the laws of the State of Indiana for the purpose “of constructing and owning a bridge across the Wabash River in Tippecanoe- County, Indiana, and of constructing and owning an embankment or causeway, which shall , be most direct across the Bottom Land on the west side of Wabash River and connect said bridge with the said road leading westward from Lafayette.”

It further appears from the averments of said complaint that said bridge company brought suit against the then owners' of said “bottom land,” for the purpose of acquiring, by condemnation proceedings, a strip of ground 125 feet wide, and 1,560 feet long, extending from the Wabash River westwardly across the said “bot[322]*322tom land,” said strip being in the line of said West Main street projected; that such proceedings were had in said cause that on June 28, 1864, the court entered its judgment and decree, “that said Main Street Bridge Company stand seized in fee simple of said strip of land, appropriated by said bridge company, as and for the use of an embankment or causeway for her bridge, upon the payment of $1,347 damages, within one year;” that in July, 1864, said damages were paid, and said bridge company at once entered upon-and took possession of said strip of land; that in 1871, said bridge company sold, and in consideration of $27,300 paid to it, conveyed by its warranty deed to appellee herein its toll road and bridge across the Wabash River, situate at the foot of Main street in the city of Lafayette, together with all the rights, privileges, and appurtenances thereunto belonging; that in June, 1875, the appellee, by its warranty deed, conveyed to one Martin, a remote grantor of appellant, a strip of ground twenty-two and one-half feet wide, off the southerly side of said 125 foot strip, said strip extending from the east end of said 125 foot strip for some distance to the west, and which strip now forms the north part of appellant’s lands, alleged to have been damaged, and for which this suit is brought; that for more than twenty years prior to March, 1913, a bridge erected by appellee for the accommodation of wagons and other vehicles had been maintained together with the embankment or causeway upon which the roadway was constructed by the appellee herein; that the high waters of said river in March, 1913, undermined one of the piers of said bridge causing the samé to settle and said bridge to become unsafe; that in September, 1913, the appellee entered into a contract for the construction of a new bridge across the Wabash River at said point, to take the place of the one so injured in the preceding March; that according [323]*323to the plans and specifications adopted for said new bridge, the west end thereof was located 170 feet to the west of the west abutment of the old bridge.

It further appears, from the averments of the complaint, that the said levee or causeway, extending westward from the west abutment of said old bridge, was eighty feet in width, and was constructed along the center line of said 125 foot strip; that said levee was twenty-five feet high; that the low water banks of said river at said point are twelve feet high; that said levee or causeway was a public highway and was without openings in said embankment; that from the west abutment of said old bridge, a levee had been constructed southward to the right of way and embankment of the Lake Erie and Western Railway, and along the east line of appellant’s land, thus protecting his said lands from overflow by the water from said river; that west of said bridge and on the southerly side of said highway a sidewalk had been constructed, and that the appellant was the owner of a building, situate on the northerly end of his said land, which building had been so built that the floor thereof was on a level with said sidewalk; that said sidewalk extended to the southerly property line of appellee, and that said building of appellant was constructed along his northerly line and abutted said sidewalk, and that appellant had access for ingress and egress to and from said building to said highway across said sidewalk.

It further appears that in preparation for the construction of said new bridge the east end of said levee, or causeway, for a distance of 170 feet, from the old west pier to the new west pier, was entirely removed and taken away; that a pier for the new bridge is located 125 feet east of said west pier, and north of appellant’s land; that said portion of said new.bridge conforms to the old levee, or causeway, as to the center [324]*324lines thereof; that said new bridge, as to the floor thereof, is nine feet higher than the old roadway; that the roadway of said new bridge is forty feet in width from curb to curb, with a sidewalk éight feet in width on either side thereof; that on both sides of said bridge is constructed a massive stone railing; that since the removal of said embankment the waters of said river flow over and upon the surface of appellant’s property, and carry vast quantities of earth, sand, and debris thereon; that appellant’s access to said property has been, by the work of building said bridge as aforesaid, entirely cut off and destroyed and that said property is now of no value, and that they have sustained damage in the sum of $12,000.

From the foregoing facts it will be seen that to the south of said new bridge, and between the said bridge and appellant’s northerly property line, is a space of about ten feet,- — -land owned by the appellee, — and that appellant is without any means of getting from said roadway, or bridge, onto his land.

The theory of appellant’s complaint is manifest from the following averments, as found in his complaint, viz.: “That plaintiffs and their grant,ors, immediate and remote, for more than twenty years prior to the 9th day of September, 1913, owned, and had a special interest and easement in said levee and bridge abutment, at the west end of said Main Street bridge, adjoining plaintiff’s property, and the maintenance of said bridge abutment and levee was necessary to the use and enjoyment of plaintiff’s property, and the preservation of plaintiff’s soil, and in the protection of plaintiff’s property against waters of Wabash River; * * * that the plaintiffs owned the right and easement of all the support and protection, against high waters of the Wabash River, which plaintiffs property had received, and of which plaintiffs and their grantors, immediate and remote, had [325]*325been in possession for more than twenty years prior to said 9th day of September 1913.” (Our italics.)

There is no allegation in said complaint that the appellee herein, in any way, in the matters connected with the building of said new bridge, did not follow the law.

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Bluebook (online)
131 N.E. 776, 77 Ind. App. 320, 1921 Ind. App. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randall-v-board-of-commissioners-indctapp-1921.