Robison v. Fishback

93 N.E. 666, 175 Ind. 132, 1911 Ind. LEXIS 26
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 27, 1911
DocketNo. 21,673
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 93 N.E. 666 (Robison v. Fishback) 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
Robison v. Fishback, 93 N.E. 666, 175 Ind. 132, 1911 Ind. LEXIS 26 (Ind. 1911).

Opinion

Myers, C. J.

[135]*1351. 2. [133]*133Appellant Robison was treasurer of Marion county, Indiana, and ex officio treasurer of £he city of Indianapolis, from January 1, 1908, to January 1, 1910. Appellant Share was in the employ of said treasurer. When the latter went into office there was a card index system in the office which furnished a partial index to the assessment rolls for public improvements in the city of Indianapolis. There are some forty-threg volumes of public improvement assessments, involving more than ten thousand names of different persons and assessments. The card index in use prior to January 1, 1908, so far as the mechanical features of it were concerned, was the ordinary form of cards, adjusted to a case, with rods to hold the cards in position, and each card had the name of a person at the top thereof, and under the name, vertical ruled spaces for indicating the property assessed, and the folio and page in which the assessment was to be found, and a like space for designating the improvement! These were arranged in alphabetical order in the cases. There was an index to the improvement in each folio, and a general index to all folios, of the improvements, but the names of property owners were not indexed. There is no express statute requiring the keeping of any index of any kind. The only other reference to assessments against any property for public improvements was upon the general tax duplicates, where, opposite any parcel of land, against which there was such assessment, a letter B was placed to indicate that there was a so-called Barrett law assessment against the property, and in case a property owner should not know upon what improvement an assessment had been made, there was no way of discovering it, without [134]*134running through the general index, or the indexes in the various folios. Appellant Share had had long experience in the conduct of the treasurer’s office, and especially with the collection of municipal assessments, and, at the suggestion, and under the pay of appellant Robison, set about devising a card index system to public improvement records. Appellant Robison personally visited a number of the larger cities of the country, examined the methods employed in keeping trace of public improvement assessments, and directed Share to work out a system of card indexes, and procured, at his personal expense, the cases and cards. Share thereupon devised a card system in which, under the name of one owner, all improvements assessed in that name appear. The only practical difference between the two systems of cards was that in the one employed when Robison came into office, but one improvement appeared upon a single card, though the cards were arranged for separate improvements, while in the system devised by Share, all improvements assessed under the name of any one person or owner were designed to be shown by such card. Robison directed Share to obtain the necessary cards and cases to install the system in the treasurer’s office, and, in the absence of the treasurer and without his knowledge, payment for the supplies was made out of the public funds. As soon as Robison discovered this fact, he covered the money into the treasury. The card system which was in vogue when Robison took office was not thereafter kept up, but the system devised by Share was completed at an expense of about $3,000 to Robison, and proved to be a great success in expediting the work of referring to assessments, and highly essential, if not indispensable, to the conduct of the office. Share applied for letters patent upon the device, and claims to be the owner of the system, while Robison claims to own the particurlar cards and the cases in which they are contained. Upon going out of office January 1, 1910, Robison claimed the cases and cards as his individual property, and the right to [135]*135remove them, and appellee, as treasurer-elect and resident taxpayer, successfully maintained an application for an injunction against their removal, on the ground that they were parts of the public records, from which judgment both defendants appeal, and assign joint and separate errors upon the action of the court below in overruling their motions for a new trial. Jurisdiction is lodged in this court by the contention of appellants that the judgment is in violation of the 14th amendment to the federal Constitution, in abridging the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States, and depriving them of their property without due process of law, and in violation of article 1, §21, of the state Constitution, in taking their services and property without just compensation first assessed and tendered. As to the first proposition, it is to be said that the privileges and immunities clause of the federal Constitution refers to the privileges and immunities arising out of the nature and character of the federal government, granted^ or secured by that Constitution. It operates upon state action solely, and not upon individual action, and simply requires that all persons similarly situated be treated alike, in privileges conferred or liabilities imposed. Hodges v. United States (1905), 203 U. S. 1, 27 Sup. Ct. 6, 51 L. Ed. 65; Field v. Barber Asphalt Paving Co. (1904), 194 U. S. 618, 24 Sup. Ct. 784, 48 L. Ed. 1142; Duncan v. Missouri (1894), 152 U. S. 477, 14 Sup. Ct. 570, 38 L. Ed. 485.

3. Appellants contend that the device is patentable, that a patent right is property, and that the judgment constitutes a taking without due process or just compensation. Whether it is patentable or not is immaterial, for there is some value in the cases and cards.. While the state courts have no jurisdiction to determine rights under an alleged patent, they are not ousted of jurisdiction by the fact that rights claimed or denied as growing out of the patent arc incidentally involved. Exclusive federal jurisdiction applies only to cases arising [136]*136under the patent laws upon a bill, complaint, or declaration of a plaintiff setting up a right under the patent laws as a ground of recovery. Pratt v. Paris, etc., Coke Co. (1897), 168 U. S. 265, 18 Sup. Ct. 62, 42 L. Ed. 458 and notes; Riverside Mills v. Atlantic, etc., R. Co. (1909), 168 Fed. 987; Osborn v. President, etc. (1824), 9 Wheat. *738, 6 L. Ed. 204; Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Mitchell (1911), post, 196.

4. The real point in this case turns on the question whether the particular cards and cases have become so essential to the conduct of the office that appellants, in installing them, must be considered as having intended that they should become so much a part of the indispensable accessories of the operation of the office that the public interest requires that they be not removed. It appears from the record that the former system of card indexing was abandoned. Had that been kept up by appellants at their own expense, and for their own convenience, though less efficient than the plan installed, though possibly involving quite as much labor as the new scheme, it could hardly be claimed that appellants could remove it, or even those cards added by their labors or at their own expense.

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Bluebook (online)
93 N.E. 666, 175 Ind. 132, 1911 Ind. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robison-v-fishback-ind-1911.