Scott v. Brackett

89 Ind. 413
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1883
DocketNo. 10,076
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 89 Ind. 413 (Scott v. Brackett) 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
Scott v. Brackett, 89 Ind. 413 (Ind. 1883).

Opinion

Best, C.

On the 2d day of August, 1881, Lyman M. Brackett, Alfred H. Bobbins and Anson H. Merrick filed their petition in the clerk’s office of the Fulton Circuit Court for the construction of a ditch in Rochester township, in said county. On the 7th day of September following, an affidavit that notices had been posted was presented to the court and an order was made referring the matter to the commissioners-of drainage of said county, directing them to examine the proposed work and make their report on the 21st day of said month. On the 21st of said month said commissioners filed their report, in which the estimated cost of such proposed work was fixed at $3,478.60, and the benefits assessed to various parcels of land therein described aggregated $4,494.15, $2,269.80 of which was assessed to lands belonging to the appellant' Mary E. Scott. No remonstrance having been filed to the report, the same was, on the 1st day ,of October thereafter, confirmed, and Isaac Busenburg, one of said commissioners, was directed to construct the work. Afterwards said commissioner assessed eighty-five per cent, of the benefits named to each tract of land mentioned in the report, and on the 8th day of October thereafter gave notice through a newspaper that such assessment was payable in five equal instalments, the first on the 9th day of November, 1881, and the balance in one, two, three and four months from that time, and also caused a notice to be recorded in the recorder’s office of said county, that the work had been established, and that the assessment of benefits had been confirmed by the court. On the 13th day of December following, the appellants filed their petition or motion to set aside said judgment establish[415]*415ing said proposed work and approving said assessments, and. asked to be permitted to remonstrate against tbe report of said commissioners. The grounds of this application were’ these:.

1st. That they did not have any actual notice of the pendency of said proceedings until ■ after the rendition of the-judgment.

2d. That the court erred in referring the matter to the commissioners of drainage until an affidavit had been filed, that, notices of an intention to present the petition had been posted for twenty days in three public places in the township where the lands described in the petition are situated.

3d. That the act of April 8th, 1881, under which the proceedings were had, is unconstitutional.

4th. That Mary E. Scott, the appellant, owns 1,040 acres of land, which is assessed at $2.20 per acre, in all, $2,269.80,. and that the balance of the land, 2,121-j^k- acres of land, is-assessed at $1.03 per acre; in all, $2,189.35; and that her assessment is unjust, inequitable and oppressive.

5th. ■ That Lyman M. Brackett is the only petitioner who is prosecuting this proceeding, and that his land, forty acres, has. only been assessed at forty-four cents per acre, in all, $17.50.

6th. That said proposed ditch is not sufficient to properly drain the lands affected, and that said lands to be benefited by such proposed ditch have been omitted from such assessment.

Pending this motion, the appellees obtained leave and filed an amended affidavit, stating that the notices posted were posted in the township where the real estate mentioned in the petition is situated, after which the court overruled the application of appellants to set aside the judgment. From this, judgment the appellants appeal.

The first question presented is whether the court erred in referring said petition to the commissioners of drainage before the proper affidavit was made as required by statute.

These proceedings were had jn pursuance of the act of' April 8th, 1881, and to the provisions of that act we must. [416]*416look to determine the regularity and legality of these proceedings. The 1st section provides that the circuit coui*t of each county shall appoint two persons commissioners of drainage, and that the county surveyor, hy virtue of his office, shall be the third. The 2d section provides that whenever the owner of lands, which will be benefited by drainage, and which can not be done without affecting the land of others, desires such drainage, he may apply by petition to the circuit court of the county where said land is situated, stating therein that the public health will be improved, or that one or more highways of the county, or a street or streets of a town or city -will be benefited, or that the proposed work will be of public utility, giving the method by which the work can be done in the cheapest and best manner, and stating that the costs, damages and expenses will not exceed the benefits which will result to the owners of land likely to be benefited thereby.

The 3d provides that When it shall be made to appear by affidavit that notice of the intention to present such a petition has been posted for twenty days in three public places in each township where the lands described in the petition are situated, and near the line of the proposed work, and one at the door of the court-house of each of the counties in which said lands are situated, the court shall hear the same, and, if the provisions of the last preceding section have not been complied with, shall dismiss the petition; otherwise, it shall make an order referring the matter to the commissioners of drainage of the county, and fix therein a time and place for the meeting of said commissioners, and a' time when they shall report.” The 3d further provides that if they find in favor of such proposed work, they shall locate the same, assess the benefits or injury to each separate tract of land, and estimate the cost of the ditch.

The 4th section provides that upon making the report to the court, three days shall be allowed to any owner of lands affected by the work propose^ to remonstrate against the report, for any of the following reasons:

[417]*417“First. That the petition is not according to law.
“Second. That the report of the commissioners is not according to law.
Third. By any person or persons whose lands are assessed for benefits, that the damages assessed to any other specified tract are exorbitant.
Fourth. By. any person or persons whose lands are assessed for benefits, that his, her, or their specified lands are assessed too much as compared with other lands assessed as benefited.
“Fifth. By a person to whom damages are assessed, that the same are inadequate.-
“ Sixth. That it is not practicable to accomplish the proposed drainage without an expense exceeding the aggregate benefit.
“ Seventh. That the proposed work will neither improve the public health, nor benefit any public highway of the county, nor be of public utility.
“Eighth. That the work decided upon is not sufficient to properly drain the- lands to be affected.” '

The 4th section further provides that “ If there be no remonstrance, * * the court shall also make an order declaring the proposed work established and approving the assessment, and shall direct some one of the commissioners to construct and make the proposed work.”

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Bluebook (online)
89 Ind. 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-brackett-ind-1883.