Shields v. Pyles

99 N.E. 742, 180 Ind. 71, 1912 Ind. LEXIS 165
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1912
DocketNo. 21,750
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 99 N.E. 742 (Shields v. Pyles) 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
Shields v. Pyles, 99 N.E. 742, 180 Ind. 71, 1912 Ind. LEXIS 165 (Ind. 1912).

Opinion

Myers, J.

Appellee Pyles and fifteen other landowners filed on September 30, 1907, a petition in the Jackson Circuit Court for the drainage of certain lands and highways. Such proceedings Avere thereafter had without any objection [74]*74interposed, that on November 25, 1908, a report of commissioners was filed, reporting the proposed work to be of public utility, to be practicable, and that it would improve the public health, and benefit highways and free gravel roads, and that the costs would be less than the benefits to the lands assessed. By that report additional lands to those named in the petition were brought in and assessed, and the court ordered notice to be given such landowners, and the cause was continued until December 11, 1908. On the latter date several of the persons whose lands had been assessed filed so-called pleas in abatement. They also, with others, filed statutory remonstrances, and on May 28, 1909, filed additional and supplemental remonstrances, setting up by a special paragraph, in addition to the statutory grounds for remonstrating, practically the same matters set up in the alleged pleas in abatement, but somewhat more fully. The pleas in abatement were stricken out on motion of the petitioners, on May 17, 1909. There was a trial and finding confirming the assessments of the commissioners, and over joint and several motions for a new trial, judgment was rendered, approving the assessments, establishing a drain, and appointing a construction commissioner, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

Coming first in chronological order, is the question of the insufficiency of the petition assigned as error, the first point being that it does not appear that the lands were wholly outside the limits of a city or incorporated town; the appellants’ contention being that “only those who own separate and distinct tracts of land lying wholly outside the limits of cities and towns ’ ’ may petition for drains.

1.

The statute (§2 Acts 1907 p. 508, §6141 Burns 1908) prescribes four classes of petitioners, (a) “owners # * of land * * * outside the corporate limits of any city or town”, (b) “township trustees * * # for drainage of a public highway or the grounds of a public school”, (c) “the common council of any incorporated [75]*75city”, (d) “the board of trustees of any town” for the drainage of school grounds or highways. The act was plainly intended as an enlargement of the power of petitioning, and not as restricting it. It is apparent that there may be as much necessity for the exercise of the power in case of cities or towns or township trustees, as in ease of purely agricultural lands, or lands outside of cities or towns, for the drainage of the latter may be closely related to and affect lands in a city or town, and necessary drainage in the latter, or by a township trustee may be closely related to and affect agricultural lands, or lands outside a city or town. These possible correlated conditions of lands to cities and towns, and vice versa, first received recognition in an act of 1889 (Acts 1889 p. 285), amending §2 of the act of 1885, so as to authorize outside landowners to drain through cities and towns affected, and in 1901 it was again amended (Acts 1901 p. 162), and in 1903 (Acts 1903 p. 252), an amendment was added in the form of a proviso, providing that common councils and trustees of towns might petition “when land lying outside # * # would be benefited.” By the general act of 1905 (Acts 1905 p. 456), and by §2, supra, this last enactment was withdrawn as a proviso, and common councils and trustees of towns and township trustees, placed in the same class as agricultural, or other landowners outside of cities or towns, and this section was practically reenacted in §2, supra, of the a’ct of 1907, and both reason and the statute itself leave no room for doubt, that a power was conferred upon the four classes named.

2.

[76]*76 1.

[75]*75Public ditches, like public highways, are the subjects of the State’s control, and it may delegate to interested persons, or cities and towns, or other officials, the power of initiative, and declare the extent of jurisdiction. They are matters of state concern, and the exercise of a function of the State. Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Luddington (1910), 175 Ind. 35, 91 N. E. 939, 93 N. E. 273; Sauntmam v. Maxwell (1900), 154 Ind. 114, 54 N. E. 397; Kunkalman v. [76]*76Gibson (1909), 171 Ind. 503, 84 N. E. 985, 86 N. E. 850; City of Martinsville v. Washington Tp. (1910), 46 Ind. App. 200, 92 N. E. 191; Thorn v. Silver (1910), 174 Ind. 504, 89 N. E. 943, 92 N. E. 161. The reason for the language used in §2, supra, providing, “Whenever any owner or owners of any separate and distinct tract or tracts of land lying outside the corporate limits of any city or town” is not far to seek. Cities and towns with the exception created by statute, are by general statute, given exclusive control over streets and highways therein, hence there was no authority originally under the drainage act for landowners outside of cities and towns, constructing drains through them, and the language restricting such petitions to lands outside cities and towns, was necessary in view of the law as it then was. Later enactments, as shown above, changed this condition so as to permit this to be done, and also enlarged the powers of cities and towns, and township trustees, to petition when outside landowners were affected, thus making the conditions for petitioning mutual, though distinct, even though petition by either may affect the other.

3.

The specific objection to the petition is that it does not allege that the lands lie outside a city or town. It does not appear by. the petition that they are in a city or town, and we take judicial notice of the location of cities and incorporated towns, and that there is no city or incorporated town upon any of the land described in the petition. Swails v. State (1853), 4 Ind. 516; Indianapolis, etc., R. Co. v. Case (1860), 15 Ind. 42; Indianapolis, etc., R. Co. v. Stephens (1867), 28 Ind. 429; Louisville, etc., R. Co. v. McAfee (1896), 15 Ind. App. 442, 43 N. E. 36; Wasson v. First Nat. Bank (1886), 107 Ind. 206, 219, 8 N. E. 97; State, ex rel. v. Gramelspacher (1890), 126 Ind. 398, 402, 26 N. E. 81; Mode v. Beasley (1896), 143 Ind. 306, 42 N. E. 727; Terre Haute, etc., R. Co. v. Pierce (1884), 95 Ind. 496; Adams v. Harrington (1888), 114 Ind. 66, 14 N. E. 603; [77]*77Smith v. Clifford (1884), 99 Ind. 113, 115; Louisville, etc., R. Co. v. Hixon (1885), 101 Ind. 337; Sever v. Lyons (1897), 170 Ill. 395, 48 N. E. 926; People, ex rel. v. Suppiger (1882), 103 Ill. 434. Also that judicial notice will be taken of a negative as well as of an affirmative proposition of fact. Harding v. Third Presbyterian Church (1863), 20 Ind. 71; Ross v. Faust (1876), 54 Ind. 471, 23 Am. Rep. 655; Peck v. Sims (1889), 120 Ind. 345, 22 N. E. 313; Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Smith (1893), 6 Ind. App. 262, 33 N. E. 241; Wasson v. First Nat. Bank, supra; Jackson v.

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Bluebook (online)
99 N.E. 742, 180 Ind. 71, 1912 Ind. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shields-v-pyles-ind-1912.