STATE EX REL. HABERKORN v. DeKalb Circuit Court

241 N.E.2d 62, 251 Ind. 283, 1968 Ind. LEXIS 572
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1968
Docket668S91 and 768S111
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 241 N.E.2d 62 (STATE EX REL. HABERKORN v. DeKalb Circuit Court) 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
STATE EX REL. HABERKORN v. DeKalb Circuit Court, 241 N.E.2d 62, 251 Ind. 283, 1968 Ind. LEXIS 572 (Ind. 1968).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Respondent is the regular judge in a suit entitled Theodore E. Haberkorn, Jr., Jack Hollabaugh, and Victor Timmerman v. Delbert Washier et al, as the Board of School Trustees of the DeKalb County Eastern Community School District. The action was commenced when the relators, plaintiffs below, filed a complaint for an injunction against the defendant school board seeking to restrain the said school board from the construction of a new junior and senior high school in the school district at a site which was not satisfactory to the plaintiffs. The suit technically seeks to enjoin the School Board from proceeding with carrying out the terms of a lease agreement executed between the school *286 board and a building corporation which was created for the purpose of selling bonds to finance construction of the school. Judge Ray Ade, respondent and defendant below, became the special judge by appointment of this Supreme Court.

The main issue before this court in this appeal is whether or not the relators, on the basis of the pleadings and the evidence of the hearing, can establish facts which would entitle them to a temporary injunction. There is submitted with the writ of prohibition the record of the hearing in the lower court which has been numbered and indexed. The relators have urged that a state of fact exists which makes the transaction a proper subject for investigation in the court of equity indicating the limitations of the availability of the ground for the school use at the site; the failure to comply with the rules of the General Commission on Education and the failure to obtain the approval of the State Board of Accounts.

The trial court below found that the suit filed by the plaintiff was a “Public Lawsuit” within the meaning of Chapter 357 of the Acts of 1967; that the defendant School Board had taken the proper steps for the approval of a site to construct the proposed school, which site had been approved by various agencies and boards of the State of Indiana, including the State Department of Public Instruction of the State of Indiana; that the relators, plaintiffs below, did not and can not establish facts which would entitle them to a temporary injunction; that the relators herein, plaintiffs below, should be required to post a bond in the amount of $160,000 to cover the damages and costs which may accrue to the defendants by reason of the lawsuit.

Relators have filed an amended petition for a writ of prohibition which repeats the allegation in their original petition which, among other things, alleged that the order to post a bond is contrary to the evidence in that any delay was not the fault of the plaintiffs below, but was the fault of the defendant below failing to answer the complaint.

*287 In its amended petition, it is further alleged that the order of the court below to post a bond is unconstitutional under the terms of the Federal Constitution and the Constitution of the State of Indiana for two reasons:

(a) The requirement of Section 5 of Chapter 357 requiring the posting of a bond to cover all damages and costs which may accrue to the defendants by reason of the pendency of the public lawsuit in the event the defendant prevails is an unreasonable limitation upon the plaintiffs denying them justice freely under Article 1, Section 12 of the Indiana Constitution, and due process of law under the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution.
(b) The provisions for appeal of the order to post bond of Section 5 of Chapter 357 of the Acts of 1967 denies the plaintiffs due process of law under Section 12 of Article 1 of the Indiana Constitution and the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution.

The provisions of Section 5 of the “Public Lawsuit Act” Acts of 1967, ch. 357, sec. 5 as found in Burns § 3-3305, et seq., reads as follows:

“At any time prior to the final hearing in a public lawsuit, the defendant may petition for an order of the .court that the cause be dismissed unless the plaintiff shall post a bond with surety to be approved by the Court payable to defendant for the payment of all damages and costs which may accrue by reason of the filing of the lawsuit in the event the defendant prevails. A hearing shall be had on such petition in the same manner as the hearing on temporary injunctions under Acts 1881 (Spec. Sess.) c. 38. If at the hearing the court determines that the plaintiff can not establish facts which would entitle him to a temporary injunction, the court shall set the amount of bond to be filed by the plaintiff in an amount found by the judge to cover all damage and costs which may accrue to the defendants by reason of the pendency of the public lawsuit in the event the defendant prevails. In the event such a bond is not filed by the plaintiff with sureties approved by the court within ten (10) days after such order is entered the suit shall be dismissed. Either plaintiff or defendant may appeal such order to the Indiana Supreme Court within such ten (10) day period by notice of appeal and a statement of error in the same manner as is provided in a petition for mandate or prohibition. The Supreme Court may stay the lower *288 court order pending its own decision, may set a bond to be filed by the plaintiff in connection therewith, may modify the order of the lower court, or may enter its order as a final order in a case. In the event no bond is filed as provided in this section the public lawsuit shall be dismissed and no court shall have further jurisdiction of the public lawsuit or any other public lawsuit involving any issue which was or could have been raised therein.”

[Chapter 357, Acts 1967, Burns § 3-3301, et seq., was adopted as a protection to the public against a flood of harassing litigation which was obstructing and delaying public improvements at prohibitive costs.] Since World War II the scope and responsibility of our municipal governments have drastically expanded with greater population, movement of people from farms to the city, and increased educational demands. This has required building of substantial facilities, such as sewers, water lines and parks, the creation of new municipal bodies such as redevelopment commissions, metropolitan area bodies and substantial boundary revisions as in the case of schools. With the changes have come additional legislation as, for example, the new Sewer Revenue Act, the Conservatory District Act, the Public Housing Acts, the School Building Corporation Acts, the School Reorganization and Consolidation Acts.

The courts have properly permitted any citizen or taxpayer to file some suit to keep a public official within his statutory duties. See State of Indiana on the Relation of the Board of Sanitary Commissioners of the City of Terre Haute v. Superior Court of Vigo County (1966), 247 Ind. 617, 9 Ind. Dec. 233, 220 N. E. 2d 336. In this case this court held that the law permits persons claiming to be aggrieved to come into the trial court and ask for injunction or other equitable remedies against administrative action where no statutory or administrative procedure provides for a final judicial review or appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
241 N.E.2d 62, 251 Ind. 283, 1968 Ind. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-haberkorn-v-dekalb-circuit-court-ind-1968.