Taylor v. Strayer

78 N.E. 236, 167 Ind. 23, 1906 Ind. LEXIS 3
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1906
DocketNo. 20,694
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 78 N.E. 236 (Taylor v. Strayer) 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
Taylor v. Strayer, 78 N.E. 236, 167 Ind. 23, 1906 Ind. LEXIS 3 (Ind. 1906).

Opinion

Montgomery, J.

Appellees commenced this proceeding by filing a petition with the Board of Commissioners of the county of Noble, for the establishment of a ditch beginning in said county and terminating in Lagrange county, by virtue of the provisions of §§5655-5671 Burns 1901. Appellant, at the proper time, filed a remonstrance against the proposed ditch, and such proceedings were thereupon had as resulted in a judgment of the circuit court upon appeal dismissing the proceeding. This judgment was reversed upon appeal to this court. Strayer v. Taylor (1904), 163 Ind. 230. The cause was remanded to the lower court, and before further steps were taken therein the General Assembly passed a new drainage law and repealed all prior drainage statutes. Acts 1905, p. 456, §5622 et seq. Burns 1905. Section fourteen of the new act reads as follows: “All laws and parts of laws heretofore enacted in relation to drainage are hereby repealed, but such repeal shall not affect any pending proceedings in which a ditch has been ordered established or in which there is no attempt to and which will not lower or affect any lake or body of water that has to exceed ten acres of surface at high-water mark, and such proceedings and all remedies in relation thereto shall be concluded and [26]*26be effective in all respects as if this act had not been passed. Nor shall this act be construed to repeal any act passed at this session of the General Assembly in relation to the construction of drains and sewers in counties having a city therein of not less than fifty-nine thousand nor more than one hundred thousand population according to the last preceding United States census, nor shall this act be deemed to repeal or affect any act passed at this session of the General Assembly to preserve the fresh-water lakes of the State of Indiana at their established level and to protect them from danger of being injuriously affected or destroyed : Provided, further, that such repeal shall not affect or be construed to repeal any other act upon the subject of drainage passed by the present General Assembly.”

The same legislature passed a penal statute for the preservation of fresh-water lakes, section one of which reads as follows: “That it shall be unlawful for any person or persons, firm or corporation, to locate, dig, make, dredge, or in any manner construct, or for any court, or board of commissioners, or body of viewers or drainage commissioners, to order or recommend the location, establishment or construction of any ditch or drain cutting into or through, or upon the line of any fresh-water lake or lakes in the State of Indiana, or to locate, dig, make, dredge or in any way construct any ditch or drain, having a bottom depth lower than the present water line of such lake, within forty rods of any point on the line of such lake where the line or any portion thereof is known or ascertainable; or in case such line or any part thereof is lost and cannot, be ascertained, within forty rods from high-water mark on the margin of such lake, such high-water mark to be the highest point on such margin to which such water has risen within the ten years last past.” Acts 1905, p. 447, §5644 Burns 1905.

Other sections of the act made it unlawful so to interfere with the shores or banks of any such lakes as to lower the [27]*27waters thereof, or to interfere with any levee or dam constructed for the purpose of maintaining the present water level of any such lake.

After the taking effect of these statutes appellant filed a special, verified answer or plea to the jurisdiction of the court, in which he alleged that the proposed ditch will pass through the following fresh-water lakes in Noble county, to wit: Lake Shockopee, Hardy lake, Tamarack lake, and Mud lake, and also Nauvoo lake in Lagrange county; that it will lower the present level of said lakes eight feet in depth; that appellant is the owner of a dam by which the present water level of said lakes is maintained-, and that the construction of the proposed drain will destroy said dam and thereby lower the water level of said lakes eight feet; that by the construction of the proposed drainage the banks and shores of said lakes will be so cut into and interfered with as to lower the water level of said lakes; that the waters of said lakes cover areas as follows: Shockopee, 120 acres; Hardy, 70 acres; Tamarack, 130 acres; Mud, 5 acres, and Nauvoo, 80 acres; that under the drainage act of 1905, supra, the rights of appellees were not preserved, but the proceedings contemplated under their petition were expressly forbidden and made unlawful, and the court is without authority further to entertain jurisdiction of the proceeding. Wherefore the court was asked to hear evidence as to the facts alleged, and to make such order as under existing laws the proof might warrant.

Appellees’ demurrer to this answer for want of facts was sustained, to which decision appellant excepted. Error assigned upon this ruling presents the controlling question for decision.

1. [28]*282. 3. [27]*27No right to construct an artificial drain over the lands of others exists at common law. Drainage statutes are given or withheld in the discretion of the legislature, and when enacted may be modified or repealed at the pleasure of that body. It follows that one [28]*28legislature cannot determine the policy of its successor and forestall action which may be deemed expedient to protect the public health or to promote the public welfare. It is altogether plain that in the opinion of the General Assembly of 1905, the public interests require the preservation of fresh-water lakes having to exceed ten acres of surface. The drainage act of 1905, supra, expressly repealed all existing laws upon that subject. It is a well-settled principle that when a right of action, not existing at common law, is given by statute, a repeal of the statute without saving pending actions takes away the right of action in pending causes, which have not proceeded to final judgment. Hunt v. Jennings (1839), 5 Blackf. 195, 33 Am. Dec. 465; Moor v. Seaton (1869), 31 Ind. 11; Roush v. Morrison (1874), 47 Ind. 414; Board, etc., v. Ruckman (1877), 57 Ind. 96; Rupert v. Martz (1888), 116 Ind. 72.

A very eminent authority states the rule as follows: “ ‘The effect of a repealing statute, I take 'to be to obliterate the statute repealed as completely from the records of parliament as if it had never passed, and that it must be considered as a law that never existed, except for the purposes of those actions or suits which were commenced, prosecuted, and concluded while it was an existing law.’” Sedgwick, Stat. and Const. Law (2d ed.), 108.

In the case of Hunt v. Jennings, supra, Justice Blackford states the principle in the following words: “Whenever a statute from which a court derives its jurisdiction in particular cases is repealed, the court cannot proceed under the repealed statute even in suits pending at the time of the repeal, unless they are saved by a clause in the repealing statute.”

4. [29]*295. 6. 7. 8. [28]*28This proceeding was accordingly terminated with the repeal of the statutes under which it was established unless it falls within the saving provisions of section fourteen above set out. It is provided that the repeal “shall not affect any pending proceeding in which

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 N.E. 236, 167 Ind. 23, 1906 Ind. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-strayer-ind-1906.