Thompson v. Goldthwait

31 N.E. 451, 132 Ind. 20
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1892
DocketNo. 15,897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 31 N.E. 451 (Thompson v. Goldthwait) 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
Thompson v. Goldthwait, 31 N.E. 451, 132 Ind. 20 (Ind. 1892).

Opinion

Olds, J.

— This action was commenced by the appellees and others filing their petitions with the board of commissioners of Grant county, Indiana, asking for the location and construction of a free gravel road. The petition was presented to the board on the 12th day of June, 1889. On said day fourteen of the petitioners withdrew their names from the petition; afterwards some others withdrew their names. On said day the appellants appeared before said board, and presented their objections in writing to the appointment of Simon P. Burley as engineer and surveyor on [21]*21said road on account of his interest and relationship within the degree prohibited by law, and thereupon said board appointed two viewers, and over the objection of the appellants appointed said Simon P. Burley as engineer and surveyor on said road.

At the September term, 1889, of said board of commissioners the said viewers and engineer made to said board their report, and thereupon the appellants moved in writing to reject and dismiss said report for the reason that the engineer, Burley, was the owner of real estate within the limits assessable for the construction of said road, and which is reported as benefited and ought to be assessed, and for the further reason that he was a brother-in-law of John Hurtsoch, who also owns lands within the limits assessable for the road, and which is reported as benefited and described in the report; that these disqualifications existed at the time said Burley was appointed. The board overruled said motion, approved the report, ordered the construction of the improvement, and appointed said Simon P. Burley superintendent, and appointed a commmittee to apportion the cost of construction, and-thereupon the appellants appealed said cause to the circuit court.

In the circuit court there was a trial by the court without the intervention of a jury, and on proper request the court made a special finding of facts and stated its conclusions of law. The court found that the said Burley owned land which will be affected by the making of the gravel road, that he was a brother-in-law of John Hurtsoch who also owned land which will be benefited by the construction of the road, and that appellants objected to the appointment of Burley, and that they made a motion to reject and dismiss the report when the same was filed, as hereinbefore stated, and that said Burley also signed the petition for the road, and stated conelusions of law in favor of the appellees. Appellants excepted to the conclusions of law, and prosecute this appeal.

The question presented involves the construction of the [22]*22statute providing for the appointment of viewers and an engineer or surveyor by the board of commissioners on the filing of a petition for the construction of a gravel road.

It is contended on the part of the appellants that the engineer becomes one of the board of viewers, and that his duties are judicial, and, therefore, Burley was incompetent to act on account of his interest and relationship to one of the land-owners whose land was affected by the construction of the road, and objection having been made to his appointment at the proper time, it was error to appoint him over such objection, and that the report should have been rejected and dismissed on the motion of the appellants.

The appellees admit that if the engineer becomes one of the board of viewers, his duties are judicial, and the court erred, and the judgment must be reversed, but they contend that he is not a member of the board of viewers, and his duties are not judicial, and that such engineer is not required to be disinterested; that he has nothing to do in determining the property benefited, and that. the statute does not contemplate that such engineer should bé a disinterested person, but only a competent engineer.

The statute (section 5092, R. S. 1881) provides that upon presentation of the petition and the filing of a bond, the board of commissioners shall appoint three disinterested freeholders of the county as viewers, and a competent surveyor or engineer, to proceed upon a day to be named by the commissioners to examine, view, lay out, or straighten said road as in their opinion public convenience and utility require.

Section 5093 provides that said viewers and engineer shall meet at the time and place specified, and take an oath to discharge the duties of their appointment respectively, and that they shall select two chain carriers and one marker, and proceed to do the things required of them by the statute, including the assessment of damages. This section then provides that the viewers shall not be required to assess damage to any person or persons except minors, etc., unless the owner [23]*23or owners thereof, or their agents, shall have filed a written application with said viewers, giving a description of the premises on which damages are claimed by them, within ten days after the completion of the survey of said road by said viewers.

The first part of section 5094 requires the viewers aud engineer to make report to the commissioners at their next regular session, stating what the report shall show. In the latter clause of the section it is provided that where lands are liable to be assessed under the act for the construction of two or more roads, the viewers shall take into consideration that fact in assessing benefits.

While these sections do not point out with clearness the respective duties of the viewers and the engineer, yet when they are all read and construed together, the intent of the Legislature is reasonably certain. In every instance where they speak of an assessment separate from the other duties, they speak of the viewers alone. The oath indicates that they have separate duties, for it requires them to take an oath that they will discharge the duties of their appointment respectively.

In section 5093, it is provided that such viewers shall not be required to assess damages to any person except in certain cases. The written application for damages is required to be filed with the viewers within ten days after the completion of the survey by the viewers.

In the latter part of section 5094, it is provided that the viewers, in assessing benefits, shall take into consideration the fact that the land is liable to be assessed for other roads. It is provided that the viewers appointed shall be disinterested freeholders of the county, and that a competent surveyor or engineer shall be appointed.

It is clear, as it seems to us, that the assessment shall be made by the viewers alone.

It is not provided that "the engineer shall be either disinterested or a freeholder, or even a resident of the county, but he shall be a competent surveyor or engineer. It is [24]*24manifest that the purpose of the appointment of an engineer is to have a skilled person to aid the viewers in laying out the road and estimating the costs of construction, to aid the viewers in the discharge of their duties, and he is required to take an oath that he will faithfully discharge his duties, and the fact that he is to join in the report does not make him an appraiser of the benefits or an assessor of the damages. The viewers who are to assess benefits and damages must be disinterested freeholders of the county, men who would have a knowledge of the value of land and the effect upon it by the construction of the road, but, in the selection of a surveyor or engineer, he is chosen by reason of his competency and knowledge in that line of duty.

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Related

Griffin v. Pearce
119 N.E. 8 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1918)
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103 N.E. 1078 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.E. 451, 132 Ind. 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-goldthwait-ind-1892.