Town of Monticello v. Fox

28 N.E. 1025, 3 Ind. App. 481, 1891 Ind. App. LEXIS 268
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 29, 1891
DocketNo. 286
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 28 N.E. 1025 (Town of Monticello v. Fox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Monticello v. Fox, 28 N.E. 1025, 3 Ind. App. 481, 1891 Ind. App. LEXIS 268 (Ind. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Black, J. —

A demurrer to the second and third paragraphs of the appellant’s answer was sustained j but the appellant was not injured by this action of the court, for the material matters alleged in these paragraphs were admissible in. evidence, and were admitted under the first paragraph of answer, which was the general denial.

The appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and we have examined the evidence.

The facts of the case, stated as briefly as may be, were as follows:

The appellees owned two lots in the town of Monticello, adjoining the western boundary of. the town. A street, known as Main Cross street, extended along the north side pf said lots.

The portion of said street which ran through this section of the town had been, before the territory through which it ran was brought within the corporate limits, a part of a road running westward from the town.

Along the east side of said lots extended another street, the name of which did not seem to be known by the witnesses. One of the appellees, who was a witness, and who resided on said property of the appellees, did not know the name of this street, but it was agreed on the trial that it was Third street.

Immediately south of the intersection of these streets was a large pond, which extended across Third street and covered a portion of the lots of the appellees when they became the owners thereof in 1883. Along each side of Main Cross street was a shallow ditch, made by throwing up the earth to raise the roadway. For many years there had been a culvert connecting these ditches near the northeast corner of said lots. After this part of the road became a part of the street, a tile culvert had been put in by the town at .this place on a level with the ditches on either side, and the town had put some gravel on the street. The town had not improved or changed the street, except by so replacing the old [483]*483culvert, and by so gravelling the roadway, the last work done by the town being the placing of some gravel there about fourteen or fifteen years before the trial. Water flowed into said pond along Third street from the south and from the north, that coming from the north passing through said culvert. About one hundred and fifty feet north of said culvert was a ridge, or elevation, and the water which came through the culvert was the surface drainage of the ground lying between said elevation and the street and that which flowed through said road ditches, which extended some rods eastward and westward, with slight descent towards the culvert, and drained the roadway and adjacent ground.

The pond was a natural depression, containing water during a considerable portion of the year, and all the water that collected in it was water that would flow thither naturally, and its quantity was not appreciably increased by reason of any artificial change mentioned above.

In February, 1884, under the provisions of the act of April 8th, 1881 (R. S. 1881, section 4273, et seq.), as amended by the act of March 8th, 1883 (Acts of 1883, p. 173), providing that any owner or owners of lands which would be benefited by drainage, which could not be accomplished in the best and cheapest manner without affecting other lands, might secure such drainage by proceedings upon petition to the circuit court, or the superior court, the White Circuit Court, in a proceeding commenced on'petition of one John H. Day, established a certain drain in Union township, White county, referred to by the witnesses in the case before us as the Day Tile Ditch, and directed one of the commissioners of drainage of said county, one Orton, to construct said drain.

Assessments of benefits were made on the owners of certain lands, on certain railroad companies, on the town of Monticello, on said Union township, and on the owners of many lots in said town. The appellees were assessed as the owners of their said lots, and they paid their assessment.

[484]*484The greater portion of the course of the projected work lay within the corporate limits of said town.

Said Orton, as such commissioner, commenced the making of the drain at its outlet at the Tippecanoe river, in 1884. Its course ran thence northwestwardly to a point in Third street near the northeast corner of the lots of the appellees; thence northward and noi’thwestward toward certain distant ponds. During the season of 1884, the drain was constructed from its outlet past the property of the appellees. Said Orton continued the construction in later years, but at tho time of the trial, in February, 1890, the commissioner still had charge of the work, which still remained unfinished. The drain was constructed of two ten-inch tiles buried several feet beneath the surface.

In 1888, the appellees constructed on their said lots a two-story brick dwelling-house, with a cellar beneath it. At different times they filled up the pond where it encroached upon the lots. The house was built upon the highest portion of the lots, where the surface was as high as the surface of Main-Cross street or higher. They connected said cellar by tiling and pipes with said Day Tile Ditch in Third street. Before the walls of the cellar were completed, the cellar was flooded, and the walls of several feet in height wei’e covered with water, which flowed in through said connection with said ditch. After the house was completed the water came into the cellar through said connection with the ditch, and when the appellees shut it off from such access by closing the connecting pipe at its end in the cellar, the water burst through the cemented floor of the cellar. Many times the cellar had been thus flooded, and the water from said pond had often backed up and covered a considerable portion of said lots.

The evidence showed that said Day Tile Ditch had been obstructed at various points between its outlet and the property of the appellees, and that it had been repaired at points in that interval by certain persons across and beneath whose [485]*485private grounds it was constructed, and by said drainage commissioner. Before the construction of said ditch there had been a shallow open ditch running from said pond in a southeastward direction, by which some portion of the water which accumulated there flowed off This surface ditch had been filled up by a base-ball club after the tile ditch was constructed on this part of its course. It appeared that if the tile ditch had been in good repair below the premises of the appellees, and if there had been an opening into the ditch at the pond for the direct ingress of the water, the appellees would not have suffered damage from the water.

The appellees, as one of them testified, tapped the tile ditch and made said connection therewith without any permission from the town. At one time, when'the property of the appellees was so flooded, one of the appellees showed the premises to the town marshal. It did not appear that the town had ever repaired the ditch, or had ever drained into it, or that the town had any relation to the ditch except that the greater portion thereof, if not all of it so far as it was completed, was within the corporate limits, and the town had been assessed for benefits to certain of its streets and had paid such assessments.

There were two paragraphs of the complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.E. 1025, 3 Ind. App. 481, 1891 Ind. App. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-monticello-v-fox-indctapp-1891.