Turpin v. Eagle Creek & Little White Lick Gravel Road Co.

48 Ind. 45
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 48 Ind. 45 (Turpin v. Eagle Creek & Little White Lick Gravel Road Co.) 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
Turpin v. Eagle Creek & Little White Lick Gravel Road Co., 48 Ind. 45 (Ind. 1874).

Opinion

Downey, J.

This was an action by the appellants against the appellees, to enjoin the collection of an assessment made on the lands of the appellants for the construction of the road of the company, under the act of May 14th, 1869.

The defendants filed a demurrer to the complaint, on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to-constitute a cause of action, and the demurrer was sustained by the court. This ruling of the court is assigned as error, and under that assignment the questions arise which are discussed, and which we are called upon to decide.

It is first contended, that the articles of association of the company are invalid, because they do not state the length of the proposed gravel road, and the county or counties in which or through which the same was to be located, and the State in which the road was to be made. The statute relating to the subject is the first section of the act of May 12th, 1852. 1 G. & H. 474. It provides that the parties wishing to organize such a company shall unite in articles of association, setting forth: 1st. The name which they assume. 2d. The line of the route and the place to and from which it is proposed to construct the road. 3d. The amount of capital stock, and the number of shares into which it is divided. 4th. The names and places of residence of the subscribers, and the amount of stocktaken by each. A statement of the length of the road is not required by the statute. It is true that the same section of the statute provides, that whenever the stock subscribed amounts to the sum of five hundred dollars per mile of the proposed road, [47]*47copies of the articles of association shall be filed in the office of the recorder, etc. But the statement is not, by the section, required to be put in the articles of association. It may be otherwise ascertained.

It is clearly required that the line of the route of the road, and the place to and from which it is proposed to construct the same, shall be stated in the articles of association. It is stated in the- articles in this case: The line and termini of said road shall be as follows: beginning at the north-west corner of the east half of the north-east quarter of section number thirty-one in township sixteen, north of range two east, in the line separating said section thirty-one on the south from section number thirty of said township and range on the north, and in the center of the public highway running over said line; and running thence east on and over said road, and on and over a prolongation due eastwardly of said line until said highway leaves the prolongation of said line; and thence on and over the prolongation due eastwardly of said line until a stake is reached two chains and sixty-nine links west of southeast corner of section number twenty-six in said township and range; and thence in an irregular south-eastwardly direction a distance of seven chains and fifty-four links to a black walnut stake, in the line running north and south between sections number thirty-three on the west and section number thirty-six on the east, in said township and range, and nine feet west of a clump of linn, or basswood, trees, three in number ; thence eastwardly along the south side of a bayou, or gully, the distance of seven chains and eighteen links, to a stake in the west bank of Eagle creek, and after crossing said stream a distance of four chains, a very little north of east, to a stake in the north-west corner of an enclosed field; and thence due east until it reaches the Indianapolis and Browns-burg gravel road, and thence to terminus.”

The introductory part of the articles of association is as follows:

We, the undersigned, citizens of the State of Indiana, for the purpose of constructing, owning, and maintaining a gravel [48]*48road over the line hereinafter mentioned, under the various acts of the General Assembly of the State of Indiana, and the various amendments thereto, hereby join in the following articles of association

In designating the line of the route and the termini of the road, it is not made, necessary, by the statute, to use the name-of the State and county, or either of them. The designation of the route of the road need not be very specific or exact, for the reason that the exact location of the road is to be, or may be, fixed by the directors of the company, as will be seen by reference to the fourth section of the act. That section says: The directors of said company shall proceed to locate and lay out said road,” etc. It does not expressly appear, by naming it, in what county the road is. It does thus appear’, we think, that it is in the State of Indiana. The company is organized by citizens of the State of Indiana, and under and in pursuance of the statutes of the State of Indiana. We think, also, that by mentioning the section, townships range, etc., of which divisions we take judicial notice, it clearly appears that the beginning point is in Hendricks county, Indiana. The objection made to the articles of association is not sustained.

The next objection is predicated upon alleged insufficiencies of the order of the board of commissioners directing tho assessment to be made. It is urged, in this connection, that the county or counties in which the road is situated, and the length of it, should have been stated in the order. We do not think the order defective- on this ground. The line of the route is designated by the mention of the congressional surveys, as we have seen.

It is further objected, that the order does not name the three persons who were appointed assessors, and does not state that they were freeholders of the county, and that they severally resided in the commissioners’ districts of the county ; that the auditor is not directed to notify the assessors of their appointment, and to proceed to view the lands within one and one-half miles of the road, and of both ends thereof in the county; that it does not order them to make a list thereof and assess the [49]*49amount of benefits that would result to each tract, etc.; nor' does it order the assessors to make report in writing to the-auditor of the county, with their affidavit attached thereto.

We think most, if not all, of these objections are founded on a misconception of the statute on the subject. Under the act of May 14th, 1869, Acts 1869, Special Session, p. 73, the board of commissioners are required to appoint three freeholders of the county, one of whom shall reside in each of the several commissioners’ districts, whose term of office is the same as that of the commissioner in whose district he is appointed,, who are termed assessors of benefits to lands, under that law,, and whose duty it is, upon receiving notice from the county auditor, to make all assessments under the act. When a petition has been filed before, and granted by, the board of commissioners, it is the duty of the auditor, without any special order to that effect, to notify the assessors to proceed to make-file assessment, and it is their duty to report the same to the proper county auditor, without any special order or direction to that effect. The order of the board of commissioners need not name the assessors. They may be presumed to have been previously appointed by another order of the board, and therefore already known and designated. It must, we think, be presumed that the assessors possess the required qualifications; but, at all events, that they do, need not be-stated in the order of the board allowing the petition. We may as well say, while on this subject, that we do not think it.

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Bluebook (online)
48 Ind. 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turpin-v-eagle-creek-little-white-lick-gravel-road-co-ind-1874.