Utica Township v. Miller

62 Ind. 230
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 62 Ind. 230 (Utica Township v. Miller) 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
Utica Township v. Miller, 62 Ind. 230 (Ind. 1878).

Opinion

Worden, J.

This was an action by the appellees against the appellant.

The complaint contained two paragraphs.

Demurrers were filed to each, for want of sufficient facts, and overruled. Judgment for the plaintiff's.

Error is assigned upon the rulings on the demurrers.

The first paragraph alleged, that; in the year 1873, Seth Daily was the trustee of said township, and by virtue of his said office was also school trustee for the township, and as such was authorized and directed to perform the duties of clerk and treasurer for school purposes of the township. The paragraph then proceeded to allege that for the purpose of erecting, and paying for the erection of, a schoolhouse, in the township, the said Daily, as such school trustee, borrowed from one David S. Koons the sum of one thousand six hundred dollars, for which he executed to Koons certain written evidences of indebtedness, which are set out, and which remain due and unpaid, and that Koons assigned the evidences of indebtedness to the plaintiffs.

The second paragraph was, in substance, like the first, and counted upon the same evidences of indebtedness.

It will be seen that the civil and not the school township was sued, and the judgment was against the civil township, while the complaint alleged a cause of action which could be good only as against the school township.

A complaint, to be good, should allege a good cause of action against the person or corporation sued; and of course it will not be sufficient to allege a good cause of action against some other person or corporation.

We suppose, that in some instances a little confusion of ideas may have arisen from the fact that two corporations, [232]*232the township and the school township, exist within the same territory, the trustee of the one being the trustee of the other. The school trustees of an incorporated city are elected by the common council thereof, and those of an incorporated town by the board of trustees thereof. 3 Ind. Stat. p. 442, sec. 5. The two corporations, however, the township and the school township, the city and school city, or town and school town, are as distinct and separate legal entities as if they existed in different territory, and had an entirely different set of officers. 'When a town or city is sued in its character as a civil or ordinary municipal organization for general purposes, the process is served on different persons than when sued in its character as a school corporation. The City of Huntington v. Day, 55 Ind. 7. The statutes which m terms create the two distinct classes of corporations need not be here cited. They are set out in the case of McLaughlin v. Shelby Township, 52 Ind. 114.

There being two distinct corporations, each having its own rights and being subject to its own liabilities, it follows that an action will not lie against the one for the debts or liabilities of the other. And, on legal principles, this would seem to be the case as clearly as if the two corporations existed in different territory, and were supplied with entirely different officers. The two corporations are as distinct legal personages as if they had no connection in any way with each other. Accordingly, it has been held in quite a number of cases, that where one of the corporations, as a township, sues or is sued upon a cause of action in favor of or against the other, as the school township, the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. We need not cite all the cases upon this point, as the following probably refer to all the preceding ones : McLaughlin v. Shelby Township, supra; Sims v. McClure, 52 Ind. 267; The City of Huntington v. Day, supra; [233]*233Jackson Township v. Barnes, 55 Ind. 136; Wright v. Stockman, 59 Ind. 65.

It is, however, earnestly contended by counsel for the appellees, that, though there maybe two corporations within the same territory, one organized for civil and one for school purposes, the name of the two corporations is the .same, viz., the name of the civil organization as Utica Township, City of Indianapolis, Town of Noblesville, without any qualifying word signifying the school township, city or town.

The 1st section of an act incorporating school townships, etc., 1 G. & H. 570, set out in the opinion in the case of McLaughlin v. Shelby Township, supra, makes the corporate name of the township “- School Township,” as Utica School Township of Clarke county.

But it is contended that so much of the above section as applies to the name of the school corporation is repealed by the 4th section of the act to provide for a general system of common schools, approved March 6th, 1865, 1 R. S. 1876, p. 780, which is also quoted, in the above mentioned opinion, from 3 Ind. Stat.

~We here transcribe that section again:

“ Sec. 4. Each civil township and each incorporated town or city in the several counties of the State is hereby declared a distinct municipal corporation for school purposes, by the name and style of the civil township, town or city corporation, respectively, and by such name may contract and be contracted with, sue and be sued in any court having competent jurisdiction, and the trustees of such township and the trustees provided for in the next .section of this act, shall, for their township, town or city, be school trustees, and perform the duties of clerk and treasurer for school purposes.”

The -former act did not embrace towns and cities, and, as was intimated in the case of McLaughlin v. Shelby Town[234]*234ship, the leading purpose of section 4, above quoted, was to extend the act making townships school corporations so-as to embrace towns and cities. It was also said in that case: “"We see nothing in this act that changes the name of the school townships as provided for m the act previously noticed. The two statutes are consistent with each other and may stand together.” See, also, on this point,, the cases hereinbefore cited.

We adhere to the conclusion heretofore arrived at upon this point. We will not impute to the Legislature an intent to give to the two corporations, existing in the same territory, and having in some cases the same officers, precisely the same name, if the act admits of any other reasonable-construction.

The confusion and uncertainty that would arise from such construction is to be avoided, if it can be done without doing violence to the language employed by the Legislature. If the two coi’porations bear the same name, how shall it be determined, when one of them is sued, wdiich one of them is the defendant? Perhaps this might be-conjectured from the facts alleged in the complaint; but this, it seems to us, ought not, if it can be avoided, to be-left to conjecture. We are not willing to hold that the facts alleged in the complaint as the cause of action may be made the criterion by which to determine which one of the corporations is the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
62 Ind. 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/utica-township-v-miller-ind-1878.