Wilson v. Board of Commissioners

68 Ind. 507
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 68 Ind. 507 (Wilson v. Board of Commissioners) 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
Wilson v. Board of Commissioners, 68 Ind. 507 (Ind. 1879).

Opinions

Howk, C. J.

This was a suit by the appellants, against the appellees, to obtain a perpetual injunction. The appellees’ demurrer to the appellants’ complaint was sustained by the court, and to this ruling the appellants excepted, and, failing and refusing to plead further, judgment was rendered against them for the appellees’ costs.

In this court, the appellants have assigned as error, the decision of the circuit court in sustaining the demurrer to their complaint. This alleged error presents for our decision the questions raised by the grounds of demurrer, the most important of which questions, as it seems to us, is [509]*509whether or not the facts stated in the appellants’ complaint are sufficient to constitute a cause of action in their favor, and to entitle them to the relief prayed for therein.

An. intelligible presentation of these questions, and a clear understanding of our decision thereof, render it necessary, we think, that we should first give a summary, at least, of the facts stated and relied upon by the appellants, as constituting their supposed cause of action.

In their complaint, the appellants alleged, in substance, that on the 15th day of July, 1871, they were, and since had been, tax payers and citizens of Noblesville township, in Hamilton county, Indiana ; that at the June term, 1872, of the board of commissioners of said county, the said board attempted to levy a special tax upon all the taxable property in said township, to aid the Anderson, Lebanon and St. Louis Railroad Company in the construction of a railroad through said township, and caused the auditor of said county to enter said special tax upon the tax duplicate of said county, for that purpose; that each of the appellants then owned both real and personal property in said township, of the aggregate value, for taxation purposes, thereinafter mentioned, and that said auditor apportioned of said taxes against the same, for the years 1872 and 1873, the sums set opposite their respective names, to wit: (Here followed a table containing the names of the appellants, with the amount of the taxables of each one, and the amount of taxes assessed thei’eon, for each of the years 1872 and 1873, set opposite his name in appropriate columns, which table we omit.)

The appellants further said that said special tax, with penalties and interest, had been carried forward year after year, on the tax duplicate of said county, by the appellee Pettijohn, as the auditor of said county, and his predecessor in office, which said duplicates were then in th.e hands of the appellee Baker, as the treasurer of said county; [510]*510that the appellee, the said Board of Commissioners, had recently ordered the appellee Baker, as such treasurer, [to collect the said special tax, etc., ?] and he had demanded payment thereof from each of the appellants, and threatened to aud would collect the same, if not paid, by distress and sale of property so owned by each of the appellants, and that the said taxes were unpaid and were clouds upon the appellants' titles to said property in said township.

The appellants further said that said special taxes had been levied and entered upon said duplicates of said county, and the collection of the same ordered, under and pursuant to certain proceedings claimed aud purporting to have been had before said board of commissioners, and under and in pursuance of its orders, entered upon the record of the proceedings of said board, and on no other authority whatever, a certified copy of all which pi’oceedings and orders of said board was filed with said complaint, as a part thereof.

The appellants averred and charged that said proceedings for the levy and collection of said special taxes, including the order for the election to determine whether such aid should be given, and all matters connected therewith, were and are defective, illegal and void for the following, among other, reasons, to wit:

1. The board of commissioners was not in general session, nor was it legally in special session, on said 15th day of July, 1871, because no summons had been issued by the auditor of said county, nor any other officer of said county, to the sheriff of said county, convening said board on that day, or on any previous day from which said board had adjourned to that day, and that no such summons had been served on the members of said board, nor a majority of them, nor was six days’ notice given of said special session, nor was there, in the opinion of the officer calling said board, an emergency declared to exist, requiring a shorter [511]*511time, and that said pretended special session of said board was unauthorized by law, and its acts on that occasion were absolutely void and of no binding force or validity whatever.

2. The amount specified in said petition of said petitioners, to said board of commissioners, exceeded two per centum upon the taxable property of said township on the tax duplicate of said county, delivered to the treasurer of said county for the preceding year, 1870.

3. No certain amount was specified in said petition to said board of commissioners, to be appropriated by said township to aid in the construction of said railroad.

4. The said board of commissioners did not grant and appropriate, in aid of the construction’ of said railroad, the sum of twenty-eight thousand five hundred dollars asked for in said petition, but undertook to appropriate another and different sum for that purpose, without any petition askipg it so to. do.

5. The said board, at its said June session in 1872, in the matter of said pretended petition presented to it as aforesaid on said 15th day of July, 1871, ordered and adjudged that the sum of twenty-eight thousand two hundred and thirty dollars and thirty cents was two per centum of the taxable property of said township, as the same appeared upon the tax duplicate of said county, delivered to the treasurer of said county, for the preceding year, 1870, and that said sum of twenty-eight thousand five hundred dollars, mentioned in said pretended petition, was a sum in excess of two per centum of said taxable property of said township for 1870, as the same appeared on said tax duplicate. Wherefore the appellants said that said board never acquired jurisdiction of the matter of said pretended petition, and that said sum of twenty-eight thousand two hundred and thirty dollars was so appropriated without any petition asking for it other than said petition for twen[512]*512ty-eiglft thousand five hundred dollars, and that its said proceedings at its said last named June session were illegal and void.

6. The said Anderson, Lebanon and St. Louis Railroad Company had long since forfeited its right to have or demand said sum or sums of money, so attempted to be appropriated as aforesaid, or any part thereof remaining uncollected, by its failure to complete its said line of railway, ready for use through said township, within three years from the levy of said pretended taxes, or at any time since; and that said board did not give it one year’s further time in which to complete the same ; by means whereof the appellants and each of them became and were released from the payment of said taxes or any part thereof.

7. The said Anderson, Lebanon and St.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People ex rel. Seeberger v. Rose
164 Ill. App. 159 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1911)
Gooden v. Police Jury of Lincoln Parish
48 So. 196 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1908)
McCollom v. Shaw
51 N.E. 488 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1898)
Anderson v. Claman
24 N.E. 175 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1890)
Prezinger v. Harness
16 N.E. 495 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1888)
White v. Fleming
16 N.E. 487 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1888)
Gosman v. State ex rel. Schumacher
6 N.E. 349 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1886)
Board of Commissioners v. State ex rel. Cottingham
4 N.E. 589 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1886)
Nixon v. Campbell
4 N.E. 296 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1886)
State ex rel. Miller v. Board of Commissioners
3 N.E. 807 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1885)
Board of Commissioners v. Center Township
2 N.E. 368 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1885)
City of Logansport v. LaRose
99 Ind. 117 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1884)
Jussen v. Board of Commissioners
95 Ind. 567 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1884)
Scott v. Hansheer
94 Ind. 1 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1884)
State ex rel. Putnam v. Board of Commissioners
92 Ind. 499 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1884)
Hilton v. Mason
92 Ind. 157 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1883)
Caffyn v. State ex rel. Rader
91 Ind. 324 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1883)
City of Elkhart v. Simonton
71 Ind. 7 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1880)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 Ind. 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-board-of-commissioners-ind-1879.