44 Ind. App. 465 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1909
On September 25, 1905, Benjamin E. Bear filed a petition in the Laporte Circuit Court asking the court to order Joseph O. Reese, county surveyor of Laporte county, to proceed to repair a certain ditch situated in said county, which had been established and constructed under the laws of this State concerning drainage. The petition shows that said Reese was at that time the duly elected, qualified and acting county surveyor of Laporte county; that said Reese had been given ten days’ notice, in writing, of his failure to perform the work of repairing the ditch as required by law, which notice was given by said Bear, who was shown to be interested in having such repairs made; that said Reese had refused to do the work and make the requested repairs; also,
To this petition appellee filed an answer in seven paragraphs. The first and third were withdrawn, a demurrer was sustained to the second and the seventh, and overruled to the affirmative fourth, fifth and sixth. Such proceedings were thereafter had that appellant stood on the overruling of his demurrer to the fourth, fifth and sixth paragraphs of answer, and judgment was rendered in favor of appellee. The overruling of appellant’s demurrer to each of said paragraphs of answer is here relied on for a reversal of the judgment.
The Supreme Court, in passing upon the right of appeal in a proceeding analogous to the one here presented, held, that while the statute authorized an appeal to the circuit or superior court by any one aggrieved, from the action of the county surveyor in making allotments, there was no right of appeal from either of such eourts to a higher court. “But, having granted this right of appeal, the legislature seemed to have been impressed with the fact that matters involved in a proceeding in respect to the mere cleaning out and keeping
Appeal dismissed.