77 Ind. 255 | Ind. | 1881
This was a suit by John A. Bish and sixty-five other persons, against the auditor, treasurer, and the board of commissioners, of Grant county, and Washington township of said county, to enjoin the collection of certain taxes levied and assessed for the purpose of enabling said Washington township to make an appropriation of $6,900 to aid in the construction of the Frankfort, St. Louis and Toledo Railroad. The appellees jointly demurred to each specification of the appellants’ complaint for the alleged insufficiency of the facts therein to constitute a cause of action, which demurrer was sustained by the court, and to this ruling they excepted. Declining to amend or plead further, judgment was rendered against the appellants for the appellees’ costs.
The decision of the circuit court, in sustaining the appellees’ demurrer to their complaint and the several spe
The appellants alleged, in substance, that they were severally the owners of real estate and personal property in Washington township, in Grant county; that, on the 14th day of June, 1880, a pretended levy of taxes was made upon all property in said Washington township, by the board of commissioners of said Grant county, in the sum of $6,900, to aid in the construction of the Frankfort, St. Louis and Toledo Railroad; that said pretended levy of taxes had been placed upon the tax duplicate by the appellee, the auditor of said county, and was then upon the duplicate in the hands of the appellee, the treasurer of said county,, ■for collection, who was threatening to collect the same, and, if not enjoined, would levy upon and sell the appellants’ property' for the purpose of paying said taxes, so levied against their property; that the said levy was unwarranted, illegal and void, for the reasons following, to wit:
1. That no such, corporation as the Frankfort, St. Louis and Toledo Railroad Company ever existed, with power to build or maintain a railroad in or through said township.
2. Because the board of commissioners, at the time they ordered the election at which said aid was voted, were without authority to order such election, for the reason that, within less than one year prior to the time said election was .so ordered, said board of commissioners had, upon a proper petition, ordered an election in said township upon the ques
3. That said board of commissioners, before ordering the election at which said aid was voted, did not investigate into or find any facts conferring jurisdiction upon said board to order said election.
4. That said board of commissioners, in ordering said election, did not at any time or in any manner provide that said election should be upon the appropriation of any definite sum, or any sum, in aid of the construction of said railroad.
5. That the notices which were given for said election, at which said aid was voted, were given and made by the auditor and sheriff of said county, without any order or warrant from any person or persons or authority whatever.
6. Because said election, at which said aid was voted, was improperly influenced and held, and the legal voters voting at the same in favor of said appropriation were improperly and fraudulently influenced and imposed upon, in this, to wit: Before said election, the beneficiary of said aid, the Frankfort, St. Louis and Toledo Railroad Company, made and entered into a pretended agreement, by which it was agreed that said Frankfort, St. Louis and Toledo Railroad Company should pay over to the Fort Wayne and Terre Haute Narrow-Gauge Railroad Company one-half of the aid so voted, whenever the said Fort Wrayne and Terre Haute Narrow-Gauge Railroad should be built through and into said Washington township; that said pretended agreement and
7. Because said election was improperly influenced, and •said election was improperly held, and the legal voters, voting in favor of said appropriation, were fraudulently imposed upon, in this, that, when the order for said election was made and notice thereof given, the beneficiary of said aid, to wit, the Frankfort, St. Louis and Toledo Railroad •Company, by its officers, agents and emissaries, published in the county newspaper, printed in'Marion, Indiana, which largely circulated among the voters of said Washington township, and also circulated among said voters printed circular copies of said notice, and, in order to give it pretended character, caused the same to be recorded in the miscellaneous record in the recorder’s office of said county, which
The first question presented and discussed by the appellants’ counsel, in their brief of this cause, arises on the second specification of the complaint. In that specification, it-will be seen from the foregoing summary of the complaint, the appellants alleged in substance, that the taxes in controversy were unwarranted, illegal and void, because, as they averred, the board of commissioners, when they ordered the election at which such taxes were voted, were without authority to make such order, for the reason that within one year before that time the said board had, upon a proper petition, ordered an election in said township on the question of appropriating $14,000 in aid of said Erankfort, St. Louis- and Toledo Railroad, which election was in all respects duly held after due notice given; at which election more votes were cast against, than were cast in favor of, said appropriation ; and that said election was never in any maimer contested, nor set aside. The theory of this specification of the complaint, as we understand it, is, that when the board of commissioners had duly ordered an election in said township on the question of appropriating a certain sum in aid of a. certain railroad, and such election had been duly held, and a majority of the votes cast were against said railroad appropriation, then, and in that event, the said board of commissioners, within one year thereafter, would be without authority, upon a proper petition therefor, to order another election to be held in said township on the question of appropriating the same or any other sum of money in aid' of the construction of the same railroad. -This theory, as it.
In support of this theory the appellants’ counsel rely upon the provisions of section 1 of the railroad aid act of May 12th, 1869, as amended by an act approved March 17th, 1875, which amended section 1 was again amended by an act approved March 8th, 1879, Acts 1879, p. 46, and also upon the provisions of section 13 of said act of May 12th, 1869, as amended by said act of March 17th, 1875, Acts 1875, Spec. Sess., pp. 70 to 72. We need not set out said amended section 1 in this opinion, but we may say genei’ally, that it gives the board of commissioners full power, and makes it the duty of such board, upon the presentation of proper petitions, signed by the requisite number of freeholders in any township, to order such petitions to be entered at full length upon their records ; but it contains no limitation upon the number of such petitions, from the same township, which may be thus received and acted upon in any specified period of time. Said amended section 13 reads as follows .-
“Sec. 13. No township shall be authorized by the provisions of this act to appropriate to railroad purposes, or to raise by taxation for such purpose, to exceed two per centum upon the taxables of such township as said taxables shall appear upon the tax duplicate of the county, in any one period of two years.”
This is the only section of the railroad aid act of May 12th, 1869, or of any of its amendments, which can be said by any possibility, as it seems to us, to limit in any degree the number of railroad aid elections in any township, in any given period of time. It can not be said, we think, by any fair construction of language, that this section was intended to or did limit the power of the board of commissioners to order' elections to be held in any township, on the question of such township making an appropriation to aid in the con
In Brocaw v. The Board, etc., 73 Ind. 543, one phase of this question of the power of the county board was considered, and, in delivering the opinion of the court, Elliott, J., said : ‘ ‘ There is nothing in the act indicating that the power to make an appropriation is exhausted when once exercised. Section 1 of the act fixes, as we have seen, the amount which shall be assessed upon one petition, and section 13 provides that such assessments shall not be made of tener than once in two years, hut there is nothing restricting the exercise except as to the amount named and to the period limited.” In the case at bar, the second specification of the complaint does not show that Washington township had appropriated to, or raised by taxation for, railroad purposes, any amount whatever, within the period of two years prior to’ the time the board of commissioners ordered the election mentioned in said specification; and, therefore, it fails to show that said board were without authority to order such election.
“Sec. 2. The board of commissioners shall take said petition under advisement and thereupon order the polls at the several voting places of the township so petitioning to be opened, on a day to be named in the order, which shall not be less than thirty nor more than sixty days thereafter, and the votes of the legal voters of such township named in said petition to be taken upon the subject of appropriating money by such township, for the purpose of aiding in the construction of such railroad, as prayed for in said petition.”
Of course, it may be inferred, in the absence of any adverse averment, that the petition contained the specified and definite amount -which it prayed that Washington township might appropriate to aid in the construction of the railroad
The sixth and seventh specifications of the complaint allege substantially the same matters, and differ from each other chiefly in this, that the seventh specification contains a more elaborate and detailed statement of the facts relied upon than does the sixth, and in that it alleges further that the appellants did not discover that the agreement set out therein was not bona fide until more than six months after the election, and after the levy of the taxes in controversy, nor until the complete construction of said railroad through said Washington township. The two specifications may, therefore, be properly considered together. We have heretofore given a full summary of the matters alleged in each of these specifications, and it will be seen therefrom that the substance of the charge in these sjaecifications was, that the election had been carried in favor of the appropriation by means of improper influences'and fraudulent practices, and that without the use of these means the election could not. have been carried for the appropriation. The improper influences and fraudulent practices, mentioned in said specifications, consisted in an agreement entered into between the beneficiary of the aid, named in the petition, and the officers of another organized railroad company, to the effect that if the latter should build their projected railroad into and through Washington township to North Marion, the former would pay over to the latter the one-half of said aid; and
We are of the opinion that the matters alleged in the sixth and seventh specifications of the complaint were not sufficient to show such improper influences and fraudulent-practices on the part of the appellees, or of either of them,, as would or ought to vitiate or avoid the said election, or the taxes levied in pursuance thereof. It will be seen from the allegations of both of said specifications, that the alleged imposition and fraud are predicated upon the said agreement between the beneficiary of the aid and the other railroad company mentioned therein. This agreement was either legal or illegal. If it was a legal and valid agreement* we-fail to see how its circulation through "the township could improperly influence or fraudulently impose upon the voters- and tax-payers of said township. If, on the other hand,, the agreement was illegal, it was void from the beginning,, and the appellants must be presumed to have known it, and they can not now be heard to say, that they and the other-voters and tax-payers of the township were improperly influenced or bribed by such void and illegal agreement to cast, their votes, at said election, In favor of said appropriation.
Upon the whole case our conclusion is, that the demurrers, for the want of facts, were correctly sustained to the complaint and its several specifications.
The judgment is affirmed, at the appellants’ costs.