61 Ind. 97 | Ind. | 1877
In this action, the appellant, as plaintiff, sued the appellees, as defendants, in the court below.
In his complaint, the appellant alleged, in substance, that he was an inhabitant of the tract of land, containing .about one thousand acres, commonly called Clarksville, and then the town of Ohio Falls, in Clarke’s Grant, Clarke county, Indiana; that there were at least five hundred inhabitants of said tract who were equally interested with the appellant in the subject-matter of this suit, and the question involved is one of a common and general interest to all of them, and they were so numerous that it was impracticable to bring them all before the court; and, therefore, with leave of the court, the appellant sued for the benefit of all said inhabitants; that, in the year 1783, the Commonwealth of Virginia, then owning said Clarke’s Grant, and having exclusive sovereignty over the country north-west of the river Ohio, within which the said grant wras situated, provided by statute that said one thousand acres of land should be laid out for a town, which was accordingly done pursuant to said statute, and that, after the plat of said lands had been returned, which was also done pursuant to -said statute, the title to said lands should be invested in ten “gentlemen,” trustees, named in said statute, who should lay off the same into lots and .streets, and that thereupon said trustees, or any five of them, should sell the said lots, and that the moneys arising from such sale should be applied by said trustees
To this complaint, the appellees demurred, upon the-ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause ’ of action, which demurrer was sustained by the-court, and to this decision the appellant excepted; and,, declining to amend or plead further, judgment was rendered against him, in favor of the appellees, on their demurrer, for the costs of suit.
In this court, the appellant has assigned as error the-decision of the court below, in sustaining the appellees* demurrer to his complaint.
It seems very clear to us, that this action can not be-maintained by the appellant, as plaintiff. As stated in the appellant’s complaint, the town of Clarksville embraced within its boundaries one thousand acres of land,, which was platted and laid out as a town, under and pursuant to a statute of the Commonwealth of Virginia, in the year 1783. At that time Virginia claimed sovereignty over the territory nortli-west of the river Ohio, embracing within its limits the present State of Indiana. The Assembly of Virginia granted to “ Colonel George Rogers-Clarke, and the officers and soldiers who assisted in the reduction of the British posts in the Illinois,” one hundred and fifty thousand acres of land on the north-west side of the Ohio river, the length of which should not exceed double the breadth. By the statute of Virginia, passed in 1783, a board of commissioners was created for the purpose of locating and surveying the said grant of land. It was made the duty of this board of commissioners to first lay out “ one thousand acres at the most
It is a part of the history of this State, of which we lake notice, that this grant of land by Virginia to the officers and soldiers of Col. George Rogers Clarke’s Illinois Regiment, sometimes called “Clarke’s Grant” and •sometimes the “ Illinois Grant,” was surveyed and located adjacent to the Falls of the Ohio river, lying chiefly in Clarke county, but extending westward into Floyd county, and northward into Scott county, in this State; and that the town of Clarksville was located and laid out in the two counties of Clarke and Floyd, and abutting on the Ohio River.
It was further provided in said section 2 of the said statute of Virginia, “ That after the said lands shall be laid off into lots and streets, the said trustees, or any five of them, shall proceed to sell the same, or so many as they shall judge expedient, at public auction, for the best price that can bo had, * * * and the money arising from such sale, shall be applied by the said trustees in such manner as they may judge most beneficial for the inhabitants of the said town; * * * and, in case of the -death, removal out of the county, or other legal disabiliity, of any* of the said trustees, the remaining trustees shall supply such vacancies by electing others, from time
It appears from the appellant’s complaint, that the appellees in this action claim to be the trustees of said town? of Clarksville, as the successors of those nominated in said Virginia statute, under the terms thereof.
By the sixteenth clause of the schedule in the Constitution of this State, of 1851, it was provided as follows r
“ Sixteenth. The General Assembly may alter or amend the charter of Clarksville, and make such regulations as* maybe necessary for carrying into effect the objects contemplated in granting the same; and tlie funds belonging to-said town shall be applied according to the intention of the-grantor.”
Under the power thus conferred, the General Assembly of this State, at the first session thereof after the-adoption of the Constitution of 1851, passed ah act entitled “An act amendatory of the charter of tlie town of Clarksville in Clarke and Floyd counties,” approved June 17th, 1852. Special Acts of 1852, p. 96.
This act is in full force, having never been amended nor repealed; and, in our opinion, it is the law of this State which is applicable to and governs the one thousand acres; of land which were laid off and platted as the town of Clarksville, under the Virginia statute before referred to.. It provided that the number of the trustees of said town should thereafter be three, and it prescribes the manner of choosing these trustees. It. is very certain, we think, that it was not competent, under this legislation, for any part of the said town to organize itself into another town,, under the general law of this State providing for the incorporation of towns. 1 R. S. 1876, p. 874. It is true, that the town of Clarksville might, under section 56 ot said general law, “ by a resolution of the board of trustees” of said town, “ entered upon the record book of the corporation, become incorporated under” said general law.
In the ease of St. Clair v. Kelly, 50 Ind. 535, it is very certain that the attention of this court was not directed to the statute of this State “ amendatory of the charter of the town of Clarksville, in Clarke and Eloyd counties,” before referred to; as, otherwise, it would never have been held by this court, that it was competent for a part of said town of Clarksville to organize and incorporate itself into a new and independent town, under the name of the town of Ohio Falls or any other name, under the provisions of the general law of this State providing for the incorporation of towns.
By the light afforded us by the legislation of this State amendatory of the charter of the town of Clarksville, supra, we are constrained to say, that the decision of this court, in the case referred to in 50 Ind. 535 was a mistake, and to hold, as we do now, that the town of Ohio Falls was not properly incorporated under the general law of this State.
By section 5 of the said act amendatory of the charter of the town of Clarksville, it is provided, that the trustees of said town, elected under the provisions of said act, may call upon the trustees and officers of the corporation, under the said statute of Virginia, and demand of them the surrender up to the said trustees, under said amendatory act, “ of all the books, papers and property of every description in their possession belonging to said corporation; and if not surrendered on demand,” the said trustees, under said amendatory act, were thereby vested with all the necessary authority to compel the same by due process of law. Supra.
It is clear, we think, from what we have written, that this action can not be maintained.
If the appellees are, as it is said they claim to be,
In our opinion, the appellant’s complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in his favor or against the appellees ; and therefore we hold, that no error was committed by the court below in sustaining the appellees’ demurrer to said complaint.
The case of St. Claw v. Kelly, supra, is overruled.
The judgment is affirmed, at the appellant’s costs.