118 Ind. 13 | Ind. | 1889
This is an action for injunction. There are two errors assigned :
1st. The court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the amended complaint.
2d. The court erred in sustaining the motion to dissolve the temporary restraining order issued and granted in the cause. .
The amended complaint states substantially the following facts: That the appellee Hultz is the supervisor of Road District 3, in Jefferson township, in Washington county, Indiana, and the appellee Enochs is the trustee of said township; that the appellant is the owner of certain real estate situated in said township, which is described in the complaint; that on the 22d day of November, 1886, the appellee Hultz served a notice upon the appellant of his intention to enter upon the said real estate on the 29th day of November, 1886, for the purpose of constructing a ditch thereon, the said proposed ditch to commence on the west line of section 20, town. 4 north, of range 3 east, 192 rods north of the southwest corner of said section, and to run thence in a northeasterly direction about 30 rods to a washout or bayou into which it is to empty; that said bayou extends from White river into said real estate for a distance of about 60 rods; that the appellant has expended large sums of money in building and constructing banks
The demurrer to the complaint admits the truth of the facts as therein alleged. We are of the opinion that the facts alleged show something more than a simple trespass which can be compensated in damages.
The facts alleged show a case where, if the acts threatened are carried into execution, irreparable injury to the appellant will be the necessary result. We are therefore of the opinion that, unless there is some authority authorizing the threatened action of the supervisor, the complaint constitutes a cause of action. Winslow v. Nayson, 113 Mass. 411; Frizell v. Rogers, 82 Ill. 109; McArthur v. Kelly, 5 Ohio, 140; Ross v. Thompson, 78 Ind. 90; Heagy v. Black, 90 Ind. 534; Kyle v. Board, etc., 94 Ind. 115; Erwin v. Fulk, 94 Ind. 235; 3 Pomeroy Eq. Jur., section 1357; Clark v. Jeffersonville, etc., R. R. Co., 44 Ind. 248; Town of Sullivan v. Phillips, 110 Ind. 320 ; Balfe v. Lammers, 109 Ind. 347.
Section 16 of the act of 1883 is relied upon as giving to the supervisor the authority to do what is charged against him in the complaint. That section reads as follows : “ The supervisor, or any other person by his order, may enter upon any land adjoining or near to any highway in his district, and thereupon construct such ditches, drains and dams, and dig and remove any gravel, earth, sand, or stone, or cut and re
The proviso above only allows an appeal from the assessment made by the appraisers. As to the right of the supervisor to go upon the land, and as to his right to go elsewhere than as pointed out by the land-holder, there is no provision for an appeal.
The Legislature has, by the foregoing statute, given the right to a supervisor to enter upon the land of another and at his pleasure locate and construct ditches, drains, etc., or it has given to him this power under certain restrictions and limitations. The section upon its face bears evidence of a want of care in its preparation, and it is somewhat difficult to determine fully what the legislative intention was.
It is first provided that the supervisor may enter upon the private lands adjoining or near a highway, and construct ditches, etc. It is then provided that, together with two disinterested persons, he shall at once proceed to the locality and assess such damages in favor of the owner of the lands as in their judgment seems right. Afterwards, it is provided that the owner shall be notified and shall have leave to select one of the appraisers, and shall have notice of the time and place of the meeting of the appraisers, with the privilege of offering evidence as to damages. Within ten days after the assessment, it is provided that the assessment shall be reported to the trustee, and that he shall pay the damages assessed out of the township treasury.
With some hesitation we have concluded that, under such circumstances as authorize the supervisor to enter upon the land of another, he may do so, and locate and build a ditch, drain, dam, and the like, or remove gravel, etc., as provided in the statute, and immediately thereafter notify the landholder, who may select one appraiser, and the supervisor an
It is provided, however, that no person’s land shall be entered upon when material can be found on the roadway, or convenient in the district on the roadways, nor when drainage can be made on the- roadway at a cost not exceeding the cost and damages of entering upon private lands and appropriating them to that purpose. It is then provided that in all cases contemplated by this section a demand shall first be made of the owner of the land before entering upon it or taking material. If he assent, he may point out the material and the location from which it is to be taken,, and, if accessible and fit for the purpose intended, it shall be taken therefrom. If consent be refused by the owner, the supervisor shall notify him of his intention to so enter, for what purpose, for what time, and point out the land to be occupied or the material to be taken.
If the provision next before the last, as we have stated these different provisions, stood alone, it could not be contended with any plausibility that the land-holder would have the right to point out to the supervisor the place or locality whereon he should dig a ditch or drain or build a dam, and that his right to make a choice would be confined to the locality from which material should be taken; but when we take the preceding and following provisions, and construe all of them together, we have no difficulty in arriving at the conclusion that it was not the intention of the Legislature to confer upon the supervisor unlimited authority to enter upon private lands and appropriate such part thereof as may please his fancy for the purpose of constructing ditches, dams, etc., thereon, or removing dirt, gravel and the like.
2d. Demand shall first be made of the land-holder in all cases contemplated by this section.
3d. The provision that if he assent he may point out the material, etc.
4th. When consent is refused the supervisor shall notify the land-holder of his intention to enter upon the land, his purpose in so doing, the time at which he will do so, and he shall point out the land to be occupied or material to be taken.
Why make a demand of the land-holder if the supervisor has unlimited power to appropriate private land and locate a ditch or drain? We can see no good reason for so doing;, but if the land-holder has the right to make a selection for the location of the ditch, then the reason for giving him notice is apparent. If the land-holder is only allowed to point out where the material is to come from, we can see no reason for the provision that, in ease he refuse, the supervisor shall point out the land to be occupied. There would be no occupancy of the land in removing material from it; and then, the disjunctive is used, “point out the land to be occupied or the material to be taken.”
Our conclusion is, that the statute only authorizes the location of a ditch on private lands when there can not be suitable drainage made in the roadway at the same expense that would follow in making it upon such private lands; that if the supervisor can not provide suitable drainage in the roadway, then the land-holder has a right to select the location for the drain or ditch, as the case, may be, and if the selection is accessible and suitable, it is the duty of the supervisor to adopt it; but if the land-holder fails to point out the location, or if the selection he makes is not accessible or suitable, then the supervisor may make the location.
We are further of the opinion that if any question is made as to whether proper drainage can be made in the highway,
If the supervisor can not provide suitable drainage in the roadway, and the land-holder points out a location for the ditch, and the same is accessible and suitable, it is the supervisor’s duty to accept the location thus pointed out, and if he refuses to do so, and locates the ditch elseAvhere, he acts without authority of law, and is a wrong-doer. These are questions, not for the determination of the supervisor when raised, but for the courts, and if the action which the supervisor is threatening to take will, if carried into execution, work serious injury to the land-holder, and such as can not be fully compensated in damages, an action for injunction is the proper action.
We have examined the case of McOsker v. Burrell, 55 Ind. 425. That was a suit for damages for the obstruction of an ancient watercourse and the diversion of the course of the water, which obstruction and diversion caused an overflow of appellee’s land to his damage. That case rests upon section 16, 1 R. S. 1876, p. 858. Under that section of the statute the supervisor was empowered to enter upon any land adjoining or near to any highway, and construct ditches, etc., necessary for the proper construction, repair or preservation of any highway within his district. This court in that case says that the statute authorized the supervisor to do just such acts as he is charged with having committed; that there were only two conditions necessary to the exercise of the authority given him, (1) that the land on which he entered must have been adjoining or near to a highway in his district, and (2)
The statute under consideration contains the same conditions that were in the former statute, with the additional and more important ones to which we have referred.
It not only does not appear in the complaint before us that the conditions existed authorizing the supervisor to take action, but it appears therein, and is admitted by the demurrer, that the conditions did not exist.
We reach the conclusion, therefore, that the complaint is good, and that the demurrer should have been overruled. We are of the opinion that the appellee Enochs is a proper party to the action, and that the complaint is good as to him.
We need not determine whether the court erred in dissolving the temporary injunction.
The judgment of the court below is reversed, with instruction to overrule the demurrer to the complaint, and, upon a bond being filed by the appellant, to the approval of the court, that a temporary injunction be granted.
Judgment against the appellees for costs.