188 Ind. 393 | Ind. | 1919
— Appellants filed their petition in the Pulaski Circuit Court for an open dredged ditch. This ditch lies wholly within the county. Commissioners were appointed and made their report. They after-wards amended this report. The cause was tried and proceedings dismissed on the tenth statutory ground of remonstrance to the amended report. Acts 1907 p. 508, §4, §6143 Burns 1914. The trial court construed the commissioners’ report to provide for an underground tile drain in the main ditch from station 0 to station '226 plus 74 feet.
The report provided that in this main ditch from stake “0” to 30 there should be a 10-inch tile; from stake 30 to 75 there should be a 12-inch tile; from stake 75 to stake 100 there should be a 14-inch tile; from stake 100 to 144 there should be a 16-inch tile; from stake 144 to stake 226 "plus 74 feet'there should be a 24-inch tile; from stake 226 plus 74 to stake 243 to be an open ditch.
■ Appellants seem to admit that, under the evidence, a 24-inch tile would not be sufficient for the drainage in question, unless Mud Creek is left open above the tile.
There were numerous branches leading into this main' ditch, and the proposed drainage was to take care of about 2,000 acres; but appellants claim that there is sufficient in the report to show that the drainage commissioners intended that Mud Creek should remain open to take care of overflow waters. They base this contention upon the proposition that the report of the commissioners provided for a concrete bulkhead at station 226 plus 74 feet, which was concave at the top,- being twelve feet high at the ends and seven feet high in the center, to conform to the bottom of the old ditch, Mud Creek; also on the proposition that the tile were to be covered level with the bottom of Mud Creek; also on the proposition that the report required the contractor to remove all trees and shrubs to a distance of twenty-five feet on each side of the drain.
Appellants’ contention about the bulkhead being concave and conforming to the bottom of Mud Creek, and the other two contentions that we have set out about the grubbing of the shrubs and removing of the trees to a distance of twenty-five feet, and the covering of the tile up to the bottom of Mud Creek, x are not sufficient to authorize the interpretation of this report that Mud Creek was to remain an open ditch. If the commissioners intended any such thing, they intended something that could not be done under the law, and something that would be utterly impossible because there would be no record anywhere to disclose the then dimensions of Mud Creek. The concave bulkhead was evidently designed to take care of flood waters during the time of the construction of this tile drain. Tile ditch construction begins at the lower end thereof. If this bulkhead were not concave, it would operate as a dam to Mud Creek, and would seriously interfere with digging the ditch and putting in the tile, in case of heavy rains. »
So far as the other claim of appellants is concerned, about grubbing out the trees and taking out the shrubs, the commissioners simply took this from the statute it
The judgment is therefore affirmed.
Note. — Reported in 123 N. E. 115. .