151 Ind. 401 | Ind. | 1898
The appellant is the owner of certain lands in Madison township, Montgomery county, through which a public ditch runs. The ditch is six or seven miles in length, and extends also into Union
Whether the trustee of the township in which the land is situated, or the trustee of the township in which the allotment is located, is the proper official to give notice to repair, and, in case of failure of the owner to do the work, to make the repairs himself and certify the cost to the county auditor, to be placed upon the tax duplicate for collection, is somewhat uncertain, on a first reading of the various sections of the act for repairing public drains, cited above. The statute is, in this respect, not very definite. We are, however, satisfied, on examination of the various provisions of the law, that the proper officer to cause repairs to be made is the trustee of the township in which the allotment is located. The statute cited requires that the surveyor, “whenever practicable,” should locate each allotment upon the tract of land assessed for its repair. This matter is thus left to the sound judgment and discretion of the surveyor, and in the present case the surveyor, for reasons not apparent from the record, did not locate appellant’s allotment upon his land, nor even in his township. Undoubtedly, however, the trustee of the township where the allotment is located has jurisdiction of the repairs.
In the case at bar, therefore, the trustee of Union township, in which township appellant’s allotment was located, and not the trustee of Madison township, where appellant’s land is situated, should have given appellant notice to repair, and on appellant’s failure to do the work, should have proceeded to make the repairs and to cause the expense to be
While there is no doubt, as we have already intimated, that the trustee was mistaken as to his duty, and that the work done by him should have been done by the trustee of Union township, yet we do not think that appellant has shown any equities in his favor that should entitle him to an injunction against the collection of the cost of repairing that part of the ditch allotted to him by the county surveyor. He has stood by and received the benefit of the work done by the trustee, though done by that official under a misapprehension of duty; and we do not think he can now come in, and, because of the officer’s mistake, cause the people of Madison township to pay for the repair of his ditch. He received notice to do the work, and then permitted the trustee to do it without taking any action. His suit for injunction came too late. He should have brought the suit when the trustee first gave notice and threatened to do the work, and not have waited until his ditch had been repaired and then sought to be re: lieved of the cost after receiving the benefit of the work.
It has frequently been held by this court that a person cannot stand by and receive the benefit of a