This appeal was commenced by landowners to challenge an appropriation order entered in an eminent domain proceeding commenced by the Little Calumet River Basin Development Commission. The Commission has moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the landowners followed the wrong procedure. 1
The question we are cаlled upon to answer initially is: What is the correct procedure? The current state of the law does not provide an answer that is altogether clear.
The statute concerning eminent domain proceedings provides in relevant part:
"But if such objections 2 are overruled, the court or judge shall appoint appraisers as provided for in this chapter; and frоm such interlocutory order overruling such objections and appointing appraisers, such defendants, or any of them, may appeal to the supreme court or court оf appeals from such decision as and in the manner that appeals are taken from final judgments in civil actions, upon filing with the clerk of such court a bond ..., such appeal bond shall be filed within ten [10] days after the appointment of such appraisers.... The transcript shall be filed in the office of the clerk of the supreme court within thirty [30] days after the filing of thе appeal bond. Such appeal shall not stay proceedings in such cause."
IC 32-11-1-5 (our emphasis).
Prior decisions have struggled, however, in their attempts to reconcile the statute with our Rulеs of Appellate Procedure, especially Appellate Rule 4.
In J.M. Foster Co., Inc. v. NIPSCO (1975),
Four years later the same district again considered the appropriate procedure in Southern Indiana Rural Elec. Coop v. Civil City of Tell City (1979),
Although we find no further decisions specifically addrеssing the proper procedure to perfect such appeals, 3 two subsequent decisions by our Supreme Court must be taken to have impliedly overruled Southern Indiana.
In Statе ex rel. Bd. of Aviation Comm'rs. v. Kosciusko Co. Sup. Ct. (1982), Ind.,
The court's decision in State ex rel. I & M Co. v. Sullivan Cir. Ct. (1983), Ind.,
"It is therefore clear that the discretion recognized in the trial court to certify interlocutory orders has no application to appeals from appropriation orders in condemnation cases. Trial courts and appellate courts have no аuthority to prevent the immediate appeal of condemnation orders. It is likewise clear that the purpose of Ind.R.App.P. 4 is to draw the line between the jurisdiction of this Court and the Court of Appeals. The language in 4(B)(6) that statutes in conflict with the Rule are superseded, refers to conflicts with this general purpose. It does not purport to supersedе statutory provisions for immediate appeals in special situations such as the eminent domain statute."
The consequence of the decisions, while they must be taken to ovеrrule Southern Indiana, is that they essentially return us to the problem posed by the "hybrid" aspects of IC 32-11-1-5. What is the proper method to appeal an order overruling objections to the condemnation itself?
The statute expressly states that an appeal bond shall be filed within ten (10) days after the appointment of appraisers (which the statute contеmplates will be done at the time the objections are denied) and that the transcript shall be filed with the clerk of the supreme court within thirty (30) days after the filing of the appeal bond.
*495 On the other hand, the statute authorizes the appeal "as and in the manner that appeals are taken from final judgments in civil actions." To the lawyer's mind this might reasonably imply the filing of a TR 59 motion to correct errors and awaiting the ruling upon it before proceeding with the appeal, since that is the manner in which final judgments are appealed in civil actions.
To follow this reasoning would, however, be inconsistent with the express direction for a prompt filing of the transcript, infra, and contrary to the legislative purpose found by thе court in Z & M that such appeals should proceed in expedited fashion.
We therefore conclude that the approрriate way to proceed with an appeal from the order overruling objections (and appointing appraisers) is as follows:
(1) Within ten (10) days after entry of the order aрpointing appraisers the party shall file with the trial court an acceptable appeal bond;
(2) Within thirty (30) days after the filing of the appeal bond the record of the рroceedings (transcript) shall be filed with the Clerk of the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals (unless an extension of such time is properly secured from the court to which the aрpeal is taken);
(8) The transcript should be accompanied with an assignment of errors specifying the errors relied upon. AP 7.2(A)(1)(b). A TR 59 motion to correct errors is inappropriate.
(4) Thereafter the rules of appellate procedure applicable to interlocutory appeals apply concerning briefing deadlines, etc.
Admittеdly, the landowners in this case did not comply with this procedure. Indeed the record demonstrates confusion on their part and an attempt to comply in the event a motion tо correct errors was necessary or in the event it was not.
We find that the uncertainty and understandable confusion existing as to the appropriate procedure to be employed in perfecting an appeal from the court's order overruling the objections constitutes a sufficiently extraordinary circumstance that this court should invoke its inhеrent discretionary power to entertain the appeal. Lugar v. State ex rel. Lee (1978),
The motion to dismiss is denied.
Notes
. The motion specifically asserts the filing of a motion to correct errors instead of an assignment of errors and the consequent untimeliness of the praecipe, the pre appeal statement and the filing of the transcript. The motion also contends the landowners failed to secure necessary permission from the trial court to appeal such an interlocutory order.
. The potential objections are enumerated earlier in the section.
. Highland Realty, Inc. v. Indianapolis Airport Authority (1979),
