90 Ind. 534 | Ind. | 1883
— The appellant was the defendant, and Noah . Black and John Trump were the plaintiffs, in a suit to enjoin the defendant, a road supervisor, from removing fences and •opening a highway over certain lands of the plaintiffs in Kosciusko county.
A restraining .order was granted in vacation until the third •day of the next term. On the first day of that term, the defendant moved to dissolve the restraining order and to dismiss the cause. On the next day, the court overruled the motion, and thereupon the defendant demurred to the complaint for want of sufficient facts. The demurrer was overruled, and further proceedings, which need not be specially mentioned, resulted in a perpetual, injunction, and the defendant appealed.
There can be no available error in refusing to dissolve an interlocutory injunction upon an appeal from a final judgment for a perpetual injunction.' Board of Comm’rs v. Markle, 46 Ind. 96. But the ruling upon this motion could not be reviewed, for the reason that the grounds of the motion are not shown by bill of exceptions.
Of the other specifications in the assignment of errors, we need only notice that by which it is assigned that the court erred in overruling the demurrer to the complaint.
The complaint showed that the plaintiff Noah Black was. the owner in fee simple of the southwest quarter of section 25, township 32, range 7 east, in said county, and that theappellee John Trump was the owner in fee simple of the northwest quarter of the same section, except sixty acres off the north side thereof; that on the 10th of March, 1879, one-Alfred Hoover and others filed their petition before the board of commissioners of said county, asking for the location of a public highway on the section line between section 25 and section 26 in said township, and the vacation of' an old road running in the same general direction; that the plaintiffs did not join in said petition, and never consented that the proposed highway might be established and run through their lands or the land of either of them or their enclosures. It was alleged that the board of commissioners appointed viewers, who reported that in their opinion the public would not be in anyway injured by said proposed change; that the-board ordered that said change and vacation be granted as set forth in the report of the viewers, and that said road should be vacated when the new road should be made as good and.
There is obscurity as to the purpose of the pleader in some portions of the complaint. While it is not alleged that the defendant was about to open the new highway upon a line other than that proposed in the petition for its location and •designated in the report of the viewers, which coincides with the west line of the lands of the plaintiffs, as described in the complaint, it is stated, in substance, that a portion of said lands would lie west of the new road, which would not run on the line dividing the lands of the “parties,” the pleader probably meaning thereby the plaintiffs and the own- ». ers of lands lying immediately adjoining those of the plaintiffs on the west. There seems to have been an intention to raise a controversy about the true location of the section line.
The complaint does not show a joint or common interest of the plaintiffs in the lands' mentioned, but shows that each owned a distinct portion thereof in severalty.
Could the plaintiffs join in such a suit as this?
If it was intended to allege in the complaint that the defendant was about to open the road on a line other than that established by the board, we think the plaintiffs could not unite on that ground, and that such allegation was immaterial in a joint suit. Such deviation would be a separate and ■distinct trespass as to each plaintiff. One would not be affected by the encroachment or trespass upon the land of the other. The issue to be tried as between the defendant and one plaintiff would be wholly different from that between the defendant and the other plaintiff. Each would have a right to equitable relief, but neither one upon the same grounds as the other, nor on grounds wholly like those of the other. Each could show that his injury would be irreparable, and that it would be occasioned in the execution of the same general purpose, but the excavations and the destruction of trees, etc., which would constitute the irreparable damage, would be different in each case. The evidence which would show
If, the purpose being to prevent the opening of the road as ordered by the board, each plaintiff would be irreparably damaged as to his separate property, would the additional fact that the proceedings- of the board of commissioners were void, constitute such a community of interest as to authorize the joinder of the plaintiffs? We think that to this question the answer must be in the affirmative, that such a joinder is permissible to avoid a multiplicity of suits.
It is well established in this State by many decisions, that a number of taxpayers may unite to enjoin the collection of' an illegal tax affecting them separately, or to set aside as void illegal proceedings of local officials, whereby a debt, which would result in taxation, would be unlawfully created against a county, city or town, of which such plaintiffs are taxpayers ; and that a number of individual owners of separate lots or lands may unite to enjoin the enforcement against such lots or lands of an assessment for a local improvement and to set aside such assessment because of its illegality. No adequate remedy can be granted at law to such taxpayers or owners, and in this State they may separately maintain the suit for injunction; or, to prevent a multiplicity of suits, they may unite. In such cases, the fact that the object of the suit on the part of each plaintiff is to protgct his property, in which the others are not interested, does not prevent their joinder. The illegality of one act or proceeding which affects them all injuriously, in like manner, furnishes a sufficient community of interest to permit' their joinder for the-purpose of suppressing a multiplicity of suits.
We think that the principles which authorize such joinder are applicable to the case at bar, and that if the facts stated in the complaint show that the proceeding before the board
It was not necessary that the viewers should report that the proposed road would be of public utility, or that the board should expressly so find. The statute, section 5016, E. S.T881, provides that if the viewers “shall deem the highway to be located or the change to be made of public utility, they shall lay out and mark the same on the best ground, not running through any person’s inclosure of one year’s standing, without the owner’s consent, unless, upon examination, a good way can not otherwise be had.”
The next section provides that such viewers shall make a report of their proceedings at the next session of the board of commissioners, “giving a full description of such location, change, or vacation, by metes and bounds and by its course and distance; except.that in case of the vacation of a road, or any part thereof, such description only as will designate it clearly shall be required.”
When objection is made to the proposed highway, vacation or change, as not being of public utility, and thereupon other viewers are appointed, as provided in section 5023, these other viewers shall report whether or not, in their opinion, it will be of public utility.
If the report of the viewers appointed as were those mentioned in the complaint be favorable to the location, vacation or change, and silent on the subject of public utility, or if they do not report the proposed highway or change not to be of public utility, it should be presumed that they deemed it of public utility. The report in this case was not to the effect that the proposed change would not be of public utility. The viewers reported that, in their opinion, the public would not be in any way injured by the proposed change. This part of the report was merely surplusage.
Nor does the statute require that the board shall indicate
It is alleged in the complaint,in one place,that the commissioners never ordered the ■ road opened; but it is said in another place that the board ordered that said change and vacation be granted as set forth in said report. We must presume, against the pleading, that the report of the viewers was in conformity with the statute, except as the contrary may be shown, and that it gave a full description of the location by metes and bounds, and by course and distance, and that it clearly designated the old road to be vacated. This averment of the order made by the board must be regarded as destroying whatever effect could be claimed for the allegation that the board never ordered the road opened.
But it is alleged that the board further ordered that said road should be vacated when the new road should be made as good and passable as the old road, by the petitioners, to the acceptance of the proper township trustee.
A statute enacted in 1855, being section 5051, R. S. 1881, provides: “ Whenever any person shall procure the establishment of a highway, private or public, by a change of one already established on or across-his own land, before the same shall be received by the proper superintendent as such, it shall be made as passable as the old highway, or as nearly so as the nature of the case will admit, of which fact the trustee of the township in which the change is made shall be duly satisfied before such superintendent shall be required to keep it in repair.”
The complaint alleged that it will be seen from reading the record of the board of commissioners, that no notice was given, as provided by law, of the application for the change and vacation, and that, therefore, the board had no jurisdiction to appoint viewers.
This is a collateral attack upon a judgment of a court of record of limited and special jurisdiction. The statute provides, “ Whenever twelve freeholders,” etc., shall petition the board for the location, vacation or change of any highway, “ such board, if it shall be satisfied that due notice of such application has been given by publication,” etc., “ shall appoint three persons to view such highway.” R. S. 1881, section 5015. The presentation of the petition required by the statute gives the board jurisdiction to make this inquiry concerning notice. The giving of the notice is a jurisdictional fact, and if the board has found that due notice was given as provided by the statute, and has proceeded to act by appointing viewers, the decision in regard to notice is conclusive.
It was not alleged that the notice required by law was not given,and that the board did not find that it had been given; and if the record must show that the board did so find, otherwise than by showing that viewers were appointed, it was not alleged that the board’s record did not show that it did so find.
It can not be alleged by way of collateral attack, that it will be seen from reading the board’s record that no notice was given as provided by law. Board, etc., v. Markle, 46 Ind.
The statute provides that iii the petition for the location, change or vacation of a highway, “the names of the owners and occupants or agents of the lands through which the same may pass” shall be set forth. E. S. 1881, section 5001; Hays v. Campbell, 17 Ind. 430.
The complaint alleged that the petition did not set out the full names of all the parties and owners of the lands through which said change would pass. If the failure to set forth in the petition the names of all the owners and occupants or agents of such lands can be ground for collateral attack, and that, too, by one not alleging that he was not himself named, the complaint did not show a failure to comply with the statute. It might be, notwithstanding what was alleged, that the statute was complied with as to those lands, the owners of which were not named in the petition, by naming the agents thereof.
The question of the passing of the road through enclosures of one year’s standing without the owner’s consent, even if it were alleged that a good way could otherwise be had without departing essentially from the route petitioned for, if not raised before the commissioners, could not be raised in a direct attack by appeal; and whether raised before the commissioners or not, can not be raised in a collateral attack. It is not a question affecting' the jurisdiction of the commissioners. See Crossley v. O’Brien, 24 Ind. 325; Green v. Elliott, 86 Ind. 53.
If it would be a sufficient ground for a joint action by the plaintiffs, that they were not notified by the supervisor according to section 5030, E. S. 1881, to remove their fences, this was not alleged. The fact that they did not know until “ yesterday ” that he would throw down their fences and expose their crops, etc., could not be a sufficient reason for his being restrained by injunction from doing such acts.
Per Curiam. — It is ordered, upon the foregoing opinion, that the judgment be reversed, at the costs of the appellees, and the cause is remanded, with instruction to sustain the demurrer to the complaint.