192 Ind. 136 | Ind. | 1922
A petition was filed in the superior court of Laporte county, Indiana, asking to widen and deepen an existing dredged ditch along the course of the Kankakee river on the boundary line between Starke and Laporte counties a distance of twenty miles or more northeastwardly from the Porter county line, and to widen and deepen the channel of Yellow river from a point near the town of Knox to its junction with the Kankakee, and to build levees on each side of the proposed ditches thus to be dug, and also to construct a lateral ditch ten miles long in Laporte county, emptying into the Kankakee river below its junction with Yellow river. What purported to be a remonstrance by two-thirds of the landowners affected was filed July 24, 1915, on which the court found against the remonstrators. On June 6, 1919, within twenty days after an amendment of §3 of the drainage law (Acts 1919 p. 433) took effect, another remonstrance was filed, signed by 3,300 landowners who claimed to be two-thirds of those affected.
As such a remonstrance had been filed in this proceeding in 1915, a second one filed in 1919 was not authorized by the language quoted, even though the latter was signed by persons not originally named by the petition as parties. Therefore it is not necessary to consider and we do not decide whether or not the fact that the later act was merely a re-enactment of language contained in the act of 1907, there used with reference to drainage proceedings begun under an earlier statute which did not provide for filing a “two-thirds remonstrance,” would have prevented such language from having any application, even if a prior remonstrance had not been filed.
Appellant, Samuel A. Craigmile, was not a party to the original petition, but was first brought in as a party by a report of the drainage commissioners, filed November 30, 1918. On December 10, 1918, he (as well as others) filed a remonstrance. On December 27, 1918, said Craigmile filed a verified “motion to dismiss proceedings,” which-alleged that certain other actions for the construction of proposed drainage improvements were pending in the circuit courts of Starke and Laporte counties, respectively, at the time the petition in this action was filed, and that because of such facts those courts had prior jurisdiction over so much of the work of drainage reported by the commissioners in this action
The statute under which this proceeding was begun, and as it has been amended, expressly authorizes the drainage commissioners, in laying out a system of drainage, “to determine that the method of drainage shall be by removing obstructions from a natural or artificial watercourse; or diverting such watercourse from its channel, by deepening, widening or changing the channel of such watercourse; by constructing an artificial channel, with or without arms or branches; * * * by constructing levees or dykes; or by any or all of such methods combined” (Our italics). §6142 Bums 1914, Acts 1907 p. 508; Acts 1919 p. 433; See Acts (Sp. Sess.) 1920 p. 26. And the power of the court to consolidate with the original petition any supplemental petitions asking for additional drainage improvements which, when completed, will constitute part of the same system of drainage is expressly recognized by the statute. §6148- Burns 1914, Acts 1907 p. 508, §8.
The original petition asked for the drainage of the
The following map or plan, on page 142, while not drawn to scale nor very accurate, will illustrate the proposed improvement as finally established.
It will be observed that this does not provide for widening, deepening, straightening or otherwise changing the existing channel of the Kankakee river. It leaves that channel just as it was before, but provides for digging three other ditches and building two levees, parallel with it, within the basin of the river as originally meandered by the United States survey, all of which are designed to help carry off, along that basin, the water which would naturally flow to the Kankakee river.
The judgment is affirmed.