19 Ind. App. 8 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1898
— Appellees filed a petition in the commissioners’ court of Hamilton county, Indiana, asking for the location of a highway. Proper notice of the filing of the petition was given, find the board of com
Appellant filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled. The correctness of «this ruling of the lower court is the question presented to this court by the record and the argument of counsel. The motion for a new trial is based principally upon the alleged error of the court in excluding certain testimony offered by the appellant. This testimony was offered by appellant, and tended to prove specific damages to appellant by reason of the location of the proposed highway.
One Thomas H. Perry, a witness called by appellant, and who was appellant’s chief engineer, was asked upon his examination in chief, among others, the following questions: “Mr. Perry, I wish you would state to the jury what changes, if any, would be necessary in the drainage on your right of way, if this
“Comes now the Lake Erie & Western Railroad Company, one of the parties affected by said proposed highway, and remonstrates against the establishment of said highway, and the approval of the report of the viewers filed herein on the 5th day of April, 1895, upon the following grounds: (1) * * * *; (2) * * * * ; (3) That said proposed highway will in no way benefit the remonstrant, but, upon the other hand, will damage it in a large amount, to wit, the sum of five hundred dollars ($500.00). [Signed.] L. E. & W. Railroad Co., by Shirts & Kilbourne, Attys.”
The question then arises, was appellant entitled to prove the specific items of damage under the general allegation of his remonstrance for damages?
The statute under which the landowner may claim damages is as follows: “If any person through whose land such highway or change may pass shall feel aggrieved thereby, such person may, at any time before final action of the board thereon, set forth such grievances by way of remonstrance, and the board shall, thereupon, appoint three disinterested freeholders as reviewers, and assign a day and place for them to meet.” Section 5019, Horner’s R. S. 1897. And any person aggrieved by any decision of the board may
The board in this cause, without any objection upon the part of the appellees, acted upon the remonstrance filed by appellant; appointed viewers to assess appellant’s damages, if any, received the report and approved it. Appellees in no manner objected to the remonstrance. They neither moved to strike it from the files, nor to make it more specific, no such motion, nor, in fact any motion tending to test the sufficiency of the remonstrance was filed in either the commissioners’ court or the circuit court. For this reason, we think, appellees waived all defects in the remonstrance covered by the objections made by them to the admission of the evidence offered. After appellees had gone to trial upon a remonstrance which was sufficient to inform them that appellant was claiming damages on account of the location of a highway for which they, appellees, were asking to have established, and without having in any manner, in either court, sought to have the allegation as to damages made more specific, it was then too late to object to the proof offered by appellant to sustain its claim.