174 Ind. 525 | Ind. | 1910
This was a prosecution in the lower court in the name of the State against appellants, Thomas M. Mc-Culloch, Philip Strack and George B. Gardner, members of the board of public works of the city of New Albany, for an indirect contempt of the Ployd Circuit Court, alleged to have been committed by them in failing to obey a peremptory writ of mandate of said court, commanding them to remove all obstructions upon a certain alley in said city of New Albany.
The proceedings were instituted in the lower court on November 13, 1909, upon the affidavit of Prank Green. This affidavit charged that on June 10, 1909, in an action in the Floyd Circuit Court, brought by the State of Indiana, on the relation of affiant, Frank Green, against defendants, members of the board of public works of the city of New
It was further charged by affiant that all the obstructions which defendants were instructed to remove, except one voluntarily removed by George Hartman, yet remain in and obstruct said alley, and that defendants, as such board of public works of the city of New Albany, have wholly failed and refused to comply with the order of said Floyd Circuit Court contained in such peremptory writ of mandate. Upon the filing of this affidavit the Floyd Circuit Court ordered the cause to be placed upon its docket, and cited defendants to appear before said court on November 20, 1909, then and there to show cause why they should not be punished for contempt of court. In compliance with the citation, defendants appeared in court and filed a duly verified answer in discharge of the citation to show cause. By said answer defendants alleged the following facts: They are, and for the year last past have been, members of, and comprise, the board of public works of the city of New Albany, Indiana. On Thursday June 10, 1909, a peremptory writ of mandate in the cause of the State of Indiana, on relation of Frank Green, versus Thomas McCulloch, Philip Strack and George B. Gardner was served upon them by the sheriff of Floyd county. The first regular meeting of the board of public works was held on June 12, 1909. At said meeting a resolution was introduced and adopted by the board of public works requiring the police department of said city to notify all persons to remove any fences, buildings or obstructions which they had upon the alley in controversy in said city of New Albany. The police de
The defendants state in their answer that within a few days thereafter, at the next regular meeting of the board, Charles Umbreit appeared before said board and reported that all the obstructions were removed from said alley except one building, and that he had a contract, with a person named, to remove said building, which would be done within a few days. Defendants stated that other property owners along said alley had notified different members of the board that all obstructions had been removed from the alley, and defendants fully believed that their orders had been complied with, that the police department had executed said orders of the board, and that said matter had been ended. They further stated that the alley had never before been opened and was not well defined, and that they had no personal knowledge of the exact limits thereof; that after said action of the board no notice or information of any kind came to the board that any obstructions in said alley had not been removed, until the filing of the affidavit herein by Frank Green on November 13; that from June until November members of the board believed that the order of the Floyd Circuit Court had been fully complied with, and that their intention in having the order passed and the notice served was fully and completely to comply with the orders of this court.
It is further stated in the answer that defendants, on November 13, 1909, upon being served with notice that there still remained obstructions in said alley, called a special meeting of the board on November 17, 1909, and passed the following resolution :
“Whereas, after the decision of the Floyd Circuit Court in the case of The State of Indiana, on the rela*529 tion of Frank Green, versus Thomas M. McCulloch et al., and upon mandate being issued, the board of works of the city of New Albany, on June 12, 1909, passed an order requiring the property owners to remove all obstructions from the alley between State street and Walnut street, running from Albany street southwardly across Blair street and Washington street to a twenty-foot cartway, and that said order of the board be served by the police department upon the property owners, which was done, and whereas, it was afterwards reported to the board by certain of the property owners along such alley that all obstructions had been removed, and whereas, it has now come to the knowledge of this board that certain of the property owners have failed to remove obstructions from said alley, and whereas, there is an uncertainty as to the line and limits of said alley. Now, therefore, be it resolved, by the board of public works that the city engineer at once run the line of such alley according to the plat, and that the property owners having any obstructions in said alley be given one day’s notice by the clerk to remove them and if any person fails to obey said order and remove such obstructions, that the police department at once remove all such obstructions, and that the expense of said removal be collected from such property owners so failing to remove said obstructions.”
Defendants further say that, after service of notice of the last resolution, the city engineer of New Albany located the lines of said alley as directed, and thereupon the property owners along said alley, as defendants are informed, removed all buildings, fenees and other structures and obstructions from said alley; that they have never at any time intended or had any thought of disobeying the process of this court, but believed that all obstructions had been removed from said alley before July 1, 1909, and that neither the relator in the former action nor any one else informed them to the contrary; that this board fully complied with the orders of this court by ordering said obstructions removed, and believed and were given to understand that all obstructions had been removed within ten days after
There was a trial by the court, and upon the evidence heard the court found defendants guilty of an indirect contempt of court, as charged in the affidavit, and assessed a fine of $25 against each of them. For the recovery of the fine assessed the court rendered a judgment against appellants in favor of the State, and further adjudged that they pay all costs.
Appellants each filed a separate motion for a new trial, assigning therein, among other reasons, the following: (1) Insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the finding of the court, and that the finding was contrary to law. (2) That the court erred in refusing to discharge each of them. These motions the court denied, and thereupon appellants prosecuted this appeal to the' Supreme Court for reversal of the judgment below. It is first urged by their counsel that the court erred in requiring them to answer and in punishing them for contempt, without first entering against them a formal rule to show cause.
Thereafter Prank Green, relator therein, who OAvned property abutting on the alley, commenced a suit in the
On November 13, 1909, relator filed an affidavit, in the Floyd Circuit Court alleging therein that appellants had failed and refused to remove the obstructions from said alley. This appears to have been the first information appellants received that the obstructions had not been removed. After being advised by this affidavit and the citation issued thereon that the obstructions had not all been removed from said alley, appellants convened, as the hoard of public works, on November 17, 1909, and passed another resolution, requiring the police department to notify the ■ property Owners to remove the remaining obstructions within one day. Upon their failing so to do, the obstructions were to he removed by the police and the street commissioner. Within two days thereafter, and before appellants appeared in court and filed their answer, and before the
Section 8960 Burns 1908, Acts 1905 p. 219, §266, makes it the duty of police officers of a city or town, when directed to do so by the proper authority, “to open up any street, alley, watercourse or public grounds, and to remove any and all obstructions therein.” It is further provided that “when any person, after five days’ notice given by order of the board of public works or the common council oE any city or the board of trustees of any town, shall fail, neglect or refuse to remove obstructions from such street, alley * =» * or public grounds, such council or board shall cause the same to be removed at the expense of such person. ’ ’
Briefly to recapitulate: Under the writ of mandamus issued in the original action, it was not intended that appellants should personally remove the obstructions upon the alley in question. All they were required to do as a board, in complying with the writ, was to proceed through the channels provided by law for the removal of obstructions in a public alley or street of a city. This procedure the board appears to have pursued. It is shown that the very next day after the service of the writ of mandamus the board convened, and passed a resolution directing the police department of the city to notify all persons who maintained obstructions in the alley in question to remove them therefrom. In compliance with this resolution the police de
Under the facts in the case, whatever delay, if any, was occasioned in the removal of the obstructions from the alley cannot be said to be attributable to appellants as members of the board of public works. Manifestly, under the facts in the case, the lower court erred in finding appellants guilty of contempt. For which error the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to the lower court to grant a new trial.