188 Ind. 345 | Ind. | 1919
— This cause was before this court in the case of Thompson v. Ryan (1914), 183 Ind. 232, 108 N. E. 98. The record discloses that on September 16, 1909, appellee Ryan and others filed in the circuit court
The appellant and others filed separate motions for a new trial. These several motions were overruled and the remonstrants each took separate and severál exceptions to the ruling. In each case thirty days’ time was given to file appeal bonds, and sixty days’ time to file all bills of exceptions. The remonstrants other than Moore do not appeal. The appellant Moore appeals from the judgment establishing the drain. The only error prop'erly assigned and not waived is that the court erred in. overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial. Among the reasons for a new trial appellant alleges that the decision of the court is not sustained by sufficient evidence.
The remonstrance of A. O. Moore filed October 4, 1917, after setting out a description of his lands assessed for said improvement, alleges that each and every separate tract of said remonstrant’s land assessed as benefited, as above set forth, will not be benefited to the
In the trial of appellant’s remonstrance the only evidence on behalf of the petitioners was the commissioners’ report setting out the separate tracts of appellant’s land, and the amounts assessed as benefits against each of said tracts. The only witness testifying in regard to said assessments was the appellant himself, and his testimony places the benefits to said land, and each tract thereof, at less than the assessments thereon, making a total amount of $941.30 assessed against all of said land more than it would be benefited by the proposed work if accomplished. The appellant contends that “the drainage commissioners’ report was only prinia, facie evidence of the things therein contained, and that -its only office and effect was to compel the remonstrants to go forward with evidence sustaining the remonstrance.” When such evidence has been introduced sustaining the remonstrance, the presumption growing out of the prima facie case has served its function and cannot be considered for the purpose of weighing the evidence or for any other purpose. The presumption growing out of a prima facie case remains only so long as there is no substantial evidence to the contrary. When that is offered the presumption disappears, and, unless met by further proof, there is nothing to base a finding solely upon it. Potts v. Pardee (1917), 220 N. Y. 431, 116 N. E. 78.
In the case of City of Rockford v. Mower (1913), 259 Ill. 604, 102 N. E. 1032, which was a suit to recover compensation for land taken for public improvements, the court says: “In this case, however, the amount awarded as compensation for the land taken was. $500, while the lowest value fixed by any of the witnesses was $2,000. The report of the commissioners cannot be regarded as evidence either upon the question of value or upon the question of damages. While it is true that section 23 of
Among the reasons for a new trial appellant alleges that said report of the drainage commissioners is not according to law in that the following provision in said report will have a tendency to prejudice bidders against said improvement, which provision of said, drainage commissioners’ report reads as follows:
“The contractor shall maintain the ditch and every part thereof to the full width and depth required by this report until the entire ditch and all that part embraced in this contract shall have been completed as required by this report, and the ditch is finally accepted as completed by the court, and a sufficient percentage of the contract price shall be withheld until the contractor complies with this requirement, and if he shall fail to do so, the drainage commissioners shall expend sufficient of the contract price to complete or clean ■ out said ditch and deduct the amodnt from the contract price.’’'
That the amount held back is indefinite and no contractor will know how much is to be held out at the time he makes the bid; that no contractor who takes the lower portion will know how long he will have to maintain it against the contractor who takes the upper portion. That the contractor who takes the upper portion or some lateral will not know how long he will have to maintain it until the entire ditch is constructed. This was one of appellant’s causes of remonstrance.
Appellant contends that the foregoing provision in the report of the commissioners was in violation of the law and by reason of said provision it came within the first statutory cause for remonstrance, and that said report was not according to law; that said report conferred upon the superintendent of construction dangerous discretionary power and opened the door to fraud.
In the case of Broerman v. Spilker (1915), 183 Ind. 88, 108 N. E. 226, it was held that the court erred in overruling a remonstrance assailing a provision in the report of the drainage commissioners which provided that the interpretation of the plans and specifications by the engineer, who planned and designed the work, should be the accepted interpretation, and in that case the court said: “The law provides that one of the commissioners shall be a competent engineer. It also provides for a definite, accurate report, fixing metes and bounds, courses and distances, grades and bench marks, with a computation of the cubic yards of excavation, and cost thereof. Provision is made for the services of an engineer to secure accuracy and definiteness to the end that the parties may know in advance the precise character of the proposed drain, and that contractors may have a definite basis for bidding. The engineer’s duties are fully performed on the filing of the report, and the contractor is invested with no more power over the plans and specifications than is a stranger.”
Judgment reversed, and the Jasper Circuit Court is directed to sustain appellant’s motion for a new trial, and to sustain appellant’s remonstrance, and refer the petition back to the commissioners for an amended or new report.
Note. — Reported in 123 N. E. 642.