157 Ind. 476 | Ind. | 1901
Appellants as resident taxpayers of the incorporated town of Bourbon sought to enjoin the town, together with its board of trustees, from carrying out a certain scheme or plan whereby it was to construct or purchase a system of water-works and an electric light plant for said town, and thereby incur an indebtedness in excess of two per cent, of its taxables, all, as asserted, in violation of appellants’ rights as guaranteed by article 13 of the State Constitution, which prohibits municipal corporations from becoming indebted in excess of two per cent., etc.
The complaint is in four paragraphs, and, in the main, proceeds upon the theory that the proposed scheme which
Appellants have filed a voluminous brief wherein they argue and contend .that, under the facts as disclosed by the special finding, the scheme entered into by the board of trustees of said town and the Bourbon Water and Light Company is in contravention of said article 13 of the Constitution and thereby their rights, guaranteed thereunder are impaired.
This cause was submitted on March 15, 1901, and on May 14th following appellants filed their brief. Appellees, under the rules of this court, were allowed ninety days after the submission of this appeal to file a brief, but none appears to have been filed by them during that period, and no request thereafter was made by them to file a brief, and the fact is that no argument whatever, by a brief or otherwise, has been presented by appellees to sustain the judgment rendered in their favor by the trial court. In this respect they are wholly in default, and, under the circumstances, we are left unaided by'them in considering and determining the constitutional question herein involved and elaborately discussed by appellants’ counsel. This neglect on the part of the appellees is inexcusable, and is violative of the rule declared by this court in Berkshire v. Caley, ante,
Consequently all party appellees who are interested in appeals pending in this court must remember that this rule will be enforced, unless this court, upon a proper showing, is satisfied that the neglect in question is excusable. It follows, therefore, from the enforcement of the rule announced in that appeal that appellees’ default herein must be accepted and deemed to be a confession upon their part of the error assigned in this cause, and the judgment below, so far as it is adverse to appellants, is accordingly reversed, at the cost of the appellees, but without prejudice to either party. The cause is ordered to be remanded to' the lower court for further proceedings'.