This action was brought by the appellant as trustee of Clay township, LaGrange county, against the appellee for the enforcement of a lien growing out of the repairing of an allotment of a certain public drain in said township and assessed upon certain real estate of the appellee.
The statute under which the lien is claimed provides that all public drains constructed under any law of this State shall be under the control and supervision of the township trustee, whose duty it shall be to see that they are kept clean after allotments thereof shall have been made by the county surveyor as provided in the subsequent section. It is made the duty of the latter official, immediately after the passage of the act, to view and examine every such drain in his county and to fix the portion thereof that the owner of each tract of land assessed for its construction shall annually be required to clean out and repair. Each ditch or drain is to be cleaned out to a depth and width not less than its original specification. The township trustee shall procure a transcript of the surveyor’s record of allotments of ditches in his township, as soon as practicable after the same is made, and before the first day of August of each year, fix a time within which each allotment shall be completed by the person whose duty it is to perform the same, beginning with the allotment nearest the mouth of the ditch and proceeding in regular succession to the beginning thereof, and of this give notice to such person. It is made the duty of the person to whom the allotment is made to perform such work within the time fixed in the notice, and on failure to do so the trustee
The appellee answered in two paragraphs, the first of which was the general denial. The second paragraph is in substance, as follows: That prior to September 25, 1891, the defendant saw said Norris, trustee as aforesaid, and said to him that he wished he would extend the time of cleaning out his allotment of the said ditch, because it was extremely dry, and that it was impossible to dig in the bottom of said ditch, because said ground was so hard; that said trustee said to defendant that he need not do so until it rained; that he himself could not clean his own allotment until it rained, which did not occur until about the 10th day of October; that when the rain came, he immediately proceeded to clean out said allotment to the' depth that it was originally dug; that he believed he was justified by the direction of said Norris to defer said work until after rains came; that after he had so cleaned out said allotment, the same was accepted by said trustee as completed. Wherefore, defendant prays judgment for his costs.
To this paragraph of answer the appellant demurred, but the demurrer was overruled and the appellant excepted. This ruling is assigned as error.
It is obvious that that portion of the pleading under consideration which undertakes to give an excuse for the delay in performing the work is not sufficient to bar
It is insisted, however, that the same facts which could have been proved under this answer were admissible also under the general denial, which was also pleaded, and that hence there could have been no harm
In Messick v. Midland R. W. Co., 128 Ind. 81,the court says: “No answer was necessary but the general denial, as under that answer in this class of actions all defenses, whether partial or complete, may be shown. In such case, sustaining a demurrer to a good special answer would not be available error; but overruling a demurrer to a bad answer is error for which the case must be reversed.”
See also, Scott v. Stetler, 128 Ind. 385; Tewksburg v. Howard, 138 Ind. 103.
In Abdil v. Abdil, 33 Ind. 460, the court said: “But where bad special answers are held good, it is not perceived that the plaintiff is in any way benefited by the general denial being in. He has no mode of availing himself of the objections to the answer but by demurrer, and that being overruled, if the answer is true in point of fact, his case is at an end. ”
We think the court should have sustained the demurrer to the second paragraph of the answer.
Judgment reversed.