154 Ind. 101 | Ind. | 1900
Appellants and others, in 1896, filed in the court below their petition for the drainage of lands in Starke and Marshall counties, under the drainage act of 1885 (Acts 1885, p. 129), §5622 et seq., Burns 1894. In May, 1897, the drainage commissioners filed their report, which named lands owned by Sterling R. Holt as affected by said work which were not named in the petition, and the court fixed June 4, 1897, for hearing said report. Appellee was not named as the owner of any lands described either in the petition or the report of the drainage commissioners. On June 11, 1897, appellee filed what is denominated a special plea in abatement, in which it was alleged, among other tilings, that appellee was and had been a resident of Marshall county, Indiana, since December, 1897, and has kept and maintained an office in said county since that date; that said appellee is the owner in fee simple of the lands described in the report of the draináge commissioners as owned by Sterling R. Holt, and which were assessed with benefits in a large amount, as shown by said report; that said lands have stood in its name on the tax duplicates and
Section 5629 Burns 1894, §4279 Homer 1897, expressly provides that any one interested in a drainage proceeding-may file “a supplemental petition showing that lands not mentioned in the original report are affected, as he believes, by such drainage, in which case the court shall require such person to give such notice as it may deem proper and sufficient to the persons affected thereby, and shall refer the same to the drainage commissioners for a report, and any and all proceedings may be had thereon, and orders and decrees made therein, the same as if it were an original petition.” After the court had, on the application of appellee, set aside and vacated the benefits assessed against appellee’s lands (which were named in the report as the lands of Holt) said lands, in contemplation of said §5629 (4279), s-upra, were not mentioned in the original report of the drainage commissioners. The court, by said order vacating the assessment against said lands, did not adjudge that they were not benefited by the proposed drain, nor that they could not be assessed, but only that the benefits assessed to the lands of appellee were invalid for want of personal notice to appellee. Whether or not this decision of the court was erroneous, we need not, and do not, determine, as the same is not called in question on this appeal by any assignment of error. The effect of the judgment and order of the court in vacating said assessment was to leave appellee’s lands the same as if they had never been mentioned in said original report, and without any adjudication as to whether they would or would not be benefited by said proposed drain. Said appellants were, therefore, expressly authorized
Appellee has filed a motion to dismiss this appeal for the reason that the same is not from an appealable interlocutory order, or from a final judgment.
Before the motion to dismiss said supplemental petition and set aside and quash the summons and return was sustained, the court had made an order establishing the proposed work, and approving all the assessments made, except those against the land of appellee which were set aside and vacated. This was a final judgment from which an appeal could have been taken in the original case.
When the court dismissed the petition after the work was established, the dismissal was a final judgment within the meaning of the statute. If such dismissal had been before the work was established and assessments approved, then it may be that no appeal could have been taken until after the court had established the work and approved the assessments.
It follows from what we have said, and the authorities cited, that the court erred in sustaining appellee’s motion to dismiss said supplemental petition and set aside and quash said summons and return.
Judgment reversed, with instractions to overrule appellee’s said motion, and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.