70 Ind. App. 569 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1919
This action was brought by the appellant against the appellees in the circuit court of Fulton county, Indiana. The amended complaint is in one paragraph and is in substance as follows: The
To this amended complaint the appellees filed their demurrer upon the grounds: (1) That the court has no jurisdiction of the defendants or the subject-mat
The appellees’ demurrer was submitted to and sustained by the court, and the appellant refusing to plead further and electing to stand by his complaint, judgment was rendered in favor of the appellees and against the appellant on such demurrer, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
The only error assigned is the ruling of the court upon the appellee’s demurrer to the complaint.
Appellees concede that by statute the courts have authority to make all proper judgments, sentences, decrees,' orders and injunctions, and to issue all processes, and to do such other acts as may be proper to carry into effect the same in conformity with the Constitution and laws of this state, but that such
The appellees say that the subject-matter of this suit is wholly situate in Pulaski county and that the Pulaski Circuit Court alone for that reason has jurisdiction. The appellhnt contends that the action is properly brought in the Fulton Circuit Court, and cites as his authority §309 Burns 1914, §307 P. S. 1881, which provides that actions for the determination in any form of rights or interest in real property and for injuries thereto must be commenced in the county in which the subject of the action, or some part thereof, is situated.
It has been repeatedly held that actions for trespass upon land must be brought in the county in which the land is situated. The case of Kinser v. Dewitt (1893), 7 Ind. App. 597, 34 N. E. 1014, was an action for damages for depositing dirt upon land. Keaton v. Snider (1895), 14 Ind. App. 66, 42 N. E. 372, was an action for damages for the destruction of crops. Indiana, etc., R. Co. v. Foster (1886), 107 Ind. 430, 8 N. E. 264, was for damages by fire from a locomotive. DuBreuil v. Pennsylvania Co. (1892), 130 Ind. 137, 29 N. E. 909, was an action for damages resulting from fire from a locomotive; in this case the land being located in the State of Illinois. In each of the foregoing cases it was held that the action was properly brought in the county in which the real estate was located. But §1438 Burns 1914, §1318 R. S. 1881, provides that, when the subject-matter of any suit shall be situate in two or more counties, the court which shall first take cognizance thereof shall retain the same. This enactment by the legislature of our state
The subject-matter of this action consists of two principle facts, the one being the construction of a dam, which was located in Pulaski county, and the other the resultant injury, by such erection, to real estate which was located in Fulton county. "Where two material facts are necessary to give a good cause of action, and they take place.in different counties, the cause of action may be said to arise in either county, and, applying this principle of law, it has been held that/ where ■ an injury has been committed in one county to real property situate in another, or where the-action is founded on two or more material facts, which take place in different counties, the venue may be rested in either. Foot v. Edwards (1855), 9 Fed. Cas. 358, No. 4,908. 1 Saunders, Pl. and Ev. 413.
The rule is stated in 1 Chitty, Pleading (16th ed.) 281, as follows: “Where * * * an injury has been caused by an act done in one county to land, &c. situate in another; or whenever the action is founded upon two or more material facts, which took place in different counties, the' venue may be laid in either.”
' The rulé as stated in Bulwer’s Case (1793), 7 Coke 2a, is as follows: ■ That “where the action is founded upon two thing's done in several counties, and both are material oh traversable, and the one without the other doth not maintain the action, there the plaintiff may choose to bring his action in which of the counties he will.” This rule is discussed at length in the case of Rundle v. Delaware & R. Canal (1849), 21 Fed. Cas. 6, No. 12,139, which case approves the doctrine.
The case of Smith v. Southern R. Co. (1909), 136 Ky. 162, 123 S. W. 678, 26 L. R. A. (N. S.) 927, was an
The case of Ruckman v. Green (1876), 9 Hun 225, holds that an action may be maintained in the State of New York for an injury to land situate therein, though the business which occasions the injury and constitutes the nuisance complained of is carried on upon land situate in the State of New Jersey.
. In the case of Thayer v. Brooks (1848), 17 Ohio 489, 49 Am. Dec. 474, the act complained of was done in the State of Pennsylvania, the injury which was occasioned by the act was sustained in Ohio, and in that case it was held that the suit will lie in either state, the court stating that, “ ‘when an injury has been caused by an act done in one county, to land, etc., situated in another, the venue may be laid in either.’ ”
In the case of Smith v. Southern R. Co., supra, it is held that a statute making an action for injury to real property local will not be arbitrarily enforced where the injury results from a cause or act arising or occurring in a state other than the one in which the property is situated. This case has an extended case note discussing jurisdictional questions such as the one in the instant case.
It will be readily seen that under either of the sections of the statutes above quoted, or under either of the lines of authorities cited above, the plaintiff’s action was properly brought in Fulton county, for an injury sustained to his lands in that county by a trespass committed in Pulaski county, and we hold that the circuit court of Fulton county had jurisdiction of the action.
This level, of course, was the level at which the lake was left by the construction and reconstruction of the ditch which was the outlet for the lake, and it was this level with which the defendants are charged with having- interfered by the construction of the dam in June, 1905, and by the reconstruction thereof in 1910, in the first instance the water in said lake being- raised from twelve to eighteen inches above said established level, and in the second to a height of twelve inches above the height occasioned by the original construction. This action has nothing to do with the level of the lake as determined by its natural outlet.
It is specifically averred in the complaint that the public drain constructed thirty or forty years before this action was commenced, and reconstructed about twenty years before, served as the outlet for the lake into the Tippecanoe river, and that the dam was erected at the outlet of the lake and adjacent to said lake, and, though appellees contend that there is no averment in the complaint that the dam as constructed and reconstructed crossed any ditch, or any part of
In its present form we hold that the complaint is sufficient for the recovery of damages against the defendants, but that it is insufficient for the equitable relief by way of abatement and injunction which the plaintiff seeks, and under the authority of Miller v. Gates (1916), 62 Ind. App. 37, 112 N. E. 538, we hold that.the complaint, although insufficient for injunctive relief, states facts sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to a judgment for damages, and therefore it will withstand the demurrer for want of facts. The demurrer to the complaint should have been overruled.
The judgment is reversed, with instructions to the trial court to overrule the demurrer to the complaint, and for further proceedings.