158 Ind. 159 | Ind. | 1902
Appellant was a remonstrant in. a proceeding instituted by the appellees under the drainage act of 1885 (§5623 et seq. Burns 1901), for the construction of a ditch. The judgment of the circuit court is assailed for apparent want of jurisdiction in this: (1) Because there was no petition on file when the primary notice was given; (2) because on the day stated in the notice for docketing there was no petition on file to be docketed, nor any action taken in the proceeding; and (3) because the petition was filed on the same day it was docketed, which was three days
November 16th the commissioners’ report, with the various pending remonstrances, was submitted to the court for trial: Appellant requested in writing upon its part a special finding of facts and conclusions of law. November 21st the court announced a general finding on the other remonstrances. November 22nd a special finding of facts and conclusions of law were filed on appellant’s remonstrance,
Whatever the fact may be with respect to the presence or absence of the petition from the clerk’s office at the time the notice of filing the petition was served or on the day set for docketing, or the subsequent filing in court and docketing of the petition on the same day, appellant is not in a situation to raise any question concerning it. The record shows that appellant was personally served with such notice twenty
Invoking questions in the right of others against the validity of a judgment for want of notice or other jurisdictional fact is a collateral attack by the party doing so, and as against a collateral attack a finding of the court that notice has been given, or other facts necessary to jurisdiction has been established, is conclusive, unless the record affirmatively discloses that the contrary is true. Steele v. Empson, 142 Ind. 397; Perkins v. Hayward, 132 Ind. 95, 103; Hackett v. State, 113 Ind. 532; Pickering v. State, 106 Ind. 228.
Appellant argues that, in the absence of am affirmative showing that a petition was on file in the clerk’s office when the notice was served and on the day fixed for docketing, a notice that such was the fact amounts to no notice at all. This position is unsound for the reason that when it appears — as it does in this case — that the court acted upon the notice and upon the regularity in presenting the petition, it must, in a collateral attack, be conclusively presumed that such notice and the time and manner of presenting the petition were such as the law requires; and the fact that such action was taken, and the court proceeded in the cause, is sufficient, without a formal entry declaring that such steps were taken in accordance with the statute. Carr v. State, 103 Ind. 548; Carr v. Boone, 108 Ind. 241; Updegraff v. Palmer, 101 Ind. 181. Furthermore, appellant, having been served with notice and having appeared to the
II. The State has the undoubted right to authorize the improving of a drain across the right of way of a railroad company by deepening and widening a natural channel, as in this ease, and such an act is not a violation of the State or federal Constitution. §5153 Burns 1901, Spec. 5; Lake Erie, etc., R. Co. v. Cluggish, 143 Ind. 347; Evansville, etc., R. Co. v. State, 149 Ind. 276; Baltimore, etc., R. Co. v. Board, etc., 156 Ind. 260.
III. Appellant assigns forty-five reasons for a new trial. The first five count on the overruling of its motion to- set aside the court’s general finding upon its remonstrance, and the failure of the court to make a special finding as re
Except two, the other reasons relate to the action of the court in the admission and exclusion of proffered testimony. Over appellant’s objection, two witnesses were permitted to testify that the proposed drain would carry off the water from the side ditches of appellant’s railroad that then had no outlet, and as to the general sufficiency of the drain to convey the water away from the vicinity of appellant’s railroad, and thus make unnecessary another culvert or bridge in the neighborhood, then being maintained by appellant. All this tended to show benefits, and was .competent.
One Rosencranz, as an expert civil engineer, experienced in railroad construction and maintenance in the Kankakee valley, wherein the drain in controversy is situate, was permitted to give the relative cost of the maintenance of a railroad bed made of muck soil when saturated by seepage from standing water and when dry and free from standing water; also the relative value of the property under the two conditions. This testimony also tended to establish benefits, and was properly admitted.
The other reasons for a new trial all relate to the exclusion of testimony offered by appellant. All of these reasons are unavailing, because in each instance, except two unimportant ones, the exception was improperly reserved. The record is uniformly in this condition. The question is propounded by appellant. The petitioners object upon stated grounds. “Objection sustained. Exception reserved.” After which an offer to prove is made. It has been many times decided that this sort of record presents no question. Gunder v. Tibbits, 153 Ind. 591; Whitney v. State, 154 Ind. 513; Rinkenberger v. Meyer, 155 Ind. 152; Wilson v.
There is no ground for argument on the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the finding.
Judgment affirmed.