162 Ind. 399 | Ind. | 1904
A petition for the opening of a street in the town of Wolcott, signed by more than twelve resident freeholders, was presented to the board of trustees of that town. The board thereupon appointed three commissioners having the statutory qualifications to appraise and assess the damages and benefits accruing to the owner of any land or lot through which the proposed street was to be opened. Such commissioners, before they proceeded to perform their duties, took and subscribed the oath prescribed by the statute, which oath was indorsed on the certificate of their appointment and filed with the clerk of the board. The requisite notice of the appraisement to be made, a complete description of the premises to be viewed, and the time and place of the examination and hearing, was given to the commissioners and to the appellant, as the owner of land to be appropriated. The commissioners met at the time and place designated in the notice, and proceeded to examine the real estate proposed to be appropriated, and to receive evidence touching the questions
Error is assigned upon the sufficiency of the facts stated in the transcript of the proceedings of the board of trustees to constitute a complaint, the rulings of the court upon demurrers, the refusal of the court to grant appellant a new trial, and the denial of the motion in arrest of judgment.
The fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, nineteenth, twentieth, twenty-first, and twenty-second assignments of error present no question. All of them allege the unconstitutionality of the statute and proceedings by virtue of which the appropriation of appellant’s, land was effected. Such infirmities, if .they exist, can not be presented by way of independent assignments of error. Standish v. Bridgewater, 159 Ind. 386.
The question of the validity of the statute, proceedings, and judgment, however, is properly raised by the assign
The transcript of the proceedings of the hoard of trustees shows that all the steps required by the statute, with perhaps one exception, were regularly and properly taken. ETo formal resolution that the public convenience required the opening of the street was necessary. ETor was it essential that a preliminary order should be made declaring that the prayer of the petition was granted. ETeither of these formalities is prescribed by the statute. The act provides that if, upon petition, the board of trustees of any town may be of opinión that public convenience requires the opening of a new street or alley, the board shall appoint three commissioners, residents of such town, who shall be disinterested freeholders, to appraise and assess the damages and benefits accruing to the owner of any land or lot through which the street or alley is proposed to be constructed, or any' structure thereon appropriated for such street or alley. §4405 Burns 1901. The order appointing the commissioners was a sufficient indication of the opinion of the board that the public convenience required the opening of the street, and that the petition was granted.
As is said in Dillon, Mun. Corp. (4th ed.), §601: “In exercising the power of eminent domain, the city council need not preface their action, as, for example, laying out of a highway or street, by declaring that they find the same to be necessary or expedient. This necessity is sufficiently implied in their action on the subject, inasmuch as they can act only in such a case.”
The statute requires that the report of the commissioners shall contain the following particulars: (1) The value of the land appropriated; (2) what real estate, if any, would be benefited — specifying the same in parcels, with the name of the owner, if known — and the proportion of benefits each owner receives, and the proportion of damages
No motion was made by the appellant before the board of trustees or in the circuit court to set aside or vacate the report of the commissioners, and, in tho absence of such motion, the only question to be determined in the circuit court was the amount of damages sustained. Swinney v. Ft. Wayne, etc., R. Co., 59 Ind. 205; Werley v. Huntington Water-Works Co., 138 Ind. 148; Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Jones, 103 Ind. 386. No motion having been made to set aside the report and for a new assessment and appraisement, we think that the transcript of the proceedings filed in the circuit court contained a sufficient statement of facts to authorize the appropriation of the land and an inquiry as to the amount of damages sustained by the appellant.
The circumstance that the proposed street was to be laid out across the appellant’s railroad was not of itself sufficient to defeat such appropriation. Elliott, Roads & Sts. (2d ed.), §451, note 4.
We have no hesitation in pronouncing the act authorizing the opening of streets under which these proceedings were taken (§§4404-4°410 Burns 1901) constitutional. The purpose for which private property may be taken under this statute is strictly public. Notice to the owner is
The hearing secured by the statute must be understood to be one affording to the owner of the real estate proposed to be taken a sufficient legal opportunity to establish by evidence the amount of his damages or benefits. The statute seems to meet every requirement of the federal and state Constitutions. Statutes of this character have been enacted by nearly every state of the Union, and their validity has been sustained by numerous decisions.
“A municipal corporation may be constitutionally, invested with the power to open and establish, by compulsory acquisition or by purchase, such streets or parks as its council may judge to be expedient or necessary.” Dillon, Hun. Corp. (4th ed.), §602.
“Every species of property which the public needs may require, and which government can not lawfully appropriate under any other right, is subject to be seized and appropriated under the right of eminent domain. Lands for the public ways; timber, stone, and gravel with which to make or improve the public ways; buildings standing-in the way of contemplated improvements, or which for any other reason it becomes necessary to take, remove, or destroy for the public good; streams of water; corporate franchises; and generally, it may be said, legal and equitable rights of every description are liable to be thus appropriated.” Cooley, Const. Lim. (3d ed.), 526; Rubottom v. M’Clure, 4 Blackf, 505; McCormick v. President, etc., 1 Ind. 48; Snyder v. President, etc., 6 Ind. 237; Rassier
Only a portion ®f the land owned by the appellant having been taken, the jury had a right to consider the amount of benefit t® that portion which remained. If it was found that the appellant was benefited instead of damnified by the appropriation, no damages should have been allowed. Cooley, Const. Dim. (3d ed.), 565; Rassier v. Grimmer, supra; Forsyth v. Wilcox, supra.
The question whether the appellant did or did not sustain damages by the appropriation of a portion @f its land was properly presented to the jury by the pleadings and evidence in the cause, and, the fact having been determined by them, we can discover no substantial ground for disturbing their verdict.
The court did not err in refusing to give instructions numbered one, two, and three tendered by the appellant. The first was a peremptory direction to the jury to return a verdict for the appellant. The second and third declared that the measure of damages resulting to the appellant by reason of the opening of the street across its right of way and tracks was the difference in value of that part of its railroad before the street was opened and afterwards, and that the evidence upon that question was undisputed. None
Some minor questions are discussed by counsel for appellant, but we find in none of them a sufficient reason for a reversal of the judgment.
We find no error in the record. Judgment affirmed.