128 Ind. 235 | Ind. | 1890
Out of a great mass of irrelevant matter the following material facts may lie extracted from a complaint to which a demurrer was sustained in the court below.
Certain proceedings were instituted before the board of commissioners of Ripley county, in the year 1884, for the construction of a free gravel road, which was to be known as the Versailles and Dillsboro Turnpike. The proceedings resulted in the making of assessments on the contiguous lands, as provided by law, and in the issuing of thirty coupon bonds of the denomination of $500 each upon which to raise money for the construction of the road. The bonds were duly negotiated and sold to the appellants, who paid the full face value therefor, the money paid going into the general fund of the county. It appears that after the bonds had been sold, and the money received by the county, certain persons whose lands had been assessed in order to raise
It is charged in the complaint that some of the land owners, whose lands were assessed, have paid part of the amounts assessed into the treasury of the county, but that others refuse to pay anything, and that the officers of the county refuse to place, or continue, the assessments on the tax duplicate, or to collect the assessments, or to apply any of the money received by the county to the payment of the bonds held by the plaintiffs below, which are now due and remain unpaid.
It is also charged that the county has, through its board of commissioners and officers, appropriated about $8,000 of the money received from the sale of the bonds to the use of the county. The relief prayed is that the board of commissioners and officers of the county be compelled to account for all moneys received from the sale of bonds and from assessments, and that they be required to apply the amount applicable to that purpose Avhich remains in the general fund of the treasury, to the payment of the bonds and the interest coupons thereon. There is also a prayer that the judgments enjoining the officers from collecting the assessments on the land benefited be declared void as to the plaintiffs, and that the officers of the county be required to proceed to place the
The facts stated in the complaint invoke the chancery jurisdiction of the court for an accounting by the officers and commissioners of Eipley county with the appellants, in respect to an alleged fund which the latter claimed should in equity be applied to the payment of the bonds held by them.
The proceedings for the construction of the public enterprise in question having resulted in fixing a lien on the lands adjudged to be benefited by the construction of the free turnpike, the lien thus fixed stood as a security for the payment of the bonds which were issued for the purpose of obtaining the money with which to carry forward the work.
Bonds such as those in question are not the obligations of the county. Strieb v. Cox, 111 Ind. 299. The lien fixed by statute upon the lands benefited constitutes a security for the benefit of the bondholders.
Unless the proceedings which resulted in creating the lien which constituted the sole security for the bondholders was absolutely void, the security thereby afforded could not be destroyed, impaired or rendered unavailing without affording an opportunity to those interested to be heard. There is no pretence that the.proceedings were void. The judgments restraining the officers of Eipley county from enforcing the assessments having, as it were, cast a cloud upon the security of the bondholders, they had the right to appeal to a court of equity to protect their property. Besides, some of the land-owners having paid in part, and others having paid nothing, and the whole matter having fallen into a state of confusion, a court of law was not adequate to the task of unraveling the “ tangled skein,” and it was therefore peculiarly a subject for the chancery side of the court, to account with the county and its officers, to reinstate the lien of the as
The rule is, that where a court of chancery takes jurisdiction of a cause for any purpose, it retains it under its control, for all purposes and administers complete relief as the justice of the case may require. Faught v. Faught, 98 Ind. 470 (472).
When a chancery court acquires jurisdiction for any purpose, it will, as a general rule, proceed to determine the whole cause, although in so doing it may decide questions which standing alone would furnish no basis of equitable jurisdiction. Bispham Equity, section 37.
It is quite true that the county can not be held for any part of the cost of constructing a free turnpike, nor can it be made accountable for any loss resulting from the errors or neglect of its officers. Board, etc., v. Fullen, 111 Ind. 410. The complaint, however, does not seek to hold the county liable for the conduct of its officers. It only seeks an accounting with the county and its officers for the money which is alleged to have gone into the general fund of the county, and which in equity and good conscience should be applied t.o the payment of the bonds. Let there be an account taken with the county and its officers, and if it is found that the facts stated in the complaint are true, then the money covered into the general fund of the county belonging to the free turnpike fund should be made available for the purpose of paying the bonds issued in order to obtain money with which to construct the work. Vigo Tp. v. Board, etc., 111 Ind. 170. So if it be found true, as is alleged, that a- valid lien had attached for the security of the appellants which has been obscured or impaired by a judgment, or by judgments to which the bondholders were not parties, the officers whose duty it is. to collect the assessments should be ordered to proceed as the statute requires to place the amount assessed upon the lands benefited upon
The court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint.
Judgment reversed, with costs.
Berkshire, C. J., did not participate in the decision of this cause.