55 Ind. App. 118 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1913
Appellant brought this action against appellees in the Superior Court of Delaware County. The trial court held the complaint to be insufficient and appellant, refusing to amend or plead over, judgment was rendered against him for costs. The only question presented on appeal is the sufficiency of the complaint. From the allegations of the complaint, it appears that appellant was the owner of certain lands in Delaware County which were in need of drainage and that in February, 1906, he and other persons filed with the board of commissioners of that county a petition for the location, establishment and construction of a ditch under and pursuant to Acts 1905 p. 456. Appellee,- Gough, was at the time, the county surveyor of Delaware County, and ex officio drainage commissioner, and appellees, Drumm, Fimple and Watson, were sureties on his official bond. Appellee, Applegate, was at the time drainage commissioner of such county and appellees, Downing, Nash and Adams, were the sureties on his official bond.
The complaint sets out in detail the proceedings before the board of commissioners of Delaware County showing that on June 4, 1906, the petition was referred to appellees, Gough and Applegate, as drainage commissioners in accordance with the provisions of §3 of the act of 1905, supra, and that on May 1, 1906, they filed with the board their prelimi
In determining the questions thus submitted to them, the drainage commissioners act in much the same capacity as commissioners appointed by a court to make partition of lands, or as commissioners appointed to assess damages in a proceeding for the appropriation of real estate. The determination of the questions submitted to such officers requires the exercise of discretion and judgment. It is well
Where official duties are purely ministerial, and involve the exercise of a certain definite task leaving no room for the exercise of judgment in determining the manner of its performance, a different rule of liability applies. It has accordingly been held that where a court established a ditch and ordered it constructed according to certain plans and specifications, the commissioner to whom it was referred for construction was liable in damages for a failure to have it constructed in accordance with such plans and specifications. Smith v. State, ex rel. (1888), 117 Ind. 167, 19 N. E. 744. Under the facts in this case, the court in proceeding to establish the ditch in question was exercising a portion of the sovereign power of the State and so also were the commissioners of drainage while acting under the authority of the court in determining and reporting the best and cheapest method of drainage. They were required only to discharge
Note.—Reported in 103 N. E. 448. See, also, 14 Cyc. 1051, 1057.