100 Ind. 443 | Ind. | 1885
It is not necessary to set forth with much, particularity the allegations of the complaint of the appellant, for no attack is made upon it in any form. The several paragraphs of the pleading are, in all essential particulars,, substantially alike, and count upon the same cause of action,, which, shortly stated, is this: The appellee attempted to annex the appellant’s land and that of other persons; the proceedings were absolutely void, but, notwithstanding the fact that such proceedings were void, the municipal officers did levy and collect taxes from the appellee and now retains the money so collected, although the land was not subject to> taxation.
The action is by a property owner who has paid the taxes-which he seeks to recover, and is not an action by a purchaser at a tax sale, so that the case is fully within the rule laid down in City of Indianapolis v. McAvoy, 86 Ind. 587; Durham v. Board, etc., 95 Ind. 182; Board, etc., v. Armstrong, 91 Ind. 528.
The second paragraph of the ajipellee’s answer expressly admits that the land of the appellant was annexed in the manner described in the complaint; that taxes were assessed and paid as charged, and then seeks to avoid the effect of these admissions by these averments: “ That during said time and after the annexation proceedings and while plaintiff resided on said premises, he voted at every city election and solicited-the votes from his neighbors and friends for himself as a candidate for common councilman, and petitioned the common council for improvements for the seventh ward of the-
If, as the answer admits, the proceedings for the annexation were unauthorized, 'the city had no right to levy or collect taxes, and unless the appellant has done something which precludes him from asserting the invalidity of the proceedings, his property rights are not affected by them. The fact that he voted at a municipal election can not have the effect to preclude him from asserting that the annexation proceedings were invalid, for that fact did not deprive the city of any substantial right nor confer upon the appellant a privilege or franchise of such legal value as to preclude him from asserting the truth respecting the annexation proceedings. Nor was the privilege of standing as a candidate for a municipal office of such value to him as to compel him to silence regarding the illegality of the attempt to annex contiguous territory, and surely his candidacy can not be treated as a thing of value to the municipality. The fact that he united in a petition for an improvement does not coerce him into silence, for the bare fact that he signed a petition neither brought him a thing of legal value, nor took from the city a thing of appreciable worth. These facts may be some evidence of acquiescence, but they are much too slight to build a defence of estoppel upon, or to sustain any defence of a kindred nature. This conclusion is so plainly correct upon general principles that it is hardly necessary to cite authorities, but there are cases fully in point" against the sufficiency of the answer. Langworthy v. City of Dubuque, 13 Iowa, 86; Buell v. Ball, 20 Iowa, 282. Much stronger than the case made by the answer is that of Greencastle Tp., etc., v. Black, 5 Ind. 557, where the plaintiff was held not concluded although he voted for the tax he sought to have declared illegal.
The evidence shows that the common council of the city passed a resolution for the annexation of contiguous territory, but it also appears that the lots which the city attempted to annex were not platted, and that the appellant did not con
The evidence does not show that the appellant ever received any substantial benefit from the annexation, nor does it show that the city incurred any expense, or was induced to change its position to its injury, on account of the attempted annexation. If it had been shown that the appellant had received any benefit from the attempted annexation, or if it had been made to appear that the city had incurred expense, or laid out money, on the faith that the annexation was valid, we should have had a very different case. But we have here a case where the city did not change its position to its injury, nor the citizen receive any substantial consideration. The case falls within the general rule thus stated by one of the text-writers : “ It will be found upon an examination of the above and other cases that, wherever the rights of other parties have intervened by reason of a man’s conduct or acquiescence in a state of things about which he had an election, and his conduct or acquiescence, or even laches, was based on a knowledge of the facts, he will be deemed to have made an effectual
There may be a consideration sufficient to bind the person-under a duty to act although he receives no direct benefit. A consideration may exist although the party against whom a right is urged may have received nothing of value from the other party. It is sufficient if there be loss or injury to the. party acting. Shade v. Creviston, 93 Ind. 591, see p. 595-This principle is illustrated by the cases which hold that where a land-owner licenses another to do an act, and the licensee,, upon the faith of the privilege granted, expends large sums of money, the licensor can not revoke the license. Rogers v. Cox, 96 Ind. 157, vide authorities p. 158; Buchanan v. Logansport, etc., R. W. Co., 71 Ind. 265; Miller v. State, 39 Ind. 267; Snowden v. Wilas, 19 Ind. 10. It is further illustrated in cases of boundaries, for, in such cases, long acquiescence in a line accepted as the boundary will preclude the real owner of the soil from reclaiming it and changing the boundary, if the othfer party has made valuable improvements on the faith that the boundary was the true one. McCormick v. Barnum, 10 Wend. 104; Chicago, etc., R. W. Co. v. People, 91 Ill. 251; Diehl v. Zanger, 39 Mich. 601; Hagey v. Detweiler, 35 Pa. St. 409; Columbet v. Pacheco, 48 Cal. 395; Meyers v. Johnson, 15 Ind. 261; Wingler v. Simpson, 93 Ind. 201; Pitcher v. Dove, 99 Ind. 175. It is true that the mistake which caused the invalidity of the annexation proceedings was one of fact. Grusenmeyer v. City of Logansport, 76 Ind. 549; City of Indianapolis v. McAvoy, supra; Town of Cicero v. Williamson, supra. But an acquiescence in a mistake, and knowledge that large expenditures have been made in ignorance of the mistake, may preclude a party from relief against it. The general rule undeniably is that a party is not estopped unless he.
There are many reasons why a different rule should apply to the acts of municipal authorities engaged in .the performance of purely public duties from the one which obtains in cases where the controversy arises out of matters of private business between individual citizens. The municipal authorities in such a case exercise delegated governmental functions, for municipal corporations are instrumentalities of gov
A municipal corporation, as the representative of the public, may acquire a direct estate in land by dedication, although there be no express grant by the owner, and the use may not have been long continued. Faust v. City of Huntington, 91 Ind. 493; Carr v. Kolb, 99 Ind. 53. The exercise of corporate authority over a territory under color of legal proceedings, with knowledge on the part of the public for twenty years, is held to be conclusive evidence of a charter. Worley v. Harris, 82 Ind. 493; Bow v. Allenstown, 34 N. H. 351; Bassett v. Porter, 4 Cush. 487. It would seem to follow from these principles that the exercise of authority for a much shorter period, with the knowledge of thé public and the consent of the landowner, ought, in a case where the corporation would otherwise suffer great loss, be held to conclude him from denying the legality of the annexation proceedings. In the case of Milne v. Mayor, 7 La. (N. S.) 47, it was held that where the citizens of a locality are for a series of years regarded as corporators, and reap the benefits arising from the municipal ordinances and improvements, they will be treated as such and held to the liabilities of corporators. In People v. Farnham, 35 Ill. 562, it is held that long acquiescence and acceptance of corporate benefits are sufficient to justify the courts in holding that the taxpayer is an inhabitant of the municipality. The case of Hamilton v. McNeil, 13 Grat. 389, declares and enforces the distinction between public corporations, and holds a doctrine similar to that declared in the preceding case. The conclusion to which these authorities logically lead is, that acquiescence may constitute a citizen a corporator, and where it. is long continued, and benefits of a substantial character are received by him as a corporator, the courts will treat him as such, and not permit him to withdraw the election evidenced by his acquiescence. This result is in full harmony with the
There are some other matters which it is important to consider on this branch of the case. The citizen of a territory which is assumed to be annexed to a municipal corporation is. relieved' from some burdens incident to a suburban residence.. The burdens with respect to highways are essentially different,, and from these he is relieved. He can not be subjected to both burdens, and in treating the annexation proceedings as. valid, and receiving the benefits of a corporator, he makes his election, and where the municipality has expended money in the belief that the annexation was valid, he must be held to it. There can not be two public corporations exercising like powers within the same territory, though there may be two> different governmental bodies, as a city and a county.n This; was said in Taylor v. City of Fort Wayne, supra, “ to be a. self evident proposition.” Grant Corp. 18; King v. Pasmore, 3 T. R. 199, 243; 1 Dill. Mun. Corp. (3d ed.), sec. 184.
The common council of a city do not constitute the municipality, but they are the agents of the inhabitants so long as they act within the scope of the authority conferred upon them by the law. City of Valparaiso v. Gardner, supra; Grant Corp. 357. They are not the agents of persons living outside of the corporate limits, but when they assume to-annex the lands owned by such persons, and afterwards assume to exercise corporate authority over the land and its owner, then they do assume to be his representative. It is a familiar elementary rule, that where one assumes to act as another’s, agent, and the person for whom he assumes to act receives and enjoys substantial benefit from the acts of the professed agent, .he will be deemed to have ratified the agent’s act, and will be bound to the same extent as if he had originally invested the agent with the authority assumed. We think this principle applies to a citizen who, with means of knowledge within his reach, acquiesces in the acts of the common council and receives substantial benefits from those acts,,
Another question remains, the effect of a curative act adopted in 1879. The appellee’s counsel do not discuss this question, but it is discussed by the appellant. One of the positions assumed is that the act is unconstitutional because it is special legislation, and we are referred to the constitutional provisions upon the subject, and to State, ex rel., v. City of Cincinnati, 20 Ohio St. 18; Ex Parte Pritz, 9 Iowa, 30; Von Phul v. Hammer, 29 Iowa, 222; City of Wyandotte v. Wood, 5 Kan. 603; Atchison v. Bartholow, 4 Kan. 124; San Francisco v. S. V. W. W., 48 Cal. 493, to which may be added Independent School District, etc., v. City of Burlington, 60 Iowa, 500. We decline to decide the question without a fuller argument, as it is one of very great importance and much difficulty, and for the further reason that the decision of this question is not essential to the determination of this cause.
We have seen that at the time the common council assumed to annex the adjacent territory, it had no jurisdiction at all over the subject-matter, for exclusive jurisdiction was vested in the board of commissioners of the county. It was an attempt by one tribunal to exercise jurisdiction over a subject-matter over which another tribunal had exclusive jurisdic
The general principle stated by these writers is affirmed and enforced in a very great number of cases, and is so firmly settled that the citation of cases is unnecessary, but it will, perhaps, be profitable, in view of the importance of the question, to refer to some of the decisions having a direct bearing upon the phase of the question presented by the case under examina
The right to notice is a fundamental one, and it is a rule of wide application, that in order to take from a citizen any rights, or impose upon him any burdens, notice of some kind must be given him. Wright v. Wilson, 95 Ind. 408; Campbell v. Dwiggins, 83 Ind. 473; Tyler v. State, 83 Ind. 563; Cooley Const. Lim. (5th ed.) 615. In this case, however, Ave are not required to decide whether a statute authorizing the annexation of agricultural lands, or lands not platted, Avould or would not be constitutional if it made no provision for notice. We now refer to this general principle only for the purpose of showing that where notice is required by the statute under which the proceedings are had, it is a jurisdictional requisite and its absence can not be supplied by a subsequent curative act. Notice is nearly always a jurisdictional question. When the right to entertain jurisdiction of the subject-matter depends upon notice, a curative statute can not make good proceedings taken without any notice at all. Marsh v. Chesnut, 14 Ill. 223; Billings v. Detten, 15 Ill. 218; Albany City Nat’l Bank v. Maher, 20 Blatch. 341; State v. City of Plainfield, 38 N. J. L. 95; Cooley Tax. 227. In speaking of want of notice the court, in the case last cited, said: “ This error being fundamental, annulling the ordinance for want of jurisdiction, by competent notice of the persons affected, can not be remedied by subsequent legislation.” In the case before us, notice Avas required by the statute where the lands were not platted, and the action of the common council was, therefore, not only taken over a subject committed to the jurisdiction of the board of commissioners, but' it Avas also taken without notice to the citizens. The effect of this course Avas to deprive the citizen of the notice pro Added by statute, and this we think was an essential jurisdictional defect which a curative statute could not remedy.
There are many cases in which a curative statute will be deemed valid. Kelly v. State, ex rel., 92 Ind. 236; Muncie Nat’l Bank v. Miller, 91 Ind. 441. But where there is a total lack of jurisdiction of the subject-matter, the rule laid down in the cases cited does not apply. In the case last cited, the defendant had entered a waiver of service of summons, and it was held that the' Legislature had power to validate the judgment rendered against him. The decision falls fully within the rule that an act done by the party in a legal proceeding, but defectively or irregularly executed, may be validated by a subsequent statute. The decision is far from reaching the present case. Had there been no notice at all in the case cited, it would then have been in point, but there was notice, and it was accepted by the party as sufficient, although it was,in reality defective.
The question in this case is, not-as to the power of the-Legislature over a public corporation, but as to its power over the rights of the citizen. The question is not whether the curative act of 1879 is valid so far as it affects the city,, but whether it can change the substantial rights of a private-citizen. That act can not be allowed to take from the citizens rights vested in them prior to its passage, and can not,, therefore, be deemed' to validate such a proceeding as that taken by the city in this ease. Irregularities and defects in annexation proceedings it may remedy, but it can not make valid an order of annexation made by one tribunal in a case where another had exclusive jurisdiction and where notice to the property owners was required.
Judgment reversed.
Zollaes, C. J., did not participate in the decision of this case.