172 Ind. 302 | Ind. | 1909
Yerified complaint by appellee, filed February 14, 1908, against appellants, alleging that appellant Town of Windfall City is an incorporated town in Tipton county, Indiana, and the other appellants are the trustees, representing the four wards of the town; that relator is the owner of certain described real estate in, and forming one of the corporation lines of, the town; that on December 18, 1907, he filed a petition in the office of the clerk of the town to have such real estate disannexed from the town; that on December 18, 1907, he caused a notice of the filing of the petition to be published in the Windfall Herald, and also the same notice to appear the following week in said Herald, that his petition would be presented to the board of trustees at the regular meeting January 6, 1908, at 7 o’clock p. m., at the office of such board, and sets out a copy of the notice, directed “To the Town of Windfall City, Indiana, and the Citizens Thereof.” Said notice recites the fact of the filing of the petition, describes the real estate, gives notice of the time and place where it will be presented, when and “where any one aggrieved, or desiring to object, may appear and object. ’ ’ The complaint alleges that the regular meeting time of the board was on the evening of January 6,1908, and that the regular meetings of the board are the first and third Monday evenings of each month; that the town board met on January 6, at its regular time and place, and has repeatedly met and transacted the business of the town at the regular time and place; that on each occasion of the meeting of the board relator has been present in person, or by agent or attorney, and x’equested the board to act upon the petition, and that it has “failed and refused to take any action upon said petition, or to determine the same in any way, and is still refusing to take action on said petition, or to determine the same.” Prayer for a writ of mandate against defendants to show cause why they should not be required to pass
To the complaint and alternative writ a demurrer was addressed by the town, for want of sufficient facts, and a like demurrer by the trustees. Each of these demurrers was overruled, and exceptions reserved. On March 10, 1908, the town answered separately, and the four trustees jointly as follows: "As reasons for not acting upon said petition at the time it was brought before said board of trustees on January 6, 1908, [defendants allege] that the question as to whether the large amount of real estate described in said petition could and should be disannexed from said town was one of vital importance to the town, and the law under which the plaintiff is proceeding in this case being a new statute which was enacted at the last General Assembly of the State of Indiana, and there being some question with the members of the board as to the validity of said law, and the board not having seen nor examined said petition prior to the time it was presented to it on said date, January 6, 1908, and not being informed as to the advisability of disannexing said lands from said town, and not then having sufficient time and opportunity to examine and investigate the matter, said petition was placed on file and action on the same continued until January 20, 1908, which was the next regular meeting of said board, in order to have more time to investigate and examine into the matter; that one Rich-creek and his wife had, prior to the filing of the petition herein, filed a petition with said board, praying for the dis-annexation of certain farm lands from said town of Windfall City, similar to plaintiff’s petition, except as to the description of the lands, which petition was filed under and by virtue of the law under which plaintiff herein is proceeding;
Errors are assigned upon the ruling on the demurrers to the complaint and writ.
It will be seen that no complaint is made of a request for, or refusal to take action, or make a decision on the question of notice or jurisdiction, but of a refusal to act on the merits of the petition. There is much plausibility in the position of the learned counsel for relator, that he is entitled to have a decision on the question of notice, so that if it be adverse he may appeal, but it will be observed that he makes no case of that kind. He brings nothing before the court from which it can say that there was an obligation of the town authorities to act. He does not show that he called upon the board to act upon the jurisdictional question of notice, and more important than all, he does not show that the required notice was given. Complaint is not made here of a refusal to act upon the question of notice, or jurisdiction, but of refusal to act on the merits of the petition, and that is the substantive cause of action attempted to be asserted. Counsel for relator cite Pfister v. State, ex rel. (1882), 82 Ind. 382, to the point that even if the notice was insufficient, he was entitled to a decision on that question, in order that he might appeal. That case does not warrant the claim, for there, the question of jurisdiction was not invoked by notice, but was an application which it was the plain duty of the board to hear and grant, or refuse, and it did neither. Here we are asked to say to the board of trustees, you must pass upon the question of notice, when on the face of the complaint and writ it is not shown that the required notice was given, nor that there was any proof offered that it was given, nor that there had been any request that the question be passed upon. We understand, of course, that such tribunals are required to pass upon the question of jurisdiction which is conferred by notice in proceedings before them, and that the question is reviewable by appeal when they have acted, and also that they may be compelled to act upon the question of jurisdiction by mandate, but when it is sought to compel them by
The judgment is reversed, with instructions to sustain the demurrer to the complaint and alternative writ.