103 Ind. 252 | Ind. | 1885
The record in this case discloses that
The facts as agreed upon show that, on the 21st day of April, 1884, Bowen, being the owner of the animals described, turned them out to graze and permitted them to run at large! The animals strayed upon lands owned by Welch, which were not inclosed by a fence sufficient to prevent the ingress of cattle. Welch and Grenat, citizens of the township, took them up, and the owner being unknown, they posted notices according to law at three of the most public places in the township. Subsequently, upon discovering that the cattle belonged to Bowen, they gave written notice to him, and demanded that he pay them $1.50 for each animal impounded. It is agreed that, before bringing the suit, Bowen neither paid nor tendered the damages or cost of taking up the cattle. It was further agreed that, on June 14th, 1853, the board of commissioners of Switzerland county made and entered of record an order permitting all cattle, except bulls over two years old, to run at large on the public commons in all of the townships of Switzerland county. On March 8th, 1883, upon the petition of numerous citizens of the county, and upon the representation that the Legislature had recently before that repealed the law under which county commissioners were authorized to pass orders allowing animals to run at large, the «board, after reciting the passage of the previous order, entered of record the following:. “And it is now ordered by this board, that the aforesaid order of June 14th, 1853, as recorded in book ‘B,’ page 484, of the commissioners’ record, be and the same is hereby repealed, from and after this day.”
It was claimed that the defendants were entitled to hold possession of the cattle until their costs and charges were
The case is elaborately argued on behalf of the appellant, but we are without the aid of a brief or other argument for the appellee.
It is contended that the act of the Legislature, approved May 31st, 1852, under the supposed authority of which the county board passed the original order, was void, as being an infringement of section 21, article 1, of the Constitution of the State. The argument is, because boards of commissioners are authorized to direct by an order that animals may run at large in the several townships, and pasture on the public commons and uninclosed lands of others, that thereby the taking of property of others is authorized without just compensation being first paid or tendered.
It is not readily apparent that the enactment in question is-subject to the objection urged. Without the regulation for which the statute provides, the common law rule obtains, which requires the owner of animals either to confine them upon his own premises or answer in damages for any trespass they may commit upon the lands of others. The force of the regulation seems to be, not to confer a right in or upon the lands of one person to another, .but to prescribe what kind of animals may be permitted to pastui'e on the public commons and uninclosed lands, without subjecting their owner to liability for trespass. In Myers v. Dodd, 9 Ind. 290, it was held to be within the province of the Legislature to withhold a remedy for injury done by cattle entering upon lands of another, where such lands were not lawfully fenced. Clark v. Stipp, 75 Ind. 114.
As a police regulation, we think it competent under the
The remaining question is, was it competent for the board of commissioners in 1883, to repeal the order adopted by their predecessors in 1853? That it was, we think there can be no doubt. Regulations which may have been suited to the condition of society in 1853 may, in the progress of thirty years, have become entirely unsuited to the state of things then existing. It would hardly do to suppose that the Legislature did not anticipate the progress of events.'
Under section 10 of article 6 of the Constitution, it was competent for the General Assembly to confer upon the boards doing county business powers of a local administrative character. Pursuant'to this provision, the Legislature, by the act approved May 31st, 1852, conferred upon the boards of commissioners the power, and made 'it their duty, by order or ordinance, to direct what kind of animals might be allowed
The general rule is that the power to pass by-laws, ordinances, or regulations affecting the government of a municipal corporation carries with it by implication the power to modify or repeal such by-laws, ordinances and regulations unless the power is restricted in the law conferring the right.
The limitation to which this power is subject is that the repeal or change can not be made so as to affect any vested right lawfully acquired under an ordinance or regulation lawfully adopted. 1 Dillon Mun. Corp., section 314; City of Kansas v. White, 69 Mo. 26.
In Rex v. Ashwell, 12 East, 22, it was said by Bayley, J.: “And this by-law only operates upon the body at large so long as they” (the aldermen) “think fit to' continue it: it is liable to be reconsidered by them at all times : it only binds their successors so long as their successors choose to be bound by it: for the same body that made the by-law may repeal it.”
It can not be necessary to elaborate or fortify this proposition further; that this is the general rule can not be doubted. Is it applicable to orders or regulations adopted by county commissioners when acting in an administrative or quasi legislative capacity?
The authorities relied on as denying this power are cases in which the action of the board was either judicial in its nature, or where some special statutory power was exerted, the time and mode of its execution being prescribed by st-at-
One board of commissioners by the exercise of this function could not deprive its successors from exercising it again and again, as often as the public interest might demand. East Hartford v. Hartford Bridge Co., 6 How. 511, 534.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, with costs, with directions to the court below to enter judgment on the agreed statement of facts in accordance with this opinion.