152 Ind. 364 | Ind. | 1899
The Windfall Natural Gas, Mining & Oil Company, appellant herein, is a corporation organized under the laws of this State for the purpose of furnishing gas to the citizens of Windfall, in Tipton county, Indiana.
In the lower court it unsuccessfully sought to obtain a perpetual injunction against the defendants to restrain them from interfering with or removing a certain pipe line, which, as alleged in the complaint, had been constructed by this company over the lands of the defendants, and which line, as
The assignments of error are: First, that the court erred in overruling appellant’s motion to modify its special finding of facts; second, that the court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial; third, that the court erred in each of its several conclusions of law on the facts found.
The first assignment is not supported by the record, as the latter does not disclose that appellant filed a motion to modify the special finding. Therefore, this assignment must be dismissed without consideration. Aside, however, from the fact that the record does not show a motion to modify the special finding, or any action taken by the court thereon, it may be said that there is no rule of practice authorizing such motions. Sharp v. Malia, 124 Ind. 407; Tewksbury v. Howard, 138 Ind. 103.
If appellant intended to assail the action of the court in overruling the motion for a venire de novo, it should have properly assigned this ruling as error.
Some questions are discussed by counsel for appellant which depend upon the evidence. The bill of exceptions, however, which purports to embrace both the evidence and also the particular rulings of which appellant complains, is not in the record, for the reason that it does not affirmatively appear that the bill was filed in open court, or with the clerk, after it was signed by the trial judge.
The motion for a new trial was overruled and final judgment rendered at the February term, 1897, of the Tipton Circuit Court, and sixty days granted in which to file a bill of exceptions. What purports to be a bill of exceptions, em
Among the facts, disclosed by the special finding are the following: Appellees owned certain lands in Tipton county, Indiana, situated along a highway, upon which highway appellant had established and constructed gas mains. On December 20,1897, appellant unsuccessfully endeavored to procure from appellees a right to lay and construct a two-inch pipe line over the lands in question for the purpose of conducting natural gas from a certain gas well, owned by the former, to the town of 'Windfall. Appellees, it seems, refused to permit appellant to lay and maintain its gas pipes over and across their lands unless it would compensate them for the right and privilege so to do, and, as it is disclosed, they
The court expressly finds that at no time prior to the construction of this pipe line over these lands had appellant obtained any license or secured any easement or right from appellees to construct or maintain the line over their lands. Under these facts, the court certainly was justified in stating its conclusions of law adversely to appellant, and thereby denying its right to an injunction to prevent appellees from removing from their lands the gas main which has been, as the facts disclose, unlawfully placed thereon by appellant. The latter is shown to have been a wrongdoer in locating and constructing the gas main in question upon and over appellees’ lands, and it certainly is not entitled to equitable relief to enable it to continue the wrong which it originally perpetrated. The facts reveal, as heretofore said, that appellant had no license, easement, or color of right whatever to locate and maintain its mains on and over appellees’ lands. Clearly, therefore, under the facts, there is no foundation whatever Upon which appellant can base its right to the extraordinary remedy of injunction.
If, under the facts found by the court, appellant has any