194 Ind. 630 | Ind. | 1924
Appellees petitioned to change a highway which ran diagonally northwest across the east three-fourths of a forty-acre tract of land, crossing on a bridge over a small creek at the bottom of a ravine, and running along the top of a fill that often washed out, and to relocate it so that it would run directly north along the east side of the said tract, passing east of the creek and not crossing any stream except a small branch, the water of which, at the point where it was proposed to cross, could all be carried (witnesses said) by a twenty-inch sewer pipe. The viewers and also the
There was evidence that the forty-acre tract crossed by the highway was the north half of a farm owned by appellee Conway; that a highway along which was a “good pike” ran east and west at the north end of the farm, on which Conway’s residence faced, eighteen rods east from its northwest comer, being situated immediately west of where the road to be changed ran into the east and west highway; that the road to be changed ran between Conway’s house and his bam, and thence southeast about forty rods, down a little hill with a four per cent, grade into a ravine, at the bottom of which was a stream that was crossed on a bridge which had cement abutments and a plank floor, and was approached by a fill on either side; that one fork of the stream washed against the fill for a distance of 150 feet, where the east side of it had been protected by a wall, but the wall had caved in, so that there was an abrupt drop at the side of the wagon track of four or five feet to the bottom of the stream, and the dirt had washed from under one abutment of the bridge for nearly one-half of its length, and the road bed there was only ten or twelve feet wide; that the abutments of the bridge were broken and “in very bad shape”, that the road along there washed out frequently, and, at the time of the trial, part of the dirt, as well as the wall, had “caved in”; that the cost of a new bridge there would be $750, and the cost of repairing the old bridge and the retaining wall so as to make a permanent improvement would be $450; that the proposed change would be wholly on the land of Conway (one of the petitioners), and the proposed new road from where it
The judgment is affirmed.
Gause, J., not participating.