130 Ind. 585 | Ind. | 1892
This was a proceeding commenced in the circuit court in pursuance of the drainage act of 1885 for the construction of a drain. A proper petition was filed, and the matter was referred to the drainage commisisoners in accordance with the statute, and the commissioners made report, naming in their said report lands as affected by such proposed work which were not named in the petition. The persons whose lands were thus named in the report and not named in the petition constituted two-thirds of the landowners resident in the county where the lands affected are situated, whose lands were reported as affected by the proposed drain remonstrated in writing against the construction of the proposed drain, and the court sustained their remonstrance and dismissed the proceedings at the costs of the petitioners. Proper exceptions were reserved, and this ruling of the court is insisted upon as error. This presents for the first time the question as to the proper construction to be placed on section 3 of the Drainage Act of 1885, Elliott’s Supp., section 1186.
It is evident that this statute, as well as others relating to the same subject, was drawn with a view to promote drainage, and with an intention to make certain steps once taken in the progress of drainage proceedings final, and to prohibit their being interfered with or set aside, even by persons who might be brought into and become parties to the proceeding after such steps were once taken. Section 2 of the act (Elliott’s Supp., section 1185) provides for the institution of the proceeding, the filing of the petition and what it should state, requiring a description of the lands which, in the opinion of the petitioners, will be affected, together with the names of the owners thereof, and it requires that the petition shall be verified. It was evidently the intention of the legislators that this section would secure the insertion into the petition of a description of all lands which the petitioners had reason to believe would be affected by the proposed drain and the names of the owners. The law presumes upon the
It is then provided that in case no remonstrance is filed, and if the court shall deem the petition sufficient, the court shall make an order referring the petition to thé drainage commissioners. It provides that all objection to the petition or to the acting of any drainage commission not made within the ten days shall be waived. The manner of proceeding by the commissioners is pointed out and their duties defined. Finally in section 3 it is provided that where lands not named in the petition arc named in the report of the drainage commissioners, ten days’ notice of the time of hearing the report shall be given to the owner of such land at the cost of the petitioners, and the court shall continue the hearing of the whole petition until the notice shall have been given, and that such proceedings shall be had in relation to such report as if the whole lands had been named in the petition.
It was évidently intended by the Legislature that all the parties interested should be brought into court by the petition and notice, and all preliminary questions relating to the
The latter clause of section 3 provides, in effect, that where lands not named in the petition are named in the report, they shall be regarded as having been, in fact, described, and the owners named in the petition. It is evident from this provision, we think, that the new parties brought in by the report shall have the same rights as the others would have at that stage of the proceedings. The time has then passed for a person whose lands were, in fact, described in-the petition, and who was, in fact, named in the petition, to raise any objection to the petition, to the competency of the drainage commissioners, or for two-thirds of them to remonstrate and dismiss the petition. The new parties occupying the same attitude, and having only the same rights as the old ones at that time, they can raise none of those objections. If by reason of the new parties having had no
It follows from the conclusion we have reached that the court erred in dismissing the petition on the remonstrance of- the appellees on the grounds that two-thirds of those whose lands were affected, as shown by the report, remonstrated against the construction of the drain.
Judgment reversed, with instructions to the court below to set aside the judgment of dismissal and to proceed in accordance with this opinion.