— The appellee petitioned for the construction of a ditch, and the appellant remonstrated against it. A special verdict was returned, of which this is the substance : The lands along the entire line of the proposed ditch, except for a distance of three hundred feet at the lower end, are wet and marshy. The natural trend of the land through which the ditch will run is such as to cause the surface water, when unobstructed, to flow from a southeast direction north and west, in the general direction of the ditch. Before the Lake Shore and Michigan Railroad was built, which was about the year 1852, the surface water from the lands along the line of the ditch, as well as the lands further south and east, flowed to a point near the terminus of the ditch and there accumulated. The sub-soil
"We are satisfied that facts are found which enable the court to adjudge that the proposed ditch will be conducive to the public health, convenience and welfare, and that it will be of public utility. Laying out of consideration the general
Our own cases, already cited, refer the authority to direct the drainage of wet lands to the police power of the State, and in so far as the drainage does promote the health, comfort and convenience of the public, it is by virtue of this great power that the authority is exercised. The police power, it has been said, is “ that inherent and plenary power in the State which enables it to prohibit all things hurtful to the comfort, safety and welfare of society.” Lake View v. Rose Hill Cemetery Co., 70 Ill.191 (22 Am. Rep. 71). “All laws,” says another court, “for the protection of the lives, limbs, health and quiet of persons, and the security of all property within the State, fall within this general power of the government.” State v. Noyes, 47 Maine, 189. By our own and many other courts this doctrine has been affirmed. Hockett v. State, 105 Ind. 250 (55 Am. Rep. 201); Eastman v. State, 109 Ind. 278; Wilkins v. State, 113 Ind. 514; Slaughter-House Cases, 16 Wall. 36; Civil Lights Cases, 109 U. S. 3; Smith v. Alabama, 124 U. S. 465; Nashville, etc., R. W. Co. v. Alabama, 128 U. S. 96. The removal of causes that produce disease and serious discomfort does promote the health and welfare of the public, and in enacting a law providing for the removal of such causes no provision of the Constitution is violated in compelling private persons who receive a special benefit to bear the expense; on the contrary, in enacting such laws a high constitutional duty is discharged, and no private rights are invaded where special benefits accrue, although the expense is imposed upon the property of the citizens. In speaking of the police power, Judge Cooley says: “ Laws imposing on the owners the duty of draining large tracts of land which in their natural condition are unproductive, and are a source of danger to health, may be enacted under the same power, though in general the taxing power is employed for the purpose; and sometimes land is appropriated under the eminent domain.” Cooley Const.
As the drainage act is constitutional, because a valid exercise of the police power, and as the exercise of that power in itself implies that the purpose for which an assessment is directed is for the public good, the purpose is necessarily a public one. As the purpose is necessarily public in all cases where health, comfort and convenience are promoted, there can remain in such cases no other questions than such as relate to the procedure and the amount of the benefits or damages assessed. Ford v. Ford, 110 Ind. 89 (93). Wherever the reclamation or drainage of wet lands will promote health there is a constitutional warrant for levying assessments to pay the expense of the drainage of such lands, and, from the very
We neither hold nor mean to hold that benefit to the property of an individual will warrant an assessment, for if the benefit is solely to private property irrespective of general or public considerations, no compulsory assessment would be valid, since one citizen can not be compelled to contribute to the improvement of another’s property. If, however, it can be justly concluded from the nature of the system of drainage adopted that there will be a material element of public good in the result, then the purpose is a public one, and property may be assessed. Nor would it change the conclusion if a pond or marsh was wholly on the land of one of the citizens, for although he might be compelled to bear the greater part of the expense, or, indeed, the entire cost, it would be for the reason that his property received the principal benefit, and not because it was his duty to drain the pond, or marsh. Of course, if the property of such an owner received the whole of the special benefit, and no public purpose is subserved, it must bear the entire expense, but it is difficult to conceive a case in which this could happen, for the removal of a cause of disease or discomfort must necessarily benefit, in some degree, property in the vicinity. Where the element of public good exists there is authority to levy an assessment, but it is otherwise where there is
In view of the findings of the jury, we can not hold that the construction of the ditch will not be conducive to public health, comfort and convenience. Blizzard v. Riley, 83 Ind. 300; Kyle v. Miller, 108 Ind. 90; Meranda v. Spurlin, 100 Ind. 380; Ford v. Ford, 110 Ind. 89. We must take the judgment of the jury upon the facts,and the only question which we are required to decide upon this branch of the case is, whether the facts are sufficient to entitle the appellee to a judgment declaring the work to be conducive to the public health and welfare. ' We are not at liberty to draw inferences of an evidentiary character, for the facts found in the verdict are, as said in Locke v. Merchants’ Nat’l Bank, 66 Ind. 353, “ the inferential facts.” The conclusions of the jury are conclusions of fact, drawn from evidentiary facts, and these conclusions of fact,, and not the evidence, are the proper elements of a verdict. Blizzard v. Riley, supra; Hagaman v. Moore, 84 Ind. 496; Bennett v. Meehan, 83 Ind. 566 (43 Am. Rep. 78).
The facts which appear in the verdict bring the case within the rule declared in Heick v. Voight, 110 Ind. 279, where it was said : “ That the work will either promote the public health, or improve a public highway, or be of public utility, is to be regarded as a legislative declaration that it is of such a public character as to justify the exercise of the power of eminent domain to the extent required in its accomplish
Whether it is practicable or expedient to construct a ditch upon the route proposed is a matter to be determined by the officers to whom the authority to locate ditches is entrusted. In Heick v. Voight, supra, it was said: “ Whether the project was more comprehensive, or whether it embraced and affected more lands, than was necessary in order to accomplish the drainage of the petitioner’s lands, in the cheapest and best manner, was a subject for the exclusive judgment of the commissioners of drainage. Their determination of that subject was not reviewable by the court.’’ “ In this regard,” said the court in Anderson v. Baker, 98 Ind. 587, “ the decision of the commissioners of drainage is analogous to the decision of the common councils of cities upon the question of benefits from the construction of sewers; it is final in each particular proceeding, in the absence of fraud.” The same doctrine was explicitly asserted in Meranda v. Spurlin, supra, and in Markley v. Rudy, 115 Ind. 533. The rule declared in these cases is no more than the proper application of the general principle, asserted in a great number of cases, that where a discretion is conferred upon local authorities it can not be reviewed or controlled by the courts. Weaver v. Templin, 113 Ind. 299, and cases cited; Kirkpatrick v. Taylor, 118 Ind. 329. In Ford v. Ford, supra, it was said : “ We find in the record of the trial in the circuit court the following admission: ‘ The ditch in controversy, proposed to be constructed, will be conducive to public health, convenience and welfare. The route of said ditch as proposed * * if constructed, would be the best route for a ditch to drain the lands of said Callender Ford, and would thoroughly drain and dry the same.’ With this admission in the record, there remained no controverted question of fact for trial, except
The jury did decide all the questions presented by the remonstrance and properly before them, and the court did right in following the verdict in its judgment upon the points which we have discussed. The appellant brings before us questions which affect only his rights, and we can consider no others. If the proceedings are effectual against the attacking or objecting party they will be upheld. We can not, therefore, consider what other parties, if any, are affected by the proceedings.
The circuit court may in the proper case remand a drainage case to the board of commissioners for further proceedings, and this is such a case. Sunier v. Miller, 105 Ind. 393; Bryan v. Moore, 81 Ind. 9.
We can not hold that the court erred in refusing to include costs made by the remonstrant in the cost of constructing the ditch. Board, etc., v. Fullen, 118 Ind. 158. Nor do we think that the court erred in denying the appellant’s motion to tax all costs of appeal against the appellees, for they succeeded on many of the issues.
In the absence of the evidence, we can not say that there was any error in assessing benefits and damages. The verdict shows that there was a benefit, and this controls, for we can not, on the face of the verdict, adjudge that there was no benefit, and we have no data to guide us except such as the verdict supplies.
It was not necessary for the jury to specifically describe the tract of land which the ditch would drain. The assessment is laid upon the land benefited, and not merely upon the land actually drained, for the benefit may extend beyond the specific parcel which is reclaimed. Baker v. Clem, 102 Ind. 109. The land on which the assessment is levied should be described with reasonable certainty, but this is all that is inquired. Boatman v. Macy, 82 Ind. 490. There is, however, no such description of the appellant’s land as will authorize an assessment, and for this reason the verdict can not be sustained. The finding is, that six acres of appellant’s land will be benefited, but what six acres will be benefited is not stated.
Judgment reversed.
Mitchell, J., did not participate in the decision of this case.