Mathews v. Droud

Citation16 N.E. 599,114 Ind. 268
Decision Date10 April 1888
Docket Number13,214
PartiesMathews v. Droud et al
CourtSupreme Court of Indiana

From the Kosciusko Circuit Court.

The judgment is affirmed, with costs.

A. G Wood, A. Brubaker and J. H. Brubaker, for appellant.

E Haymond and L. W. Royse, for appellees.

OPINION

Zollars, J.

From an order of the county board locating and establishing a public highway, Mathews, the appellant here, appealed to the circuit court. The clerk of that court copied into the transcript what purports to be a written motion by appellant, filed in that court, to dismiss the petition. The grounds of the motion, as therein stated, are, that the petition is not according to law, and that no notice of its presentation was given.

There is no available error in the overruling of the motion by the court below, for several reasons. In the first place, no deficiencies in the petition are pointed out in argument. In the second place, the motion, so far as it relates to the insufficiency or the lack of notice, could be made a part of the record only by incorporating it into a bill of exceptions, which has not been done. And, in the third place, appellant should have raised the question of notice at his first opportunity before the board of commissioners; that he did not do. He appeared before the board and filed motions and remonstrances, and, after appeal, consented to, or, at least, did not object to, a continuance, and made no question as to notice until the filing of his motion to dismiss at the second term after the case had reached the circuit court. Washington Ice Co. v. Lay, 103 Ind. 48, 2 N.E. 222, and cases there cited; Orton v. Tilden, 110 Ind. 131, 10 N.E. 936; Board, etc., v. Montgomery, 109 Ind. 69, 9 N.E. 590.

In their argument upon the alleged error in overruling the motion below, counsel for appellant contend that a certain order made by the board was defective and void. In answer to that argument it is sufficient to say that no such question was specifically raised by their motion, and that the order was vacated by the appeal, and hence was no longer of any consequence.

In the circuit court the jury returned a verdict, in substance, so far as is material here, that the highway as described in the petition would be of public utility, and should be established to the width of thirty feet, and assessed damages in favor of appellant in the sum of forty-seven dollars. The court below overruled a motion for a new trial, and struck out a motion for a venire de novo.

The cause assigned for a new trial, upon which appellant relies here, is, that the verdict is contrary to law. Upon the record before us, this court can not say that the court below erred in either of the above rulings. Nor will it be necessary for us to determine just what ought to be included in verdicts in highway cases under different issues, nor to add to, or comment upon, what has already been decided as to what defects in verdicts will require the sustaining of a motion for a venire de novo. It is well settled that, on appeal to this court, a judgment will not be reversed unless the record shows affirmatively that an error or errors intervened in the proceedings below, and that such error or errors were, or probably were, prejudicial to the party complaining here. Cline v. Lindsey, 110 Ind. 337, 11 N.E. 441, and cases there cited; Hollingsworth v. State, 111 Ind. 289, 12 N.E. 490; Passmore v. Passmore, 113 Ind. 237, 15 N.E. 338, and cases there cited.

In the absence of an affirmative showing to the contrary, all reasonable presumptions will be indulged in favor of the rulings of the trial court. Becknell v. Becknell, 110 Ind. 42, 10 N.E. 414.

It is also well settled that, on appeal to the circuit court from the county board, in highway cases, only such questions are for trial as were in issue before the county board, or as may, by leave of court, be put in issue by amended pleadings. Orton v. Tilden, supra; Washington Ice Co. v. Lay, supra; Green v. Elliott, 86 Ind. 53; Peed v. Brenneman, 89 Ind. 252; Breitweiser v. Fuhrman, 88 Ind. 28; Rominger v. Simmons, 88 Ind. 453; Lowe v. Ryan, 94 Ind. 450; Clift v. Brown, 95 Ind. 53; Denny v. Bush, 95 Ind. 315; Stockwell v. Brant, 97 Ind. 474; Forsythe v. Kreuter, 100 Ind. 27; Thayer v. Burger, 100 Ind. 262; McKee v. Gould, 108 Ind. 107, 8 N.E. 724; Powers v. Johnson, 86 Ind. 298. See, also, Bradley v. City of Frankfort, 99 Ind. 417; Updegraff v. Palmer, 107 Ind. 181, 6 N.E. 353; Carr v. Boone, 108 Ind. 241, 9 N.E. 110; Osborn v. Sutton, 108 Ind. 443; Robinson v. Rippey, 111 Ind. 112, 12 N.E. 141; Groscop v. Rainier, 111 Ind. 361, 12 N.E. 694; Ford v. Ford, 110 Ind. 89, 10 N.E. 648.

In the case before us appellant filed a remonstrance before the board of commissioners, but there is no copy of it in the record. We are informed by the briefs of counsel that his remonstrance was upon the grounds that the proposed highway way would not be of public utility, and that his land would be damaged by its opening and construction. Accepting as true what is thus stated by counsel, it must be held that the questions of utility and damages were the only questions for trial in the circuit court. The verdict of the jury, therefore, covers the only questions that were, or that could be, submitted to them under the issues, and hence it is neither defective nor contrary to law. This conclusion results from the holdings in the cases above cited. Rominger v. Simmons, supra. See, also, Reynolds v. Shults, 106 Ind. 291, 6 N.E. 619; Thompson v. Deprez, 96 Ind. 67.

The striking out of the motion for a venire de novo was not the proper method of disposing of that motion, but as a right result was reached, a mistake in the mode of reaching it is not an available error. Neptune v. Taylor, 108 Ind. 459, 8 N.E. 566 (462).

Upon proper reports of viewers and reviewers the board of commissioners established the highway forty feet wide, and awarded damages to appellant in the sum of thirty dollars. In the circuit court the...

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