Millikan v. Wall
Millikan v. Wall
Opinion of the Court
The appellants allege in their complaint, that they are the owners of real estate upon which assessments have been levied for the construction of a ditch;, that Erancis Conn, assuming to act as surveyor, and under the authority conferred upon him to keep ditches in repair, at the expense of land owners, caused work to be done on the ditch; that under the pretense of repairing it he has-caused a ditch to be constructed eight feet in width, two-feet in width at the bottom, five feet in depth and two and one-fourth miles in length; that he has done the work without any petition to widen or deepen such ditch; that he has done the work without any other assessments than such as were made in the original proceeding, and has-caused the expense of the work, amounting to five hundred dollars, to be apportioned upon the lands of the.
We do not deem it proper to express an opinion upon the merits of the case further than to say that the complaint is not so clearly destitute of equity as to make it necessary for us, without any hi’ief or argument from the appellees, to adjudge that, at first blush, there appears to-be no cause of action. We do no more than decide that the complaint is not so clearly bad as to require us to adjudge that there is an entire absence of material facts, for the reason that the appellees have filed' no brief, although requested to do so by an order of court made on the 3d day of March last, and of which they had special notice, and for the further reason that it appears that the appellants have shown a prima fade right to relief.
The attack is undoubtedly a collateral one, and on such an attack it can not he shown that the original ditch was not received by the proper authorities. Romack v. Hobbs, 133 Ind. We, therefore, attach no importance to the allegations of the complaint upon that point.
As an appeal lies from an assessment made by a surveyor, this action could not be maintained if it were not
We hold that under the confessions of the demurrer and the default iii failing to file a brief, the complaint is sufficient to drive the appellees to answer. We do not, however, determine any question beyond those stated, but leave the case open for a full investigation upon its merits in the event that the defendants appropriately answer the complaint.
Judgment reversed.
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