
    Green v. The City of Indianapolis.
    Pleading.—In an action to recover the penalty for the violation of a by-law or ordinance of a city, a copy of the by-law or ordinance should be made a part of the complaint and filed with it.
    APPEAL from the Marion Common Pleas.
   Perkins, J.

A complaint as follows was filed before the mayor of Indianapolis:

“ State oe Indiana, Marion County, ss :

The City of Indianapolis, pit.,

v.

“Molly Green, deft. ",

Before John Caven, mayor of the city of Indiangpolis. .

“The City of Indianapolis complains of Molly Green, late of said city, and says that said Molly Green, on the 27th day of June, 1863, at the city and county aforesaid, did then and there violate section nine of an ordinance of said city passed by the common council thereof, on the 4th day of May, 1859, a copy of which is herewith filed. The said defendant did unlawfully keep a house- of ill-fame and prostitution in said city of Indianapolis, county of Marion, State of Indiana, wherefore the-plaintiff demands judgment for 50 dollars.

“ E. J. Eyan, City Attorney.”

The complaint was verified.

Neither the hy-law, (the ordinance on which tho suit was based) nor any section- of it, nor a copy of either, was filed with the complaint, or any where appears in the record. The complaint is fatally defective for this reason. 5 Blackf. 236, 8 Ind. 130, 16 Ind. 273. Ang. and Ames on Corp., 7th ed., p. 21; and also § 366. In Stuyvesant v. The Mayor, &c., of New York, 7 Cowen, on page 608, the Court say of the declaration in that case that it conforms in every respect to the rule laid down by Kyd, in his . treatise on the- krw of corporation. (2 Kyd on Corp. 167.) “In an action-of debt for for the penalty of a by-law, the time when it was made, the parties by whom it was made, their authority to make it, the by-law itself,, and the breach of it by the defendant must be set forth, that the Court may judge both whether the by-law be good, and-whether the defendant be a proper object of the action.” (Vide Hut. 5, Hob. 211, 1 Str. 539, Brownl. & Gouldsb. 177.)

In this State, where municipal corporations are organized under the general law, the Court would take judicial notice of their powers to enact by-laws, but not of the fact that any given one had been enacted. As the by-law or ordinance in question, then, is not in the record, and the Court does not take judicial notice of such corporate acts, we can not pass upon its legal construction or validity. Indeed, we do not know that any such exists.

A public statute need not be set out in pleading, nor, in this State, need a private act of the legislature, 2 G-. & II. p 109. But statutes of other States, relied upon must be set out by copy, and so must by-laws of corporations, for they are not statutes of the State.

J. N. Sweetser, for the appellant.

R. J. Ryan, and J. C. Rufián, for the appellee.

If there was no appeal from the judgment of the mayor in these cases, it might well be that by-laws should not be set out, but should be judicially noticed by the mayor; but as appeals are allowed to the State courts, the acts of the corporation relied on as foundations of suits or defences must be set out in the pleadings, and proved on trials to bring them before appellate courts.

The record before us shows no cause of action. It is as 'important that a by-law sued on be set out, as it is that a written instrument should be.

Per Curiam.

The judgment below is reversed, with costs. 'Cause remanded, &c.  