*427*426Each of these cases is an appeal from an interlocutory order appointing appraisers to assess *427the damages of landowners by reason of the fee simple title of lands in and near the channel of the Tippecanoe river having been appropriated for the purpose of being overflowed by waters impounded in a dam constructed to produce water power. Appellee, as plaintiff in each case, alleged in its complaint that it was incorporated under the act authorizing the formation of companies for the manufacture and sale of electricity for heating, lighting and power purposes to towns and cities and to the public, defining their powers, approved March 9, 1907, and the various acts amendatory thereof and supplemental thereto (§§5533 et seq. Burns 1926, Acts 1907 p. 277). That plaintiff was the owner of a damsite on the Tippecanoe river located on certain described lands, at which place it was proposing to erect a dam across the Tippecanoe river for the purpose of manufacturing electricity to be sold to towns and cities and to the public for heating, lighting and power purposes, and was taking steps toward the erection and completion of a dam and power house there, and intended in good faith to complete the dam and to enter upon the business of manufacturing electricity for said purposes. That the construction and maintenance of said dam would cause the waters of the river to overflow certain described portions of tracts of land which were alleged to belong to the defendants. And that the lands so sought to be appropriated and condemned are necessary and desirable for the carrying out of the said purposes for which plaintiff was organized. Each complaint also alleged that plaintiff, in good faith, had made an attempt to purchase the land in question from the defendant owners, but had failed to agree with them for its purchase, and that a plat of the land of defendants which would be affected was filed with such complaint as an exhibit.
*428Appellants insist that even if the facts alleged be sufficient to establish plaintiff’s right to appropriate these lands under the power of eminent domain, they only show it entitled to condemn an easement for purposes of overflowing the lands, and that the court was without jurisdiction to appoint appraisers to assess the damages upon taking a fee simple title. The statute under which plaintiff alleged it was incorporated provides that every corporation organized under its provisions for the purposes for which plaintiff is alleged to have been incorporated, “is hereby fully empowered and authorized to acquire, build, construct, own, maintain and operate all necessary and convenient lands, buildings, structures, dams, machinery, poles, wires and .other things and devices, and to this end, to appropriate and condemn lands of individuals and private corporations, or any easement in such land necessary to the carrying out of its objects,” etc. And that the appropriation and condemnation of lands and easements as therein authorized should be in the manner prescribed by the Eminent Domain Act of 1905. §5540 Burns 1926, Acts 1907 p. 277, §8. And said act of 1905 provides that upon the filing of a complaint in the form substantially as above set out, by any person, corporation or other body having the right to exercise the power of eminent domain for any public use, notice shall issue to the owner of the land sought to be appropriated, after which objections may be filed, that may include objections on the ground that the court has no jurisdiction either of the subject-matter or the person, or that plaintiff has no right to exercise the power of eminent domain for the use sought; and that, if such objections are overruled, the court, or judge, shall appoint appraisers as provided in the act. §§7680 et seq. Burns 1926, Acts 1905 pp. 59-62. And it appears from the record in each of these cases that such objections, and *429also objections on the ground it was not necessary to appropriate the fee simple title, were filed, and after an exhaustive hearing were overruled. Plaintiff being authorized by statute to appropriate and condemn lands “necessary to the carrying out of its objects,” and issue having been joined on its authority to take the fee simple title of these lands as being “necessary” for its purposes, the trial court clearly had jurisdiction to decide the issue thus presented. And jurisdiction to decide includes jurisdiction to decide wrong, as well as right, subject only to review on appeal. Appellant’s objections to the jurisdiction of the court are not well taken.
Appellants have not set out in their respective briefs a condensed recital in narrative form of the evidence given in the case, as required by the fifth subdivision of Rule 22 in order to present in this court questions relating to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the decision, and no question is before us as to whether or not the proof showed the appropriation of the fee not to be necessary, or showed that plaintiff was seeking to condemn more land than was necessary to the carrying out of its objects.
All other questions presented are decided adversely to the contentions of appellant by the case of Lowe v. Indiana, etc., Power Co. (1926), post 430, 151 N. E. 220. And on the authority of that decision each of these judgments must be affirmed.
The death of Scelnira Pingry, appellant in cause No. 24,418, having been suggested, the judgment in that case is affirmed as of the date of its submission. And the judgment in each of the causes numbered 24,455 and 24,456 is also affirmed.