Allen v. Michel

38 Ill. App. 313, 1890 Ill. App. LEXIS 337
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 21, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 38 Ill. App. 313 (Allen v. Michel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Michel, 38 Ill. App. 313, 1890 Ill. App. LEXIS 337 (Ill. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

Wall, J.

This was an action of trespass on the case against Michel, Wade and Besterfeldt, as commissioners, and Worthy as overseer of highways of El sail township, in Jersey county. The declaration complained of the defendants for unlawfully and negligently cutting a ditch along the east line of the Jersey-ville and El sail road, a public highway in said township, through a small hill or elevation on said road, and making an embankment or fill at a low place or depression on said highway just north of said hill, by means whereof the flow of surface water from plaintiff’s land and land adjoining hers on the north was diverted from its natural course to the west across said highway at said depression and made to flow south through said ditch and onto plaintiff’s land to her damage, etc., her land being S. E. JST. E. J of Sec. 6, T. 6 E., E. 11, in said county, improved and used for purposes of cultivation, said Absalom Worthy being possessed of the W. E. E. i of said Sec. 6, west of her land and separated from same by said highway; Worthy’s land and said highway being much lower than plaintiff’s land and the natural flow and drainage of rain and surface waters that fell on plaintiff’s land and land lying immediately north of hers being over and across depressions and sags in the highway and across Worthy’s land and thence into Otter creek.

The defendants plead: First, the general issue. Second, that the ditch was dug in the highway more than twenty years ago and under order of the county board of Jersey county, and had with the full knowledge of plaintiff and her immediate grantors been constantly in use by the public as part of said highway for more than twenty years next preceding the beginning of suit, whereby the public acquired an easement and prescriptive right, etc., and defendants claim the benefit of the statute of limitations. Third, that when the defendants were elected highway commissioners they found said highway and ditch in actual use and occupancy of the public and thereafter the same became in bad order and repair and defendants caused the brush, weeds and trash which had accumulated in said ditch to be removed and caused said highway to be graded in the manner most practicable and best adapted thereto, which was within the financial ability of defendants as such commissioners, and that all of said work was necessary to keep the highway in good order, and done without intent to injure plaintiff, and but the necessary result of properly draining a small portion of the highway, and that all the water which at any time flowed into or through said ditch was surface water and thereby directed to and flowed into a natural channel or branch which was also located within the limits of said highway. Fourth, that the ditch was dug more than twenty years ago for the purpose of draining off sprface water collected on the highway, and said water was thereby drained along said ditch into a natural channel which flowed across plaintiff’s land at. a point where said natural channel flowed across said highway; that during said term said ditch had, with full knowledge of plaintiff and her grantors, been-used by the public as part of said highway and as a jumper means of keeping said highway in good order. That the natural conformation of the land over which said highway passed on the west side of plaintiff’s said land was such that there was a gradual descent from a point thereon where said highway first touched plaintiff’s land on the northwest corner thereof, running south to the point where said ditch emptied into said natural channel within the limits of said highway with the two exceptions, and that there was one slight depression or marshy spot for a few feet in extent and one slight elevation of a few inches ; that the grade and embankment mentioned in the declaration was simply a filling in of said marshy spot up to the general level of said declivity, by reason of all which the public had an easement, etc.; that said ditch and embankment were necessary and proper for the good order and repair of said highway and not intended to injure plaintiff, and defendants have exercised their best judgment and skill in discharging their official duties with reference to said highway, ditch and embankment so as to inflict no avoidable injury or damage to plaintiff and her lands.

Demurrer to second and third pleas overruled. The cause was tried by jury; verdict, not guilty, and judgment against plaintiff for costs.

It is argued by counsel for appellee that the second and third pleas must be considered as confessed, because appellant did not elect to stand by the demurrer thereto. We think not* Had the defendants, on the overruling of the demurrer, asked a rule upon the plaintiffs to reply, or for judgment for the want of replication, the plaintiff would have been required to reply or suffer judgment; but when the parties went to trial without objection it is to be presumed that a formal issue was waived, and it is too late now to take advantage of the informal condition of the pleadings. Strohm v. Hayes, 70 Ill. 41; People, etc., v. Weber, 92 Ill. 288.

The matter attempted to be set up by the second plea might be regarded as a right by prescription rather than as a pure plea of the statute of limitations. It is not merely the lapse of time, but coupled therewith the knowledge and acquiescence of the plaintiff, which would constitute the defense.

The matters set up in the third and fifth pleas were merely in discharge of the action, if of any legal significance, because, as supposed by the pleader, they justified the alleged tortious act averred in the declaration. This is an action on the case and under the general issue of not guilty the plaintiff is put upon proof of the whole charge in the declaration, so far as necessary to make out a cause of action, and the defendant may show any matter in discharge or excuse. Whatever would in good conscience preclude recovery may, in this form of action, be given in evidence under the general issue: 1 Ch. Pl., 491. These special pleas were unnecessary and whatever they contained showing a defense might have been proved under the plea of not guilty. It is also to be remembered that while a verdict will aid a defective statement of title, it will never aid a statement of a defective title or cause of action. • Nothing is presumed after verdict but what is expressly stated in the declaration, or necessarily implied from the facts which are stated, and it is the rule also that as the plaintiff’s declaration must have all the essentials necessary to maintain the action, so the defendant’s bar must be substantially good, and if the gist of the bar be bad it can not be cured by a verdict for defendant. 2 Tidd’s Practice, 919, 920; C. & E. I. R. R. Co. v. Hines, 132 Ill. 161. The action of the court in giving and refusing instructions and in refusing, the motion for new trial is made the subject of complaint by the assignment of errors, and we are required to determine whether the defense interposed by these pleas is valid. Upon the point of right by prescription, we think it is clearly settled that the acquiescence of the plaintiff is an essential element, necessary to be established by the defendant. Mere knowledge is not sufficient. C. & N. W. R. R. Co. v. Hoag; 90 Ill. 339. The plea was defective in not averring acquiescence. Hence, it was competent for the plaintiff to show any facts tending to prove non-acquiescence, and any instruction basing a defense upon prescription should have contained a reference to this necessary element.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 Ill. App. 313, 1890 Ill. App. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-michel-illappct-1890.