Bromwell v. Flowers

75 N.E. 466, 217 Ill. 174
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 75 N.E. 466 (Bromwell v. Flowers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bromwell v. Flowers, 75 N.E. 466, 217 Ill. 174 (Ill. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellee district was organized on the 15th day of October, 1883, by an order of the county court of Champaign county, under the act approved and in force May 29, 1879, commonly called the “Levee act.” (2 Starr & Cur. Stat. p. 1500.) The appellants are the owners of section 7, town 18, north, range 7, east, in Champaign county, which lands were included in the district. The system of ditches adopted and constructed by the dictrict included a lateral drain passing through said section 7 and thence emptying into the main ditch or drain of the system of ditches adopted and constructed. The work of constructing said main ditch and said lateral was performed as a whole and paid for by assessments on the lands benefited thereby. On the nth day of March, 1904, the appellants exhibited in the circuit court of Champaign county a petition praying that a writ of mandamus issue, commanding the appellee commissioners of said district to forthwith clean out, deepen and repair said lateral drain through petitioners’ lands and on below to the main ditch of said drainage district, in such manner as to afford an outlet for the tile in petitioners’ lands and for the proper drainage of petitioners’ lands, or, in case the commissioners of said drainage district have not the money on hand or already provided for to do said work, that they be directed to take such proceeding as is by law provided to raise the money necessary to do said work, and then clean out, deepen and repair and improve said lateral ditch so as to provide an outlet for the drainage of petitioners’ lands. The petition was, as finally amended, held to be obnoxious to demurrer and was dismissed at the cost of the petitioners, who have brought the record here by appeal.

In addition to the facts hereinbefore stated, the petition alleged “that petitioners were assessed and paid $1835 for the construction of said system of drainage as originally constructed; that on two occasions since the construction of said system it has been necessary to levy additional assessments to clean out and open up the main ditch in said district, and upon the occasion of one of these levies petitioners were assessed and paid $540 and on the other assessment they were assessed and paid $300, making the total amount of $2675 paid by petitioners for the construction, maintenance, repair and improvement of said system óf drainage; that the lateral drain through petitioners’ land, as originally constructed, was not deep enough to adequately drain petitioners’ land, and that the commissioners have allowed the said lateral open drain to become filled up with silt and overgrown with weeds, grass and willows, and so thereby obstructed that said lateral no longer affords an outlet for the tile drains laid by petitioners for the drainage of their lands; that the cpmmissioners have expended all money levied and have no funds on hand to repair and improve said lateral drain, and that said lateral is one of many lateral drains in said district, and that the lateral in controversy only drains the land of a small minority of the owners of lands within said district, and that it has been and is impossible for petitioners to obtain the signatures of a majority of the land owners within said district who are of lawful age and who represent one-third in area of the lands in said district, on a petition to the county court of Champaign county for the levying of an assessment upon the lands in said district for the maintenance and repair of said lateral drain and additional work necessary for the adequate drainage of petitioners’ lands; that petitioners have requested and demanded of the commissioners that they clean out, deepen and repair said lateral so established to drain petitioners’ lands, or that they take such proceeding as by law is provided to levy an assessment for the purpose of cleaning out, deepening and improving said lateral through petitioners’ lands in order to afford an outlet and drainage for petitioners’ lands, but that two of the commissioners said they would do nothing until compelled by the courts, but did not deny that the work was needed, and the third commissioner expressed his willingness to do the work and admitted it was needed, and that by reason of the commissioners refusing to repair said lateral all of the moneys paid by petitioners to said district have not benefited petitioners or provided drainage for their lands; that in consequence of the filling up of said lateral drain the lands of petitioners became wet and unfit for cultivation and the outlets of the tile on their lands stopped; that said lateral is the only outlet to the main ditch provided by said commissioners for the drainage of petitioners’ lands, and that since the same has become filled up petitioners derive no benefit and will continue to derive no benefit from said system of drainage until said lateral is cleaned out, opened up and deepened in such way as to afford an outlet for the waters on petitioners’ lands.”

The powers of the commissioners are such as the statute confers upon them, and their duties are prescribed by the statute. Section 37 of the act of May 29, 1879, (2 Starr & Cur. Stat. par. 68, p. 1519,) in the body of the section, authorizes the commissioners to appropriate and expend the funds coming to their hands, among other purposes, in the work of constructing, repairing and maintaining ditches, drains, etc. The proviso to the section directs the course to be pursued by the commissioners when all funds of the district have been expended and the ditches and drains of the district are in need of repair or of additional work thereon. The petition shows that the commissioners have expended all funds which have come into their hands, and the proviso to the section, is, therefore, the measure of the power and duty of the commissioners. The said proviso provides that when the funds of the district have been so expended, assessments to procure funds to be expended in and about the work of the maintenance and repairs of the ditches and drains, and other work specified in the proviso, may be levied-on the lands of the district under the order of the court within which the district was organized, “on the petition of the majority of the owners of lands within said district who are of lawful age and represent at least one-third in area of such lands; or on the petition of the commissioners, accompanied by an itemized statement of accounts made by the commissioners, under oath, showing the moneys received by the district and the manner in which they have been expended, together with plats, profiles of such additional work and estimated cost of the same.” It appears from the petition herein for the mandamus that neither the requisite number of the owners of lands within the district nor of the commissioners will join in a petition to the county court for the levy of the assessment.

There is no statutory requirement that the lateral ditches shall be kept clean and in repair by the commissioners, they having no funds applicable to that purpose. The authority given them to petition the county court for an order levying an assessment to procure funds for that purpose made it the duty of the commissioners, on the demand of the appellants, to take into consideration all facts and circumstances affecting the expediency, justice and propriety of levying an assessment on all of the lands of the district for the purpose of repairing or deepening this lateral drain, and to join or refuse to join in the petition to the court, as their judgment or discretion, fairly and honestly executed, should dictate.

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Related

Brooks v. Hatch
106 N.E. 956 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1914)
Langan v. Milk's Grove Special Drainage District No. 1
144 Ill. App. 394 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1908)
Binder v. Langhorst
85 N.E. 400 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 N.E. 466, 217 Ill. 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bromwell-v-flowers-ill-1905.