Canal Commissioners v. Sanitary District

61 N.E. 71, 191 Ill. 326
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 61 N.E. 71 (Canal Commissioners v. Sanitary District) 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
Canal Commissioners v. Sanitary District, 61 N.E. 71, 191 Ill. 326 (Ill. 1901).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

The Illinois and Michigan canal, extending from the Chicago river to Peru, was constructed by the State of Illinois and is managed by the appellants as a board appointed by the Governor. In 1889 the act authorizing the formation of sanitary districts was passed, and the appellee, the Sanitary District of Chicago, was organized under said act. It has constructed a drainage channel from said Chicago river to Lockport. This suit arises out of a contract between the canal commissioners and the sanitary district by which the sanitary district agreed to supply water to the canal. Some statement of the nature and history of the two enterprises, as shown by the evidence, seems to be necessary to an understanding of the questions at issue.

The canal was opened for business in the year 1848. The first level of the canal leading from Chicago was constructed so that the water therein was about eight feet above Lake Michigan when the latter stood at what is known as “datum,” which is the low-water mark in Lake Michigan in the year 1847. This first or upper level of the canal is also called the “summit level,” and extends from Bridgeport, where the canal connects with the Chicago river, at a point about five miles from Lake Michigan, south-westerly about twenty-eight miles, terminating in a lock called “Jack’s lock,” about two miles north of Lockport, where the canal takes a new and lower level. To supply the canal with water a dam was built across the Calumet river at Blue Island and a channel was cut from thence to the canal. As a further source of supply a feeder from the Desplaines river was provided, and pumping works were erected at Bridgeport to pump water from the Chicago river 'into the canal. These pumps were used during the dry season of the year. The canal has a slope of one-tenth of a foot to the mile from Bridgeport to Lockport, so that the surface is about three feet lower at Lockport than at Bridgeport. To maintain this level a constant supply of water is required. As the city of Chicago grew and turned sewage into the Chicago river the city became interested in having more water pumped-out of said river into the canal, to induce a flow from Lake Michigan into the river instead of allowing the sewage to be carried out into the lake, where the city obtained its water supply. Consequently, in 1858 new and larger pumps were put in at Bridgeport, pumping over 20,000 cubic feet per minute, and the cost of the new pumps and of operating them was divided between the city of Chicago and the canal trustees. The city continued to grow and to discharge more sewage into the river, and in 1865 the legislature authorized it to deepen this summit level of the canal to cleanse and purify the river by drawing a sufficient quantity of water from Lake Michigan through it- and through the summit level of the canal to carry the river water and sewage away by means of the canal. The city was to have a lien upon the canal, and the deep cut was completed in 1871, and after the Chicago fire the city was reimbursed for the expenditure. For a number of years after the deep cut was completed there was a sufficient depth of water in the canal from gravity flow to answer the needs of navigation without pumping. The dam across the Calumet at Blue Island was then removed. In 1883 it had again become necessary for the city to pump from the Chicago river, and it established pumps at Bridgeport which pumped from 40,000 to 50,000 cubic feet of water per minute out of the river into the canal. This was done by the city for its own protection, to keep its sewage out of the lake, and it operated the pumps until it was relieved by turning the sewage into the drainage channel of the sanitary district. The pumps raised the water from the Chicago river into the canal, whence it flowed very slowly toward Lockport. When the sanitary district channel was opened the city had no further interest in pumping water into the canal.

In 1892 the sanitary district commenced cutting its channel, which it claimed to be completed in the latter part of 1899. The canal and drainage channel are practically parallel from Chicago to Lockport. • Both connect with'the Chicago river and draw their supply of water from Lake Michigan through the river. The inlet to' the sanitary channel is at Robey street, and the inlet to the canal is about 2500 feet east, toward the lake. The supply for the sanitary channel is therefore drawn past the inlet to the canal. While the canal and drainage channel are parallel, they are in no way connected with each other. The act for the formation of sanitary districts provides for-a commission to be appointed by the Governor to ascertain whether a channel is of the character and capacity required by the act, and upon their report that such is the case the Governor is directed to authorize the water and sewage to be let into the channel. The commission to examine the drainage channel was appointed in May, 1899, and on January 2, 1900, they reported the channel, in substance, complete. The Chicago river is a navigable body of water under the charge and control of the Federal government, which granted permission to the sanitary district to connect its channel Avith said river. The canal commissioners discovered that the admission of water into the drainage channel would lower the level of the water in the Chicago river at the inlet to the canal from two to two and a half feet, and, of course, they knew that the city of Chicago would stop pumping water into the canal. At the instance of the canal commissioners the Attorney General filed an information in the nature of a bill in equity in the circuit court of Will county to restrain the sanitary district from lowering the level of the water in the Chicago river. On the petition of the sanitary district this information was removed into the circuit court of the United States, on the ground that a Federal question was involved, and that information is still pending. The city of St. Louis was also threatening to enjoin the sanitary district from opening its channel, and the Governor of this State refused permission to open it unless it would preserve navigation on the canal. The sanitary district was very desirous of opening the channel to turn in the water before there should be any interference on the part of the city of St. Louis, and on December 21,1899, it entered into the written contract with the canal commissioners which, is the foundation of this suit. By that contract the sanitary district agreed that for the period of four months after opening its main channel it would supply the summit level of the canal with a volume of water equal to the average volume which had been supplied to said canal by the pumps at Bridgeport for the year 1899,— not less than 35,000 cubic feet per minute; that it would lower the lock at the junction of the canal with the Chicago river prior to April 1,1900, so as to maintain a depth of six and one-half feet of water over the mitre-sills of said lock, and that after the expiration of four months it would maintain throughout the summit level of the canal a navigable depth of six feet of water. The volume of water to be supplied for the purpose of maintaining this navigable depth of six feet was to be determined by the needs of navigation. The obligation was perpetual, and the sanitary district was to have the rig'ht to enter upon the canal in order to make such excavations in the summit level as_ might be necessary to secure said six feet of water, if it should find that method more economical than to pump that amount of water into the canal.

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Bluebook (online)
61 N.E. 71, 191 Ill. 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/canal-commissioners-v-sanitary-district-ill-1901.