Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railway Co. v. Road District No. 10

187 N.E. 155, 353 Ill. 160
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1933
DocketNo. 21911. Order affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 187 N.E. 155 (Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railway Co. v. Road District No. 10) 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
Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railway Co. v. Road District No. 10, 187 N.E. 155, 353 Ill. 160 (Ill. 1933).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant filed with the Illinois Commerce Commission on March 17, 1932, its petition seeking permission to discontinue a certain grade crossing over its tracks in Johnson county. The petition recites that appellant owns and operates a line of railroad from Chicago to Thebes, in Alexander county, passing through Johnson county; “that a certain public highway crossing your petitioner’s railroad at grade, located on the township line between townships 13 and 14 south, range 2 east, in Johnson county, is no longer used as a public highway and the crossing abandoned, substantially as shown” on a blue-print attached to the petition. The petition sought an order of the commission permitting petitioner to discontinue the maintenance of that grade crossing. Certain residents and property owners of road district No. io in Johnson county filed with the Commerce Commission a cross-petition objecting to the relief sought by the petition. A hearing was had and evidence taken on April 6, 1932, and an order entered by the commission granting the prayer of the petition. Thereafter, on petition therefor, a rehearing was allowed and further hearing of evidence had on June 6, 1932. Thereafter the commission re-entered its order granting the prayer of the petition and permitting appellant to remove the crossing in question upon improvement by it of two certain crossings on its main and branch lines at points about one-half mile south from the crossing here involved. It appears that the crossing sought to be abolished, known in this record as the “J°PPa Junction crossing,” is a grade crossing forming a part of an east and west highway and crosses at a point a few feet south from the wye at which the Joppa branch leaves the main branch. At that point the two tracks are quite close together. This highway is about three and one-half miles in length and connects the village of Perks, west of the said road, with Belknap, another village in Johnson county lying east of appellant’s road. At the time of the hearing State route No. 147, a hard road extending north and south, was being laid about one-half mile east of the railroad, at Joppa Junction. A small settlement, known as Chappel Community, lies about three-quarters of a mile west of Joppa Junction, at the intersection of the road here involved and the Perks road, a north and south highway. This settlement contains a store and a church. A cemetery is located near by. On the east end of this Joppa Junction road is a small settlement known as West Eden. Another east and west road one and three-quarters miles north of Joppa Junction connects the Perks road on the west with the new hard road on the east, and one-half mile south of Joppa Junction an east and west road has been laid out extending from the Perks road to the new hard road. This latter road crosses the main and branch lines of appellant’s road, and, though it does not appear to have been completely dedicated and accepted as a public highway so as to require maintenance by appellant of statutory crossings, it is used to a considerable extent by the public.

It is conceded that for more than fifty years the Joppa Junction road has been in use as a public highway but that for the last five or six years it has been allowed to deteriorate, and either because of the opening of the road one-half mile south or because the Joppa Junction road has not been kept in repair the use -of it has fallen off, until at the time of the hearing it was not used to any great extent by the public.

The commission finds (paragraph C) “that at a point a" few feet south of the junction of said Joppa branch with petitioner’s main line a certain east and west public highway crosses both said lines of railroad at grade.” It also finds (paragraph G) “that neither the said Joppa Junction crossing nor the highway for some distance each way therefrom have been used to any great extent in recent years, and the said highway, through disuse or otherwise, has been allowed to deteriorate.” It also finds (paragraph H) “that since the said Joppa Junction crossing and the highway each side thereof have been permitted to deteriorate, the crossings of the main line and the Joppa branch, formed by the east and west highway one-half mile south thereof, have been used to a considerable extent by the general public.” It also finds (paragraph I) “that the closing and abolition of the Joppa Junction crossing will not seriously inconvenience the public in traveling from the territory immediately west of said crossing either to Cypress or Karnak; that the public necessity and convenience to be served by the said crossing is not sufficient to offset the danger inherent in a grade crossing, and that in the interest of public safety the said crossing should be abolished and closed, but only after performance by the petitioner of the conditions set forth in the next following finding.” These conditions are, that the appellant take steps, by dedication or otherwise, to remove any possible doubt as to the public nature of the road crossing its main line and Joppa branch one-half mile south of the Joppa Junction road and to maintain lawful crossings at those points. The commission ordered the crossing abolished on these conditions and ordered that “the said crossing may then be closed to public travel by said railroad company.” On appeal to the circuit court of Johnson county this order of the Commerce Commission was reversed and set aside.

Appellant argues that the Joppa Junction road is shown to have been abandoned and that the new road one-half mile south of it has been accepted by the public, and that the Joppa Junction road has therefore ceased to exist as a public highway and the commission had jurisdiction to abolish the grade crossing. It is also argued that the issue concerning the abandonment of the Joppa Junction road was one of fact within the province of the commission to decide, and that its findings on that issue will not be disturbed unless clearly and manifestly against the weight of the evidence.

Appellant points to section 58 of the Public Utilities act as the source of the authority of the commission to abolish this crossing. Under that section the commission “may alter or abolish any grade crossing, heretofore or hereafter established, when in its opinion the public safety requires such alteration or abolition.” It is not contended that this section empowers the commission to close an existing public highway by abolishing a .railroad crossing on it, and, of course, it does not. The commission has no authority to abolish or vacate highways. It does have authority over railroad crossings in the public highways, (Commerce Com. v. Omphghent Township, 326 Ill. 65,) but if a public highway exists at such crossing the power of the commission is, and it must necesarily be, limited to the separation of grades or re-location of a grade crossing at such point.

Appellee does not seriously contend that the commission does not have authority to abolish a grade crossing where the public highway has been abandoned or legally vacated, but its argument is that there is no substantial evidence in the record upon which to base a finding of abandonment or vacation of the highway. It is necessary to a determination of the jurisdiction of the Commerce Commission to abolish the crossing to consider whether the Joppa Junction road has been, in fact, abandoned or vacated. The question thus raised is more than one of fact.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 N.E. 155, 353 Ill. 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-eastern-illinois-railway-co-v-road-district-no-10-ill-1933.