Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Ry. Co. v. Polecat Drainage District

213 Ill. 83
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 213 Ill. 83 (Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Ry. Co. v. Polecat Drainage 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
Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Ry. Co. v. Polecat Drainage District, 213 Ill. 83 (Ill. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a petition filed by the appellee drainage district under the provisions of the Eminent Domain act, for the condemnation of the right of way for the ditch of the drainage district in the bed of a natural water-course, across the right of way of the appellant company at two points. The appellant filed a cross-petition, asking for an assessment in its favor for damages to property not faken. A hearing resulted in an order granting the relief prayed for in the petition, at petitioner’s cost, on the payment to the appellant company of the sum of $40 for the property taken and the sum of $1000 damages to property not taken.

The appellee district was organized under the provisions of an act of the General Assembly adopted May 29, 1879, familiarly known as the Drainage and Levee act, which act constitutes paragraphs 1 to 74, inclusive, of chapter 42 of Hurd’s Statutes of 1899. -The contention of the appellant company that the said act provides a mode of procedure for the condemnation of the lands of others for use as a right of way of the drainage djjph, and that as the statute which gives the right of condemnation provides the remedy such remedy is exclusive and no other can be availed of, is not sound, for the reason that the remedy provided in the said act is in violation of constitutional guaranties of the citizen, as we held in Wabash Railroad Co. v. Coon Run Drainage District, 194 Ill. 310, and that being true, in legal effect the act provided no remedy whatever for the condemnation of the lands of others. Section 2 of said act of May 29, 1879, under which the appellee district claims corporate existence, authorized drainage districts formed thereunder to construct drains or ditches “across the lands of others.” This enactment was adopted in pursuance of the provisions of section 31 of article 4 of the constitution of 1870, as amended November 28, 1878, (1 Starr & Cur. Stat. 1896, p. 138,) and which authorized the General Assembly to pass laws to provide for the organization of drainage districts with power to construct drains, ditches and levees “across the lands of others.”

The question first arising is, as the remedy for condemnation provided by the act has proven inoperative and void, may such districts avail themselves of the Eminent Domain act in order to procure the right to construct their ditches across the lands of others. The power of eminent domain can only be exercised when the property to be taken is to be devoted to a public use. A public use means public usefulness, utility, advantage or benefit. It is not essential that the entire community or people of the State, or any political subdivision thereof, should be benefited or share in the use or enjoyment thereof. The use may be local or limited. It may be confined to a particular district and still be public, (10 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,—2d ed.—1063.) If local or limited, the use must be directly beneficial to a considerable number of the inhabitants of a section of the State, and the property to be taken must be controlled by law, for the advantage of that particular portion of the community to be benefited. Private property cannot be condemned by a person or corporation on the ground the general prosperity of the State or community would be promoted thereby, if the title to the property so taken is to be vested in such person or corporation as private property, to be used and controlled as other private property. To be public the use must concern a community, as distinguished from an individual or any particular number of individuals, and then, to authorize the condemnation of private property, the law must control the use to be made of the property, after it has been condemned, to the end that it shall be devoted to the public purpose which alone could justify the taking of the same from the owner without his consent. Tested by these observations, and in view of the amendment to the constitution authorizing drainage districts to construct their drains across the lands of others, the use of lands for the purpose of constructing thereon the ditch of a drainage district organized under the said statute is a “public use,” and such ditch dug for that purpose is to be regarded as a “public work,” within the meaning of those words as used 'in section 2 of the Eminent Domain act. Having the right, by virtue of the constitution and the laws made in pursuance thereof, to construct their ditches “across the lands of others,” and the use to be made of such ditches being a public use, we entertain no doubt of the power of drainage districts to avail of the provisions of the Eminent Domain act to enable them to obtain the legal right to the right of way through and over the lands of others for their ditches.

The question whether the appellee drainage district had been legally organized did not and could not arise in the proceeding for the condemnation of a right of way for the ditch across the lands of the appellant company. A petition to the Coles county county court for the entry of an order creating the district and a final decree or order of the said county court establishing the district were produced in evidence. The statute invested the county court of that county with jurisdiction to entertain petitions for the formation of drainage and levee districts and to enter final order establishing such districts. Jurisdiction and power were therefore vested in the county court to determine whether the petition bore the signatures of the requisite number of qualified petitioners and was in other respects in compliance with the statute. Whether it correctly exercised such power or jurisdiction could not be considered in this a collateral proceeding. The final order of the court having jurisdiction of the person and subject matter, cannot be inquired into and impeached in a collateral proceeding. (Figge v. Rowlen, 185 Ill. 234.) The legality of the organization of a drainage and levee district can be attacked and brought under judicial review only in a direct proceeding by quo zvarranto. (Osborn v. People ex rel. 103 Ill. 224.) The trial court therefore properly refused to consider the issue sought to be introduced by the appellant company whether the petition for the formation of the drainage district contained the number of qualified petitioners required by section 2 of the act of 1879.

• The petition asked the condemnation of two separate strips of land, each sixty-six feet in width and one hundred feet in length, across the right of way of the appellant company. Polecat creek ran through and crossed the right of way of the railroad and returning again crossed the right of way, and the railroad company had a bridge over the stream at each crossing. The drainage district proposed to widen and deepen the bed of the stream at each of the crossings, thereby making a ditch thirty feet in width at the top at both places. The appellant company claimed that this would necessitate the tearing away of all or a portion of each of the bridges and re-building the sarhe, and by its cross-petition sought an assessment of the damages and expense thereby to be occasioned. In support of this claim the appellant company introduced as a witness Charles Fisk, assistant civil engineer of the appellant company, who testified that the damage which would thereby be occasioned at the more westerly bridge would range from $2000 to $3000 and from $3200 to $3500 at the more easterly crossing.

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Bluebook (online)
213 Ill. 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-cincinnati-chicago-st-louis-ry-co-v-polecat-drainage-ill-1904.