Commissioners of Sangamon v. Houston

120 N.E. 253, 284 Ill. 406
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1918
DocketNo. 11891
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 120 N.E. 253 (Commissioners of Sangamon v. Houston) 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
Commissioners of Sangamon v. Houston, 120 N.E. 253, 284 Ill. 406 (Ill. 1918).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cooke

delivered the opinion of the court:

Sangamon and Drummer Drainage District is a drainage district organized in the county court of Champaign county under the Levee act and embraces lands in Champaign and Ford counties. The chief purpose in organizing the district seems to have been to reclaim lands subject to overflow from Drummer creek by straightening, widening and deepening that creek. The dredging of Drummer creek extended south from the city of Gibson, in Ford county, to the outlet of Drummer creek into the Sangamon river, in Champaign county, and the drainage district as originally formed apparently included only lands subject to overflow from Drummer creek. The district ditch, constructed principally in the bed of Drummer creek, was completed in 19x3. On May 8, 1917, the commissioners of the district filed their petition in the county court of Champaign county to annex approximately 10,000 acres of land in Ford county lying outside the district as originally formed, it being charged in the petition that the lands sought to be annexed would be benefited by the work done and proposed to be done in the district and that the owners of such lands had connected their drains with the drains and ditches of the district. A large number of land owners filed objections and a hearing was had before the court. One objection, that some of the .lands sought to be annexed were in another drainage district, was sustained as to those lands, and the commissioners upon the hearing dismissed their petition as to certain other lands. The court, overruled the objections of the other land owners and entered an order annexing their lands to the district. From that order twenty-four land owners owning 3945 acres of land annexed to the district have prosecuted this appeal.

Appellees conceded upon the hearing in the county court that none of the land owners had made connection with any drain or ditch of the district. The only work done by the district consists of straightening, widening and deepening Drummer creek, which was thus made the district ditch, and it was not shown that the district proposed to construct any additional ditches or drains. The only question presented for determination in this case therefore was and is whether the appellants’ lands have been and will be benefited by the straightening, widening and deepening of Drummer creek south from the city of Gibson.

The lands of a portion of the appellants lie west of the drainage district as originally organized, and all of them, except 155 acres belonging to appellant Eliza W. Dunnan, have their drainage through natural water-courses which empty into the district ditch. These lands are located from one to three and one-half miles from the district ditch, and along the natural water-courses into which they drain have an elevation varying from 14.87 feet to 44.19 feet above their outlet into Drummer creek. None of the natural water-courses into which appellants’ lands drain have a fall of less than 10 feet to the mile and some of them have a fall of 20 feet to the mile. The lands of the remaining appellants lie north of the district as originally formed. Some of them have their drainage into natural water-courses which empty into the drainage ditch or into Drummer creek north of the point where the district ditch begins, and the others have their drainage into Drummer creek from one to three miles north of the point where the district ditch begins. These lands along the natural water-courses into which they drain have an elevation varying from 16.14 feet to 40.70 feet above the original bed of Drummer creek and a fall of from 10 to 20 feet to the mile.

There is no contention that any of appellants’ lands are or ever were subject to overflow from that portion of Drummer creek which has been widened and deepened, but it is appellees’ theory that by reason of the construction of the district ditch the flow of water in Drummer creek above and north of the district ditch and in the natural watercourses having their outlet into the district ditch has been accelerated^ resulting in improved tile drainage facilities and consequent benefits to appellants’ lands. A careful consideration of all the evidence in the record leads to the conclusion that this theory is based entirely upon opinion evidence and not upon facts. The mere fact that the flow of water in a natural water-course into which tile drains empty has been accelerated is not sufficient proof of benefits to the lands drained by the tile to warrant the annexation of such lands to a drainage district. It must further appear that the lands, when adapted only for agricultural purposes, have been thereby rendered more productive and consequently more valuable. There is a conflict in the evidence as to whether or not the construction of the district ditch has accelerated the flow of water in the natural watercourses into which appellants’ lands drain, but there is no conflict in the evidence upon the question whether appellants’ lands have been thereby rendered more productive. The evidence adduced is conclusive that, so far as material benefits are concerned, there has been no change in the condition of the lands of appellants since the construction of the district ditch.

While it is argued by appellees that appellants’ lands have been benefited by the construction of the district ditch, in our judgment the following appearing in appellees’ brief states the true reason for the attempt to annex these lands: “The entire burden of the construction of this immense outlet and drainage system has been borne by the lands which had theretofore been flooded and .overflowed by the waters thrown down upon them by these objectors.” This situation existed, however, because the lands which were subject to overflow were servient to appellants’ lands, and the appellants cannot be required to contribute to the expense of relieving those servient lands of the burden which the law casts upon servient lands. If appellees’ position were sound, then in organizing a drainage district, under the Levee act the only question necessary to be considered in determining what lands should be included within the district would be whether the lands sought to be included were in the same watershed. That such is not the deciding factor in cases of this kind has been heretofore settled. People v. Barber, 265 Ill. 316; Inlet Swamp Drainage District v. Cooper, 274 id. 77.

That appellees tried the case on the theory that because the appellants’ lands were in the Drummer creek watershed they could and should be annexed to the drainage district is apparent from a consideration of the testimony of the witnesses testifying in their behalf.

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Bluebook (online)
120 N.E. 253, 284 Ill. 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioners-of-sangamon-v-houston-ill-1918.