County of Henderson v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad

151 N.E. 542, 320 Ill. 608
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1926
DocketNo. 17317. Order affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 151 N.E. 542 (County of Henderson v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad) 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
County of Henderson v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, 151 N.E. 542, 320 Ill. 608 (Ill. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The county of Henderson and the town of Biggsville, in that county, filed a petition with the Illinois Commerce Commission for an order requiring the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company to repair and maintain a bridge over a creek crossed by a public highway running north and south on the section line between sections 17 and 18. The commission, after a hearing, entered an order finding that the subject matter of the petition was one over which the commission had no jurisdiction, because the bridge was entirely outside of the railroad company’s right of way, and for that reason the petition was dismissed. The petitioners appealed to the circuit court, which found that the commission had jurisdiction of the subject matter, and therefore set aside its order and remanded the cause to the commission. The railroad company appealed to this court, but by agreement of the parties the appeal was dismissed, and it was stipulated that there should be a rehearing of the petition before the commission but that no additional evidence should be heard. On the rehearing the commission found that the duty of reconstructing the bridge fell' primarily upon the public authorities and ordered that the prayer of the petition be denied, except it should appear that the tracks or structures of the railroad company had added an additional cost to the reconstruction of the bridge ; that the railroad company be ordered to contribute to the public authorities the excess cost, if any, which the construction or reconstruction of the tracks or structures of the railroad company have added to the cost of reconstructing the bridge, and that the commission retain jurisdiction of the cause for the purpose of ascertaining the amount, if any, to be contributed by the respondent toward the reconstruction of the bridge in case the parties are unable to agree. The county and township filed a petition for rehearing, which was denied, and they appealed to the circuit court of Henderson county, which set aside the order of the Commerce Commission, remanded the cause to the commission, and ordered the clerk to transmit a certified copy of the order of the court to the commission, together with the record, at the expiration of sixty days, if no appeal should be taken. From this order the railroad company has appealed and the county and township have assigned cross-errors.

The petition alleged that the highway existed prior to the building of the railroad, but there is no evidence of that fact. The evidence shows that many years ago the railroad was in existence, having a single track running from east to west through sections 17 and 18. On the south side of the railroad was a creek running from east to west, and there was also a highway running from south to north on the section line between sections 17 and 18. The road, on reaching the creek, crossed it at a-ford. After crossing the highway the creek turned northwest, crossing the right of way of the railroad company, going under the tracks, which were carried over the stream on a pile bridge. The stream continued northwest, then turned west and southwest, and again crossed the. right of way, going under the tracks, which crossed the stream on another pile bridge. The highway, after crossing the ford on the section line, turned to the left, and leaving the section line ran down the north bank of the creek and crossed the right of way, going under the same pile bridge over the stream. On the north side of the right of way the road turned back to the section line on the east and then continued north. The pile bridge was filled in and a solid embankment made by the railroad company in 1882. At the same time the railroad company changed the channel of the stream by cutting a new channel on the south side of the railroad, through which the creek ran without crossing the railroad. The road-bed was not raised and the railroad company graded the approach from the ford to the tracks, and the highway was changed so that it went from the ford straight over the railroad embankment on the section line instead of turning to the left, going under the railroad, and returning to the section line as before. In 1899 and 1900 the railroad embankment was raised five and a half or six feet and the track was moved to the north about ten feet. This elevation of the grade made a rise of 23 feet from the ford to the track, and was an obstruction which made necessary some provision for travel on the highway either over or under the railroad track. There was a conference between the commissioners of highways of Biggsville township and railroad officials as to the method of getting over or under the railroad when the grade was raised. There, was some talk of an underground crossing by the railroad company. The underground passage would relieve the road from all danger of accidents, but with an underground crossing the water from the creek would flow through to the north side and run west and back through the road again, making another opening necessary. In the opinion of the engineers good engineering demanded that that should be avoided if it could be done. Throupe, the superintendent of the railroad, said that he would put in a bridge, and it was done. The bridge was one which had been previously in use by the railroad company. It was a combination span wood and steel bridge 100 feet long raised on abutments, with two approaches, making a total length of 136 feet. The bridge is 11 or 11^ feet above the bed of the stream, and the top of the railroad track is 12 feet above the floor of the bridge. The north end of the bridge is 147 feet from the nearest rail, at right angles to the main track at the center of the highway. Some repairs have been made on the bridge by the railroad company and some new planks and beams put in. The public authorities have done no work and made no repairs. The bridge was not open to public travel at the time of the hearing because it was impassable and had been for about a year or a year and a half.

The commission made a finding that while there is evidence that prior to the raising of the grade the public crossed the creek in question by means of a ford, and that upon the raising of the grade of the railroad the company, under an agreement with the public officials, straightened the public highway and built the bridge at its own expense, yet it is not conceivable that with the development of the community and the increase of traffic on the highway, as shown by the evidence, the straightening of the highway and the building of the bridge would not have been found necessary whether the railroad was located in its present position or not. This is substantially a finding that the development of the community and the increase of traffic on the highway would have required the straightening of the highway and the building of the bridge without any regard to the location of the railroad where it is, and it is without any basis in the evidence. There is no testimony in regard to the development of the community or the increase of traffic on the highway. The evidence is that the road is one of the public highways of Henderson county; that it connects with the main road going west from Biggsville and with the road north of the railroad track. It is characterized by one of the witnesses as not really a main traveled road but a kind of secondary road from the north to the main traveled road. It will be a main traveled road when the hard road east and west is built. The road a half mile south of this bridge is one of the main roads of the county. It runs through Henderson county from Monmouth to Burlington.

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Bluebook (online)
151 N.E. 542, 320 Ill. 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-henderson-v-chicago-burlington-quincy-railroad-ill-1926.