Cox v. Deverick

272 Ill. 46
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 272 Ill. 46 (Cox v. Deverick) 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
Cox v. Deverick, 272 Ill. 46 (Ill. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cooke

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellees, Stephen Cox and his children, filed their bill in the circuit court of Jasper county for a mandatory injunction commanding the appellants, Ransom Deverick and Otto Crandall, to remove a dam or obstruction alleged to have been placed by them in a common water-course or ditch. The bill alleges that the appellees are the owners of eighty acres of land north of and adjoining forty acres owned by appellant Deverick and in the possession of appellant Crandall as tenant; that beginning at the north side of appellees’ land and extending south to and across Deverick’s land there is a natural swale, through which water has always passed from the lands of appellees across those of appellant Deverick and thence east to a slough near the southeast corner of the section in which the lands of appellees and appellant Deverick are situated; that the said swale was many years ago improved by the owners of the lands through which it runs digging a ditch along the same from the north side of the lands of appellees south across the lands of appellant Deverick and thence east to the slough; that said ditch was made more than thirty years ago and at least five years prior to 1889; that on September 5, .1913, appellants erected a dam across said ditch at the south line of appellees’ land so as to prevent the proper flow of water therein, and that the damages occasioned thereby are continuous and recurring and not susceptible of reparation in an action at law. The answer denies the existence of the swale alleged in the bill, or that there is or ever was an artificial ditch as alleged, or that appellants have erected any dam in such ditch. The matter came on for hearing before the court and the temporary injunction theretofore issued was made perpetual. This appeal followed.

The principal contention made is that the decree is not supported by the evidence.

The lands of appellees and appellants are located in section 8 of township 7, north, range 14, west, in Jasper county, appellees owning the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter and the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of the section, and appellants owning the southeast quarter of 'the southwest quarter of the section. The evidence on the part of appellees tends to prove that before this land was improved this part of section 8, and the north part of section 17 adjoining it on the south, was flat, level land; that there was a natural swale extending north and south through about the center of the lands now owned by appellees and appellants, with a fall from the north line of appellees’ land to the south line of appellants’ land (a distance of three-fourths of a mile) of about five feet; that the swale then turned to the east and extended along and south of the section line between sections 8 and 17 to a point at or near the southeast corner of said section 8, where it joined a natural water-course which conducted the waters finally into the Embarras river; that some time between the years 1871 and 1874 the owner of the lands now owned by appellees, together with the owners of the other lands through which the swale extended, completed an artificial ditch, beginning at the north side of appellees’ lands and extending thence south through those lands and the lands of appellants and then east to a point at or near the southeast corner of the section; that this ditch was made by plowing a furrow with a two-foot plow for the purpose of facilitating the flow of the water; that the ditch was constructed along the lowest line of the swale and in the center thereof; that at various times since its construction the ditch has been repaired and cleaned out by the various owners of the lands through which it extends; that in 1893 a number of those who were interested in maintaining the ditch and keeping it free from obstructions combined their efforts and cleaned the ditch out thoroughly across the lands of appellees and the land now owned by Deverick; that one Layman, who owned the land in section 17 immediately south of the lands of appellant Deverick, objected to them going upon his lands to clean out the ditch, for the reason that one Calvert, who owned land between Layman’s land and the outlet of the ditch, refused to allow them to go upon his land for the purpose of cleaning out the ditch; that Layman thereafter, during the same year, cleaned out the ditch across his land, and it appears that for at least forty years there has been an artificial ditch through the land owned at that time by Calvert; that in 1913 appellants cleaned out the ditch across their lands up to a point within four or five rods of the line between the lands of appellants and the lands of appellees; that above that point appellants filled in the ditch; that along the line between the lands of appellees and the lands of appellants there is a ridge, referred to by the witnesses as a fence-row, composed of earth, which ridge is, according to the testimony, approximately twelve inches above the surface of the surrounding land; that the ditch along this swale or depression extended through this ridge or fence-row; that appellants, in filling up the ditch, built the dam to the height of the ridge or fence-row and approximately twelve feet square, constructing it of such material as to make a permanent obstruction and one which could be removed only with difficulty; that by reason of this obstruction the lands of appellees had been overflowed, because the water was thereby prevented from flowing off appellees’ lands through the usual outlet.

; A surveyor, who had formerly been county surveyor of Jasper county, testified that he had gone over this ground and taken levels along the line of this ditch; that the ditch is located in the center of a natural swale; that the ground slopes up from the sides of the ditch and it is the natural course for the water to take in flowing from the lands of appellees; that from the north line of the lands owned by appellees to the end of this ditch at or near the southeast corner of said section 8 there is a fall of 10.40 feet on the natural surface of the ground, and a fall of 12.30 feet from the natural surface of the ground at appellees’ north line to the bottom of the ditch at the section corner.

The testimony on the part of appellants is somewhat conflicting. Some of the witnesses testified that the natural flow of water was not south from the lands of appellees over the lands of appellants, but was to the west to another slough or branch located about twenty-eight rods west of the west line of appellees’ lands, or to the east to the public highway extending north and south along the east side of section 8. Some stated that there had never been any artificial ditch across the lands of appellants until the one constructed there by appellants in 1913, while others tes-’ tified to the existence of a ditch there prior to this time, one of the witnesses testifying to practically the same facts related by the witnesses for appellees as to the cleaning out of the ditch through the lands of appellees and the lands of appellants in 1893 and to the stopping of the work at the Layman farm.

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Bluebook (online)
272 Ill. 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-deverick-ill-1916.