Danaher v. Phillips

149 N.E. 302, 318 Ill. 204
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1925
DocketNo. 15837. Affirmed in part and reversed in part.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 149 N.E. 302 (Danaher v. Phillips) 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
Danaher v. Phillips, 149 N.E. 302, 318 Ill. 204 (Ill. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a proceeding in the county court of LaSalle county for the organization of Hope Township Drainage District, under the Levee Drainage act. The petition praying for the creation of a drainage district described therein was filed February 11, 1920. A hearing was had thereon, commissioners were appointed by the court July 12, 1920, and after a hearing upon the report of the commissioners, on December 23, 1921, the county court entered an order establishing the district. Certain objectors sued out this writ of error to review the proceedings in the county court, but by stipulation of the parties the time for filing briefs of defendants in error was extended from time to time till May, 1925.

The district as planned is practically rectangular in shape, a little over four miles long from east to west and about one and one-half miles in width. It contains approximately 4700 acres of land, and the village of Lostant, with a population of about 500 persons, is located in and near the northeast corner of the district. A natural water channel or ditch known as Little Sandy creek furnishes the only drainage facilities at the present time. It runs through the village and thence in a westerly and southwesterly direction through four sections of the land in the district. The petition and the proof offered disclose that this open ditch is partially obstructed with vegetation and debris and overflows at times in the year, causing damage to large portions of adjoining lands; that three-fourths of the basements'in the village of Lostant were full of water in the spring of the year; that water stands in parts of the ditch, becomes stagnant, and is a menace to the health of the community.

The drainage plan proposed by the commissioners and their engineers, as shown by the record, is the installation of tile drains, the main thirty-six-inch tile following the general course of the open ditch, which is to be completely filled up. Other lateral tile drains are to be constructed of such size and at such places determined upon so as to adequately drain all of the lands. The probable cost was estimated at approximately $148,000, and the annual maintenance, barring unusual occurrences, estimated at $100. The commissioners filed their report on August 15, 1921, after several continuances made by the court from time to time. The report shows that no lands within the district would be damaged on account of the construction of the tile drains and that the benefits would be double the cost. The commissioners reported further that no lands outside the district would be damaged but that several hundred acres so situated would be benefited, and they added to the district as originally planned 320 acres, namely, the south half of section 13 of township 31, which addition they stated would still make the signers of the petition constitute more than one-third of the adult land owners in the proposed district, who represent at least the major portion in area of the lands therein. The court found the necessary statutory provisions relative to establishing a drainage district had been complied with and that the drainage work proposed would be useful for agricultural and sanitary purposes, and the district was duly established by order of the court.

There are numerous assignments of error in the record. Certain plaintiffs in error appeared specially, challenging the court’s jurisdiction, and others appeared generally and filed objections. The contentions of the several objectors are classified by counsel under six different subdivisions, some of which are re-subdivided.

It is contended by those challenging the jurisdiction, that the court did not acquire jurisdiction of the parties. The petition was filed February 11, 1920, and notice given, by publication and mailing, of the date the petition was filed, “and that a hearing of said petition would be asked for at the March term of said county court.” On April 30, one of the days of the March term, the case was continued to the May term and finally set down for hearing June 23. ' As we understand the record, plaintiffs in error Danaher, Lungreen and Barton had previously entered a limited appearance for the purpose of contesting the court’s jurisdiction of them, one of the grounds being that the notice of filing the petition was insufficient. A hearing was had, and the court entered an order finding it had jurisdiction and overruled the objections. Subsequently further hearings were had on general objections filed by land owners to the commissioners’ report. An order was entered establishing the district. On behalf of Danaher, Lungreen and Barton the action of the court in overruling the objections to the court’s jurisdiction is assigned for error.

The court did not acquire jurisdiction of the parties by the notice published and mailed. Section 3 of the Levee act requires the notice to state when and in what court the petition is filed, “and at what term of the said court the petitioners will ask a hearing.” (Smith’s Stat. 1923, p. 756.) The notice stated the petitioners would ask for a hearing at the March term but stated no day of said term. Thirty days did not intervene between the first publication and the first day of the March term, so that could not have been the return day, and no particular day of the term was fixed by the notice. Whether the statute required the notice to fix the first day of the term as return day was considered in People v. Munroe, 227 Ill. 604, and it was there held return day is not required to be fixed for the first day of the term but may be fixed on any day during the term far enough in the future to permit the statutory notices to be given, but it was not held in that case that no definite day of the term should be fixed. In the Munroe case a definite day was fixed, March 20, which was not the first day of the term but was one of the days of the February term. That decision was followed in Regan v. Upper Salt Creek Drainage District, 311 Ill. 18. It is not stated in that opinion whether or not the notice fixed the return day on a definite day during the term. The statute is ambiguous in that it does not say whether the notice shall state the date on which the hearing shall be had or the day the petitioners will appear and ask that a date be set for the hearing. It is perhaps capable of the possible construction that the date of the hearing is not required to be stated in the notice but that the day on which the petitioners will appear in court and ask the court to set a date for the hearing must be stated in the notice. The notice is the process by which the court acquires jurisdiction of the -parties interested. The return day of a summons at law or in chancery is the first day of the next term of court at which the action may be commenced. A summons must be made returnable on a day stated. It would not give the court jurisdiction of the person of a party to serve him with a writ commanding him to appear at a term mentioned without stating the day of the term he is to appear. The notice required by section 3 answers the place of a summons, and the time stated therein when the petitioners will appear in court is the “return day,” or the time the “writ is made returnable.” That was so stated in the Munroe and Regan cases, supra.

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of Said District v. People ex rel. Condron
117 N.E.2d 96 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1954)
People Ex Rel. Goldsbery v. Zoller
169 N.E. 228 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1929)

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149 N.E. 302, 318 Ill. 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/danaher-v-phillips-ill-1925.