Daum v. Cooper

70 N.E. 339, 208 Ill. 391
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 70 N.E. 339 (Daum v. Cooper) 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
Daum v. Cooper, 70 N.E. 339, 208 Ill. 391 (Ill. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a bill in chancery filed by the appellant, praying that appellee be enjoined from cutting a ditch in his (appellee’s) farm and causing water to flow out of its natural course to and upon the lands of appellant. The cause was heard upon bill, answer, replication and proofs produced in open court, and a decree was entered dismissing the bill for want of equity, from which decree this appeal has been perfected.

A motion submitted by the appellee to dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction was reserved to the hearing, and will be overruled for reasons that will be made apparent in the course of the-opinion.

The appellant and the appellee are the owners of adjoining farm lands in the town of Alto, in Lee county. The lands are all situated in section 29, town 39, north, range 2, east. The appellant is the owner of the west half of the south-east and the east half of the south-west quarter of said section, and the appellee’s lands are described as the east half of the north-west and the northeast quarter of the said section. Appellee’s dwelling is located on the north-east corner of the west half of the north-east quarter, which tract, together with the eighty-acre tract immediately west of it, will be designated hereafter as the appellee’s home place. A public highway ruus east of this home tract of appellee’s land, dividing it from the east half of the north-east quarter, which latter tract will be, for convenience, hereafter called the “Body place.” This highway runs south along" the east side of the lands of the appellant. There is a highway along the north side of appellee’s lands. The following plat will aid to a clearer understanding of the location of these lands and of what will hereafter be said in this opinion as to ditches and water-courses:

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Two small water-courses ran from the Eody place across the highway westwardly into appellee’s home tract, and another water-course entered his home tract near the center thereof, on the north side. The natural flow of the water from all of these water-courses was to the west and south-west. It seems from the testimony that the water did not flow in any well defined channels in the westerly or south-westerly portion of appellee’s home place, but that the land there was low and flat and the water found its way in slight depressions to the west and south-west. The appellee contended, and the testimony in his behalf tended to show, that a portion of this water flowed from his land on to a portion of the northwestern corner of the lands of the appellant, but the testimony in behalf of the appellant tended to show that the water would in a state of nature flow across appellee’s west line of his home place at points from twenty to sixty rods north of the north-west corner of the lands now owned by the appellant. The north-west portion of appellant’s land and the south-west portion of appellee’s land were flat and low and wet, and the truth of either contention could not be well declared from the proof.

The lands belonging to the appellant formerly belonged to one Jeptha Mitten. In the year 1871 the appellee and the said Jeptha Mitten, by mutual consent and agreement, constructed a line of ditches beginning on the west line of appellee’s home place about one hundred rods north of his south-west corner and extending thence south along the west line of the appellee’s home place to the north-west corner of Mitten’s land, (now appellant’s tract,) thence south along the west line of Mitten’s land a distance of eighty rods. Appellant became the owner of the Mitten land in 1875.

In 1886 the appellee claimed that the highway commissioners, in grading- and improving the highways near the north-east corner of his home place, had obstructed the natural flow of the water coming from the east and north, and caused the same to flood his door-yard and premises about his house in the north-east corner of the home tract. This complaint on the part of the appellee resulted in an agreement with the commissioners of highways, made in 1886, under which the appellee was permitted to construct, and did then construct at his own expense, a ditch in the west “bench" of the highway, which ran north and south, beginning in the west bench of the said highway at the north-east corner of his'home place and extending from thence south to within about four feet of the south line of his land. This ditch intercepted the waters which would otherwise flow on the north-easterly portions of his home place because of the construction of the grade of the highway, and also the waters which would otherwise flow on the easterly part of his home place from the two water-courses coming from the Body place, and would conduct all such water down the ditch to the south end thereof, near the southeast corner of his home place. The appellee at the same time caused a ditch to be dug on his own land in the south part of his home place, from the south end of this ditch on the west side of the highway, west to his own ditch near the south-west corner of his home place. These ditches were constructed in 1886, and conducted the water which otherwise would have come upon the home place upon the north-east corner thereof, and from the Body place, south in the ditch in the highway to the ditch leading west on his own land, thence in the latter ditch west to the appellee’s ditch on the west line of his home place and within a few feet of the north end of the Mitten ditch, into which latter ditch the water would then be conveyed by the ditch on the west line of appellee’s land.

In 1888 the Inlet Swamp Drainage District was organized, and a number of ditches were dug for the purpose of draining the lands west and south of that of these litigants. The plans of the drainage district contemplated the construction of a ditch from the north main ditch of the drainage district almost due north-east to the south-west corner of appellee’s home farm, which was also the north-west corner of Daum’s farm and also the junction of the Cooper and Mitten ditches, and a few feet south of the western outlet of the ditch constructed by the appellee from the north and south highway in the south part of his home place to the south-west corner thereof, as before described. The appellant interceded with the commissioners of the drainage district and induced them to abandon the proposed ditch to the south-west corner of appellee’s land, and arranged with them to cut the ditch eastwardly to the south end of the Mitten ditch, and to secure this action on the part of the commissioners the appellant agreed, with them that he would clean out the Mitten ditch and keep it in good condition to conduct the water which came into it. After the construction of the Inlet drainage district ditch in thp year 1888 until the year 1903 all of the waters from appellee’s farm came, by means of the ditch on the west side of his home place and the ditch from the' highway on the south side of his place, into the Mitten ditch and from thence to the ditch of the drainage district. The position of appellee is, he has the perpetual right to discharge the water from his ditch into the Mitten ditch on appellant’s land and to have the same flow therein, and it is for this reason we hold a freehold is involved.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 N.E. 339, 208 Ill. 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daum-v-cooper-ill-1904.