Daum v. Cooper

103 Ill. App. 4, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 85
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 18, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 103 Ill. App. 4 (Daum v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daum v. Cooper, 103 Ill. App. 4, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 85 (Ill. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action on the case brought by Cooper against Daum, in which Cooper recovered judgment for $25, from which Damn appeals. The original declaration, contained one count, and an additional count was tiled later. A special finding by the jury was practically against plaintiff as to the additional count, so that only the original declaration need be considered. It charges the plaintiff owned certain real estate in Alto township in Lee county; that defendant, a commissioner of highways in said town, for the purpose of injuring plaintiff’s lands, cut certain ditches across a certain highway and put culverts therein, and took out certain culverts across said highway, and thereby caused water to flow upon plaintiff’s lands and damage plaintiff’s lands and buildings, and thereby caused rain, standing and surface water, to flow in a different direction and channel, and with much greater force and violence than it of right ought to have and otherwise would have done upon plaintiff’s lands, and damaged them. The plea was not guilty.

There is very little conflict as to the main facts. Cooper owned the northeast quarter of section 29. A highway ran north and south through the center of the quarter section, and an east and west highway ran along its north line. Cooper’s residence and farm buildings were just south of said east and west road on the west side of the north and south road. James Smith owned the land north of Cooper on both sides of the north and south road. Daum owned the land south of Cooper, west of the north and south road. The general course of the water over these lands is southwesterly. In a state of nature the water rising on Smith’s land east of the north and south road, and the water coming from lands northeast of his, passed across said road at two places and went west some seventy rods on Smith’s land,and then turned south and ran southerly across the east and west road some seventy rods west of Cooper’s corner, and across Cooper’s land and to and upon Damn’s land. The water from Cooper’s land east of the road passed in a state of nature across said road at points 400, 700, 1,000 and 1,950 feet south of Cooper’s corner and passed westerly and southwesterly and then southerly over his land west of the road and then to and upon Daum’s land.

Some eighteen or nineteen years before this suit was begun the highway commissioners graded said north and south road between said Smith lands and cut a ditch on the east side of the pike or grade and thereby brought to the corner where the Cooper residence was the water coming from Smith’s land east of the road and from other lands northeast of his, all which water in a state of nature would have passed about seventy rods west of that road over Smith’s land and then would have turned south and crossed the east and west road about seventy rods west of Cooper’s home buildings. The commissioners placed a culvert in the north and south road, on the north side of the east and west road, to conduct this water across to the west side of the north and south road, but there was no ditch on the east and west road to carry the water west to the depression seventy rods west of that corner, nor any pike to restrain the water from flowing upon Cooper’s lands at that corner where his farm buildings were, and it did so flow where it never flowed in a state of nature. To avoid this injurious result Cooper, at his own expense, made the following changes in the road: He took out the culvert on the north side of said east and west road which conducted said waters to the west side of said north and south road; he cut through the east and west road on the east side of the north and south road and placed a culvert there, thus conducting said waters across the north and south road, and he carried said waters south along a ditch on the east side of said north and south road for about 1,400 feet south from said corner. At that point he placed a culvert in said north and south road and carried said waters to the west side of said road, and then carried them in the ditch on the west side of said road south to his south line. He placed a culvert in said road 1,950 feet south of the corner to conduct other waters from the east to the west side of the road. He also put an eight-foot culvert across the highway at his south line to carry to the west side of the road waters collecting in the ditch on the east side of the road at that point, and he dug a ditch along his south line west of the road which carried all said waters on his own land west to the point where in a state of nature they all passed upon Damn’s land, and there discharged said waters in their natural course. He also built banks along the bench on the west side of the north and south road at certain places to prevent the water in the west ditch flowing upon his land. The effect of these changes made by Cooper was that all the waters from Smith’s lands east of the road and from lands northeast of Smith, which the highway commissioners had brought to his corner and discharged upon his land where hishome buildings were, contrary to the natural course thereof, and all the waters flowing in the course of nature at various points from Cooper’s land east of the road to and over his lands west of the road, were collected in said road ditches and carried to his south line and there carried west to the depression where, in the course of nature, all said waters flowed upon Damn’s land. Cooper thus avoided the injury the commissioners had inflicted upon him and further benefited his own land.. As he owned the land on both sides of the road the work wras done on land in which he owned the fee, subject to the public use. He made these changes about fifteen years before the grievances herein complained of. Plaintiff offered to prove he had permission from the highway commissioners to do this work, but an objection thereto was sustained because he did not offer to show that fact by their record. It does not appear that the commissioners as a body have ever made any objection to the course pursued by Cooper, but apparently they have ever since acquiesced therein and are still content with that method of conducting the water. Daum has been a highway commissioner many years, and seems to have been commissioner when the work injurious to Cooper was originally done on the highway between the Smith lands. About two years after Cooper made these improvements Daum started to take out the culvert Cooper had placed across the east and west road at the corner, but Cooper asked him if he had the consent of the other commissioners and he said he had not, and Cooper told him he put it in under a permit from the other commissioners and forbade Baum taking out the culvert without the action of the other commissioners, and Baum then desisted. Up to the time of the acts by Baum here complained of, nothing appears showing that the commissioners, as a body, or the majority of them, either by any recorded action or in any other manner, ever questioned the improvements Cooper had made. Upon this record the commissioners, as a body, must be deemed to have acquiesced therein.

Beginning in the fall of 1899, Baum made the following changes in the system constructed by Cooper and which had been in force for fifteen years: He took out the eight-foot culvert in the road at the south line of Cooper’s land, and put in a twenty-inch tile at that point. He removed the culvert Cooper had placed in the road 1,'400 feet south of the corner, and instead placed a culvert in the road 1,000 feet south of the corner, or 400 feet nearer Cooper’s farm buildings. He closed the culvert 1,950 feet south of the corner.

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Bluebook (online)
103 Ill. App. 4, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daum-v-cooper-illappct-1902.