Drainage Commissioners of Hammond Mutual Drainage District v. Drainage Commissioners of District No. 9

92 N.E. 953, 246 Ill. 526
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 92 N.E. 953 (Drainage Commissioners of Hammond Mutual Drainage District v. Drainage Commissioners of District No. 9) 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
Drainage Commissioners of Hammond Mutual Drainage District v. Drainage Commissioners of District No. 9, 92 N.E. 953, 246 Ill. 526 (Ill. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cooke

delivered the opinion of the court:

In September, 1904, the Drainage Commissioners of the Hammond Mutual Drainage District, appellee, filed a bill against the Drainage Commissioners of Drainage District No. 9 of the town of Unity, county of Piatt, appellant, in the circuit court of Piatt county, to enjoin appellant from exercising, control and jurisdiction over a portion of the drainage ditch in the south-east quarter of the southwest quarter of section 13, township 16, north, (Unity township,) range 5, east of the third principal meridian, and from excavating, widening, deepening and repairing such ditch and from trespassing upon the same. Temporary injunction was issued, and a motion to dissolve the same having been denied, the cause was referred to the master in chancery to take the proofs and report the same to the court, which was done. After many continuances of the cause a decree was entered by the court at the February term, 1910, finding in favor of the complainant in the bill and making the injunction perpetual.

The facts having a legitimate bearing upon the questions involved, as disclosed by the proof, are as follows: Some time during the year 1887 certain land owners of the town of Unity and of the town immediately east, in Piatt county, and in the towns of Lowe and Lovington, in Moultrie county, prepared an agreement, to be signed by such land owners, to form a mutual drainage district under section 77 of the Farm Drainage act of 1885. The agreement was in proper form and named therein three of the land owners who should serve as drainage commissioners until the third Tuesday of November, 1888, at which time their successors should be chosen. Among other lands included within this district was the Said south-east quarter of the south-west quarter of section 13 in Unity township, then owned by the estate of John Crocker, deceased, and controlled by John H. Crocker as executor of the last will and testament of the said John Crocker, deceased. To this agreement was attached a grant executed by Crocker as such executor, conveying to the district, which was designated in the agreement as Hammond Mutual Drainage District, a right of way of the width of sixty feet through said forty-acre tract for the construction of a ditch through the same to the depth of six feet and a width of twenty feet, which grant was properly acknowledged on November 10, 1887. The commissioners named in the agreement at once contracted for the construction of the main ditch through the district, beginning at the upper end of said forty-acre tract, about seventy-two rods north of the south line thereof and extending south to the outlet, through the towns of Lowe and Lovington, in Moultrie county. Work was at once commenced by the contractor and construction of the ditch was practically completed at the time this agreement was filed for record in the counties of Piatt and Moultrie, on October io, 1889. In the meantime, Crocker, as such executor, sold the forty-acre tract above described to Alfred Ceiling, and on November 20, 1888, Ceiling participated in the selection of commissioners for Hammond Mutual Drainage District, signing his name to the written selection as “Alfred Ceiling, successor to J. H. Crocker.” On July 6, 1889, a petition was filed with the town clerk of the said town of Unity for the organization of Drainage District No. 9 of said town of Unity. Alfred Ceiling signed this petition also. That district was finally organized on July 29, 1889, and as so organized embraced and included, among other lands, the forty-acre tract in question, then owned by Alfred Ceiling, although it is claimed by appellee that this tract was not properly included under the petition. After the organization of each of said districts had been completed dissension arose as to which district had jurisdiction over said forty-acre tract, and district No. 9 so planned and located its main ditch that its outlet was to be into the head or upper end of the ditch then constructed by the Hammond district to about seventy-two rods north of the south line of said forty-acre tract. In order to adjust their differences and to avoid the litigation which was threatened, the commissioners of these two districts entered into a written agreement on November 19, 1890, whereby it was mutually agreed between them that the Hammond district should have jurisdiction over and control of the south seventy-two rods of said forty-acre tract and district No. 9 should have jurisdiction over and control of all the remainder of said forty-acre tract, and that for and in consideration of the payment of $480 by district No. 9 to the Hammond Mutual Drainage District, district No. 9 was to be allowed to connect with the head of the ditch of the Hammond Mutual Drainage District on the said forty-acre tract and use said ditch as an outlet to its drainage system. This agreement also provided that it should never be construed as authorizing the commissioners of the Hammond district to levy any assessment upon the lands of district No. 9 or malee any claims for repairs or cleaning out the ditch of the Hammond district, it being understood that each party should take care of its own ditches and pay the costs thereof. Subsequent to that time the Hammond district on various occasions cleaned and repaired its ditch up to the upper point thereof, seventy-two rods north of the south line of the said forty-acre tract, and exercised exclusive jurisdiction, up until the filing of the bill herein, over the right of way which had been granted it by Crocker to that point. On two occasions after the making of the agreement between the commissioners of the two districts referred to, and before the filing of the bill herein, district No. 9 contracted with the Hammond district for an outlet through the ditch of the Hammond district for an additional flow of water. During all this time the various owners of said forty-acre tract were assessed by both drainage districts on said tract, which assessments were all paid. At the upper end of the ditch of the Hammond district, as constructed on said forty-acre tract, a lateral drain extended eastward, which was known as the “Stuve and Ponder lateral.” This lateral drained the lands belonging to Stuve and Ponder lying east and north of the said forty-acre tract, comprising in all nine hundred and sixty acres. In 1904 district No. 9 contracted with Joseph Lewis to widen, deepen and repair its ditch and that portion of the ditch which had been constructed by the Hammond district in the said forty-acre tract. Lewis had progressed with his work until he had reached the north end of the ditch as originally constructed by the Hammond district, when the commissioners of the Hammond district filed, this bill and secured the temporary injunction against Lewis and the commissioners of district No. 9.

The bill alleges that the commissioners of district No. 9, and Lewis, are threatening to go upon the lands embraced in the Hammond district without the consent of said district or its commissioners and against its protest, and to take possession of the ditch thereon and make repairs on the same and to exercise exclusive jurisdiction and control over a portion of the ditch of the Hammond district, and that' the improvement contemplated by the commissioners of district No. 9 will require the -appropriation of the right of way of the Hammond district, and of the ditch thereon, for a distance of seventy-two rods; that no steps have been taken by district No.

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.E. 953, 246 Ill. 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drainage-commissioners-of-hammond-mutual-drainage-district-v-drainage-ill-1910.