Dupont v. Miller

310 Ill. 140
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1923
DocketNo. 15238
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 310 Ill. 140 (Dupont v. Miller) 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
Dupont v. Miller, 310 Ill. 140 (Ill. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant filed his bill in January, 1921, in the superior court of Cook county, seeking to enjoin the appellees the director of the Department of Public Works and Buildings of the State of Illinois and the superintendent of waterways of said department from interfering with, hindering or obstructing him from constructing a bulkhead across the entryway of a waterway known in this record as the duPont slip or magazine slip. The bill alleges that this is a private waterway connected with the Chicago river, lying east of Halsted street, in the city of Chicago. The bulkhead is sought to be put in twenty feet from the mouth of the slip for the purpose of filling in this slip, which is eighty feet in width and approximately nine hundred feet in length, extending north from the south branch of the Chicago river. Said appellees answered the bill of complaint, alleging that the slip is a public and not a private waterway. During the hearing on issues made up, appellee Maude L. McLaughlin, owner of a portion of the property abutting on the slip, petitioned to be allowed to intervene as a defendant. By stipulation in open court she was admitted as a defendant, with the understanding that her petition stand as her answer to the bill of complaint as amended, and that she also adopt the answer of the director of public works and the superintendent of waterways. The chancellor, on hearing, dismissed the bill for want of equity.

There is little dispute as to the controlling facts in the record. Most of them are stipulated. It is stipulated that the sole reason of defendants for preventing the complainant from constructing the proposed bulkhead is that they contend the waters of the duPont slip are public waters; that the use of the same is subject to State control to the extent provided by the acts of the legislature of this State referred to in the bill of complaint and the answer of the defendants, and that to permit the closing of the duPont slip would violate such acts and the laws governing navigable waters.

The facts concerning the construction of the slip are as follows: In 1864 the owners of various portions of a strip of ground bounded on the south by the Chicago river, on the west by Halsted street, on the north by Twenty-second street and on the east by Union avenue, in the city of Chicago, for the purpose of utilizing their property for shipping and dockage purposes excavated the slip now known as the duPont slip. It extends north from the Chicago river through approximately the center of the tract. This work was completed in 1870. The excavated tract was opened and filled with water from the Chicago river. In July, 1865, the owners of the portion of the described property lying east of the slip filed in the office of the recorder of Cook county a map or plat of a subdivision entitled Morris & Johnson subdivision. This slip is indicated on the plat filed. DuPont slip, when created, was of the depth of fourteen feet, opening only on the Chicago river. In 1902 the north one hundred feet of the slip were filled with rock and earth, a bulkhead was put in and buildings erected thereon. It is stipulated that at .the present time the depth of the water in the slip is irregular, varying from four feet eight inches to thirteen feet eight inches. The docks along the west side of the slip are in places in need of repair. There are switch-tracks abutting on the slip on the land of the appellant, which are his private switch-tracks. It is also stipulated that the appellant is owner of the entire tract of land included within the descriptions herein referred to, except that owned by appellee McLaughlin, subject to such rights of navigation in the public, if any, as are held for the benefit of the public by the State of Illinois in the slip.

In April, 1903, the appellant filed in the circuit court of Cook county, under the Burnt Records act, his petition to establish his title to the property herein referred to. This petition made parties defendant those who were known to claim any interest in the described property and unknown owners or claimants thereof. The city of Chicago was also made defendant, it being set out in the petition that a street known as Lumber street had been laid out, extending east and west between Union avenue and Halsted street, and that Lumber street had been vacated by the city council so far as the same affected the described property of the appellant. The city answered, setting up that an ordinance had been passed vacating Lumber street and that the city claimed no interest in the property. It is apparent from an examination of the record in that proceeding as here disclosed, that no question of a public easement in the waters in the slip was raised either by the petition or the answers thereto. The decree entered in that cause held, however, in effect, that the appellant had retained absolute jurisdiction and control over the slip as a private slip for dockage purposes, paid the expense of maintenance of the same, and that the whole right, title and interest in the land and water in the, slip, were at the time of the filing of the petition in appellant’s predecessor in title. The decree adjudged and decreed the fee to be in him, free and clear of all incumbrances of every kind.

Appellant contends that the decree is res judicata of all questions as to his right to the slip as a private waterway. The appellees, on the other hand, contend, first, that the right of navigation in and over the waters of the slip was acquired by the public through dedication prior to the decree in the burnt records proceeding in 1903; second, that the burnt records proceeding is not res judicata of the rights of the public, and that the continued use of the slip as a public navigable waterway after that decree amounted to a re-dedication to public use.

The„ evidence of the appellant tends to show that the water in the slip has become stagnant, that the docks have become out of repair, and that since 1902 the slip has not been used for public navigation. The evidence of appellees shows that from the time of the construction of the slip, in 1870, up to within ten or twelve years before the filing of this suit in 1921, the slip was used by steamboats, sailing vessels, tugs, barges, canal boats, scows, etc., which were used in the commerce over the waters of Lake Michigan, the Chicago river and the Illinois and Michigan canal; that such boats continuously used the slip for loading, unloading and transferring cargoes from one boat to another or from boats to freight cars on the dock; that the slip was frequently used by boats passing up and down the river as a means of turning around; that boats of various kinds were laid up in the slip for the winter seasons and for repairs ; that because of the lowering of the level of the Chicago river by reaspn of opening the canal in the Chicago Sanitary District, in 1905, and the increasing size and draft of freight-carrying boats, the slip in the last ten years has not been used to any appreciable degree. The evidence of the appellees also.shows that no charge was ever made for the use of the slip, that no barrier has ever been constructed to keep the public from navigating it, and that the public have never been denied free access thereto; that by various ordinances of the city of Chicago passed in 1905, 1912 and 1913 this slip was included in the Chicago, harbor district and placed under the control of the harbor master.

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Bluebook (online)
310 Ill. 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dupont-v-miller-ill-1923.