DuPont v. Sanitary District of Chicago

203 Ill. 170
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 203 Ill. 170 (DuPont v. Sanitary District of Chicago) 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. Sanitary District of Chicago, 203 Ill. 170 (Ill. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

The amended petition of appellee, the Sanitary District of Chicago, filed in this case in the circuit court of Cook county, alleged that it had adopted a plan for deepening, widening and improving the south branch of the Chicago river to the uniform width of two hundred feet and a depth of thirty feet in the central portion of the channel, and that it would be necessary to acquire for such purposes four tracts adjoining the river, numbered 69, 70, 71 and 71a, being the parts of lot 1 in Pair-bank’s subdivision and of lots 1 and 2 in Morris & Johnson’s subdivision and of an unsubdivided tract, which were south of a proposed new dock’line and north of a dock line then existing. The petition stated that appellant had an interest in said premises, and prayed that the just compensation to be paid to the owners might be ascertained. Appellant filed his amended cross-petition, charging that in taking the lands described in the amended petition appellee would necessarily take other lands owned by him not described in said petition, which would necessarily be dredged out and taken and used by the appellee as a part of its drainage channel, and be prayed that he might be paid the value of the lands so designed to be taken. A jury having been empaneled and sworn to ascertain and report the just compensation to be awarded, and having heard the evidence and viewed the premises, returned a verdict finding the compensation to be paid for the lands taken and described «in the amended petition at $18,168.23, and that there were no damages to lands of appellant not taken. After overruling a motion for a new trial the court entered jhdgment that on payment of the compensation so ascertained, and the costs, appellee should have the right to enter upon the tracts described in the amended petition, which were the lands between the proposed new dock line and the existing dock line. From that judgment this appeal was taken.

One of the points presented by counsel is, that it was alleged in the petition that the petitioner had obtained permission of the Secretary of War to make the contemplated improvement, and such permission was not produced or offered in evidence, and therefore the petitioner did not show that- it had authority to widen the river and bring the condemnation proceeding for that purpose. The right of the petitioner to institute the proceeding and condemn the land was a preliminary one, to be settled by the court before empaneling a jury to ascertain the compensation. The defendant appeared and raised no such question, but filed his cross-petition and submitted the issue to the jury. His right to question the power of the petitioner to condemn his property was thereby waived, and the objection cannot now be made. O’Hara v. Chicago, Madison and Northern Railroad Co. 139 Ill. 151; Guyer v. Davenport, Rock Island and Northwestern Railway Co. 196 id. 370.

There was an existing dock along the river where the property sought to be taken was located. The petitioner fixed a line further north as a proposed new dock line, and in its petition described the land between the two lines. The defendant claimed that as shore owner he had title to lands outside of the present dock, submerged by the waters of the river, and that the line of the existing dock was not the true boundary of his lands. He also had a private slip extending substantially at right angles north from the main channel of the river on his lands, and he claimed compensation, by his cross-petition, for all lands south of the proposed new dock line, whether covered by water in the private slip or beyond the existing dock and submerged. There was no evidence that the existing dock constructed on the premises was on a dock line fixed or prescribed by the city of Chicago, but the court supplied the lack of evidence by a presumption of law stated in the following instruction:

“The court instructs the jury, as a matter of law, that the city of Chicago is authorized, by virtue of its charter, to fix and establish the dock line along the south branch of the Chicago river; that property owners owning property along the south branch of the Chicago river have no right to erect or construct buildings extending out into the river beyond the dock line established by the city council of the city of Chicago; and you are further instructed, as a matter of law, that in the absence of evidence to the contrary, you are bound to presume that the existing dock line is the dock line fixed and prescribed by the city council of the city of Chicago; and this is true even though you may believe, from the evidence, that the defendants in this case have title to property extending beyond said dock line out into said river.”

The instruction advised the jury that the mere existence of a dock along the river raised a presumption that the city of Chicago had fixed and established a dock line. The theory of the instruction was, that because the city had power to establish a dock line the law would presume that it had established one, in the absence of evidence to the contrary. We do not think there is any presumption that a power conferred upon a municipal corporation by its charter has been exercised merely because the power exists, and it was error to give the instruction.

The defendant asked the court to give three instructions to the effect that in considering what lands were taken, and the value of such lands, the jury were not confined to the amended petition; that defendant was entitled to receive the fair cash market value of all lands which the plans in evidence showed would be taken and used by the petitioner, and that the jury must consider such plans shown by the evidence as to what lands would be taken, and allow the market value of such lands, whether described in the amended petition or not. The court refused to give such instructions, but gave an instruction asked by the petitioner, that in fixing the compensation for lands actually taken, such compensation should be limited to the tracts actually described in the amended petition. So far as the cross-petition was concerned, it is somewhat difficult to determine upon what theory the case was tried by the parties. As already stated, the defendant, by his cross-petition, claimed that submerged land south of the present dock and under the private DuPont slip, which he claimed to own, would be actually taken; that the necessity for taking and using such lands was obvious, because the land would be dredged away, and'he asked to have his compensation fixed as to such lands, on the ground that they would be so taken. The petitioner made no objection to the cross-petition, but on the trial the inquiry was mainly as to • whether the submerged land would be damaged.

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Bluebook (online)
203 Ill. 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dupont-v-sanitary-district-of-chicago-ill-1903.