Eberle v. Greene

163 N.E.2d 822, 18 Ill. 2d 322, 1960 Ill. LEXIS 255
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1960
Docket35282
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 163 N.E.2d 822 (Eberle v. Greene) 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
Eberle v. Greene, 163 N.E.2d 822, 18 Ill. 2d 322, 1960 Ill. LEXIS 255 (Ill. 1960).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bristow

delivered the opinion of the court:

Defendants appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Stark County ordering them to remove dirt, rock and other materials plowed, graded or deposited by them in, under and along a division fence and to restore the elevation of the ground thereunder as it existed in 1947 and perpetually enjoining them from thereafter raising or altering the same, and further ordering them to remove an artificial dam from a natural watercourse and perpetually enjoining them from placing in the watercourse a dam which obstructs or interferes with the natural flowage of the surface water therein. Defendants’ answer and counterclaim involves the question as to whether defendants’ land is subjected to a perpetual easement of drainage in favor of plaintiffs’ land so that plaintiffs may cast their surface water upon and across defendants’ land. A freehold is therefore involved. The appeal was properly taken directly to this court. Saelens v. Pollentier, 7 Ill.2d 556.

No questions are raised on the pleadings. The defendants allege four errors for reversal, viz.:

(1) that the record clearly shows that plaintiffs have not acquired a drainage easement over defendants’ land;

(2) that both the special master in chancery and the lower court failed to pass upon material issues which were raised by the pleadings and supported by the evidence;

(3) that the special master’s fee, approved by the chancellor in the amount of $5,404,70, was grossly excessive, and

(4) that the taxing of 75% of the court costs, including the master’s fee, against the defendants was completely inequitable under the facts of this case.

Plaintiffs own 240 acres of farm land, referred to as tract 1, described as the southwest- quarter (SW%) and the south half (Sof the northwest quarter (NWJ4) of section 27, Valley Township, Stark County, Illinois, which they acquired in 1941. Defendants own an adjoining 160-acre farm, designated as tract 2, described as the north half (N^) of the northeast quarter (NEj4) and the north half (Nj4) of the northwest quarter (NW%) of the same section, which they acquired in 1947.

The complaint was filed by the owners of tract 1 to enjoin the owners of tract 2 from maintaining any obstructions along their common division fence which would prevent the drainage of surface water from tract 1 to and across tract 2. Defendants denied that any drainage easement existed across their lands and alleged in their counterclaim that they had acquired a prescriptive right to have both the surface and subsurface water from tract 1 flow to the northwest corner of tract 1 and into a road ditch specifically constructed for this purpose without passing over any portion of tract 2.

The chancellor, after a hearing on the special master’s report and the exceptions thereto, filed by both parties at which no additional testimony was presented, approved the master’s report and entered a decree in accordance with his findings and recommendations.

Plaintiffs have not appealed from the decree which orders them to cease discharging subsurface water on tract 1 at any point in or on tract 1 in such a manner that said subsurface water, gathered and discharged as surface water, might, or could' or would flow from tract 1 onto tract-2 as surface water;, perpetually enjoins them from so doing, orders them to remove the obstructions placed in the roadside fence; perpetually enjoins them from obstructing and altering the flow of surface water from tract 1 through the roadside fence line, and decrees that neither the plaintiffs nor the defendants are entitled to have or to recover damages from the other as claimed and set forth in their respective pleadings.

The following drawing will aid in the understanding of the facts in this case:

[[Image here]]

Prior to 1903 that portion of the northwest quarter aforesaid, lying north of the pond line shown on the above map, was inundated. This area was drained by the artificial open ditch constructed in 1903, in which year the 8-inch farm tile shown along the north side of the south half of said northwest quarter was laid.

The proof is uncontradicted that the surface water normally flowed west, south of the division fence from a point more than 90 rods east of the public highway to the highway. Normally, this surface water has run under the division fence at a point 6 rods east of the public highway, thence west and northwesterly across tract 2 to the east roadside ditch. From there it either ran north along the east roadside ditch or through an 18-inch culvert constructed opposite the division fence line across the public highway to the open ditch.

Subsequent to 1947 plaintiffs laid a 10-inch tile from the interior of tract 1 across the 8-inch tile to a point 10 rods south of the division fence and 90 rods east of the road fence where the tile was joined to a 75-foot metal tube laid near the surface. A small dam was built over this pipe west of the east end thereof, and a dam was built by the plaintiffs at least 100 rods south of the division line and near one of the tributary tile emptying into the 10-inch tile. At the east end of the metal pipe subsurface water was discharged and commingled with surface water, and the same flowed across the division fence line into the draw until the defendant constructed a rock dam 5 feet high across said draw which resulted in stopping the normal flow of surface water through this opening in the fence. The record shows that the fence row was raised since 1947 by the defendants by grading dirt thereon and by placing obstructions in openings thereunder. The record also shows that prior to the raising of the height of the fence row it was normal for surface water to flow through the fence row from tract 1 to tract 2 in several places, and that at all times surface water flowed from tract 1 to the roadside ditch, except where obstructions placed by plaintiffs therein impeded the flow thereof, and at all times from tract 2 to the roadside ditch.

Defendants contend that plaintiffs have changed the drainage system, which has existed on tract 1 since 1903, so as to force the tract 1 surface water through the division fence and onto tract 2, claiming that the natural drainage of surface water from tract 1 is along the north side thereof to the road and that defendants have acquired a prescriptive right to be free from surface water from tract 1 and to maintain a division fence row higher than the adjoining lands. The evidence shows that since 1947 the elevation of the ground on the division fence line was raised by defendants by grading and plowing dirt upon this area which tends to restrict the flow of surface water. Defendants admit that in May, 1950, they put stone in the draw on the north side of the division fence at the 90-rods point near the outlet of the tile laid by plaintiffs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 N.E.2d 822, 18 Ill. 2d 322, 1960 Ill. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eberle-v-greene-ill-1960.