Farrow v. Eldred Drainage & Levee District

268 Ill. App. 432, 1932 Ill. App. LEXIS 151
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 9, 1932
DocketGen. No. 8,444
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 268 Ill. App. 432 (Farrow v. Eldred Drainage & Levee District) 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
Farrow v. Eldred Drainage & Levee District, 268 Ill. App. 432, 1932 Ill. App. LEXIS 151 (Ill. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Niehaus

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this case a writ of error is prosecuted to review a judgment of the circuit court of Greene county awarding the plaintiff in the case, Lizzie Farrow, the sum of $3,000 damages for alleged injury to crops, in certain years, upon the real estate of the plaintiff which is located adjacent to a levee and drainage ditch constructed and maintained by the defendant in the case, The Eldred Drainage and Levee District. The suit was brought jointly by the plaintiff and her husband, Adellis Farrow, to recover for injuries to the growing crop upon the real estate referred to. Later, during the progress of the trial of the case, Adellis Farrow, by leave of court, was withdrawn as a party plaintiff from the case and the case proceeded to trial with Lizzie Farrow as sole plaintiff. The declaration charges that Eldred Drainage and Levee District was duly organized as- a corporation for the purpose of constructing drains and levees, and that while the plaintiff with her husband were the owners of certain real estate, the drainage district did dig and open a ditch and construct a levee adjoining said real estate which was adjacent thereto, said ditch and levee running north and south along the western boundary of said real’estate; and that the drainage district in constructing said ditch and levee caused the dirt taken from the ditch so constructed to be thrown upon the west side of said ditch, forming a levee on the west side of said ditch and leaving the said land of the plaintiff unprotected from water overflowing from said ditch so constructed.

The declaration further avers that prior to the time said ditch was so constructed by the said defendant as aforesaid, a certain natural watercourse known as Bushnell Creek flowed in a general southwesterly direction at a distance of about one and one-half miles south of the south boundary of said real estate, and the, said defendant in constructing its said ditch and levees as aforesaid wrongfully closed the channel of the aforesaid natural watercourse and caused the water therefrom to flow in a westerly and northerly direction through the said ditch so constructed along the western boundary of the said lands of the plaintiffs ; that prior to the time said ditch and levee were constructed as aforesaid a certain natural watercourse known as Hurricane Creek flowed in a general southwesterly direction about one-half of a mile south of said south boundary line of the aforesaid lands of the plaintiffs, and the said defendant in constructing its said ditch and levees as aforesaid adjoining the said real estate of the plaintiffs on the west, wrongfully closed the channel of the aforesaid natural watercourse called Hurricane Creek and caused the water therefrom to flow north along and adjoining the west boundary of said real estate of the plaintiffs and through the said ditch so constructéd; and that prior to the time said ditch and levee were constructed as aforesaid a certain natural watercourse known as Schafer Creek flowed in a general westerly direction near the northern boundary of the aforesaid real estate of the plaintiffs, and the defendant in constructing its said ditch and levees as aforesaid adjoining the western boundary of the said real estate of the plaintiffs wrongfully closed the channel of the aforesaid natural watercourse called Schafer Creek and caused the water therefrom to flow north and through the ditch so constructed',- that prior to the time said ditch and levee were constructed as aforesaid the said real estate of the plaintiffs drained to the south and west and that the surface water and rainfall draining from the real estate of the plaintiffs had an unobstructed flow and drained from the land of the plaintiffs to the west and southwest.

And the declaration avers that the defendant failed to dig’ said ditch adjoining’ the real estate of the plaintiffs of sufficient size, slope and capacity to carry off the water from the aforesaid natural watercourses together with the surface water naturally draining off the real estate of the plaintiffs during years of heavy rainfall, thereby causing said ditch intermittently and recurrently to overflow said real estate of said plaintiffs; and that by reason of the turning of said natural watercourses into said ditch, and also by reason of the said defendant failing to construct said ditch past the real estate of the plaintiffs of sufficient size, slope and capacity to carry off the water from said watercourses and the surface water naturally draining from the real estate of the plaintiffs into said ditch and by reason of placing the dirt from said ditch on the west side thereof instead of on the east side, thus leaving the real estate of the plaintiffs unprotected from said water, during the season of heavy rainfall in the year 1923 a part of the bank of said ditch caved in and said ditch overflowed in the summer of 1923 and covered a part of said real estate of the ■plaintiffs on which they had certain crops of grain then and there growing; and the plaintiffs aver that as a result of said overflow from said ditch upon said land of the plaintiffs as aforesaid, the water greatly injured a large part of said crops and totally destroyed a large part of said crops, to the damage of the plaintiffs of $6,000, therefore they bring their suit, etc.

In the second count of the declaration, the plaintiffs’ right of recovery is based upon the negligence of the drainage district in the maintenance of the ditch and the declaration charges that after the construction of the ditch that “it became and was the duty of the defendant to keep said ditch in repair and to keep it dredged and cleaned out and open and to prevent it from filling up and to keep said ditch in such repair, condition, size and capacity to carry off the waters from said Bushnell Creek, Hurricane Creek and Schafer Creek together with the surface water naturally draining off of the said real estate of said plaintiffs: Yet, the defendant did not regard its duty, but on the contrary wrongfully and negligently permitted said ditch to become and remain out of repair and did not keep said ditch in repair and open and in such condition, size and capacity to carry off said water and wrongfully and negligently allowed said ditch to fill up as aforesaid to such an extent that said ditch did not have sufficient size and capacity to carry off the said waters from said Bushnell Creek, Hurricane Creek and Schafer Creek together with the surface water naturally draining off of the said real estate of the plaintiffs; by reason of said defendant wrongfully failing and neglecting to keep said ditch in repair and open and dredged out and wrongfully allowing it to fill up, the water in said ditch, from the aforesaid Creeks, and said surface water, overflowed in the summer of the year 1923 and said overflow waters covered a part of the said real estate of the plaintiffs on which they had certain crops of grain then and there growing, and the plaintiffs aver that as a result of said overflow from said ditch upon their said real estate the water greatly injured a large part of said crops and totally destroyed a large part of their said crops, to the damage of the plaintiffs of Six Thousand ($6,000) Dollars.”

The basis of recovery in the third, fifth, seventh and ninth counts of the declaration are the same, namely, improper construction of the ditch in question, and the fourth, sixth, eig’hth and tenth counts allege a right of recovery resulting from a failure of the drainage district to keep the ditch in proper repair and condition to carry the flow of the water.

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Related

O'BRIEN v. City of O'Fallon
400 N.E.2d 456 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1980)
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33 N.E.2d 906 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1941)
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6 N.E.2d 149 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1936)
Farrow v. Eldred Drainage & Levee District
194 N.E. 515 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
268 Ill. App. 432, 1932 Ill. App. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farrow-v-eldred-drainage-levee-district-illappct-1932.