Fenton & Thompson Railroad v. Adams

122 Ill. App. 234, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 492
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 1, 1905
DocketGen. No. 4,534
StatusPublished

This text of 122 Ill. App. 234 (Fenton & Thompson Railroad v. Adams) 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
Fenton & Thompson Railroad v. Adams, 122 Ill. App. 234, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 492 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Mr.. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Fenton & Thompson Railroad runs diagonally through sections 13, 14 and 24 in Fulton township, White-side county, Illinois. Hear the east» line of section 14 and something more than one-fourth of a mile north of the east and west half-section line, the railroad crosses Otter Creek, which is a running stream of water. The creek at this place, and for nearly a mile east of the point where it is crossed by the railroad, runs west on an almost straight line. It then bends to the northeast. The railroad crosses the creek on a bridge 280 feet long, which affords a passageway for the water under the track. After crossing Otter Greek, the right of way of the railroad for some distance is on high land until near where it enters appellee Akker’s land in the southwest part of the northeast quarter of section 24, where it crosses a valley several rods wide, extending north and south and declining to the south. On the east this valley is bounded by a range of bluffs or high land. The railroad company proposed to construct its tracks across this valley on an embankment twenty feet high, and put a four-foot cast-iron pipe through the embankment under the railroad, several rods southeast of the place where the water naturally' flowed south for the passage of the water flowing through this valley. Appellant Holleran owns the north half of the southeast quarter and the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 24, and appellant Woltérs owns lands in section 26 southwest of the Holleran lands. This land, except a portion of the first above described tract belonging to Holleran, lies on the southwesterly side of the railroad. Appellee Akker owns the northeast quarter of section 24 and the south half of the southeast quarter of section 13, all of which lies in the valley mentioned, north of the right of way of the railroad. Appellee Adams owns the west half of the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section 18 in Ustick township, which lies immediately east of section 13 in Fulton township. A gulch or ravine enters the valley from the east a short distance east of the township line between Fulton and Ustick townships, which is the east boundary of section 24, and something like a fourth of a mile north of the east and west half-section line of section 24. This ravine extends back into the country east several miles and affords drainage in wet weather for a considerable scope of territory. In dry weather it is dry, but in times of heavy rains a large volume of water is brought down, into the valley through it, and with the water is also brought down quantities of sand, logs, stumps, trees, brush and other debris. From the mouth of the gulch, the water runs in a northwesterly direction under a bridge called in this record Bridge Ho. 1, on an east and west highway, and after passing through under the bridge, it continues to run northwesterly until the channel ceases, where it spreads out over a considerable body of low land belonging to appellees and a Mr. Kustes, and then after this depression is filled, it passes west and then south through Bridge Ho. 2 on the same east and west highway, a little more than eighty rods west of Bridge Ho. 1, and thence on south through the valley and what is known as the Worthington ditch, crossing the right of way of the railroad near the southwest corner of the northeast quarter of section 24, and continuing on south across the lands of Holleran and Wolters into the Cat Tail Slough and thence into the Mississippi River. Appellees proposed to construct a ditch wholly on their own land, commencing at the mouth of the gulch and running from thence substantially directly west and emptying into the Worthington Ditch on the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section 24, about twenty-three rods north of the right of way of the railroad. Appellants filed their bill alleging that appellees were about to divert water in large quantities from its natural course by the proposed ditch and cause it to flow upon and injure their land, and prayed that they be restrained from constructing said ditch. Appellees answered the bill and filed a cross-bill, in which they alleged the natural flow of the water that came into this valley through the gulch was southward through the channel the proposed ditch would empty into, and further alleged that the railroad company was constructing a large embankment twenty feet high to lay their tracks on, and by said embankment were closing up the natural waterway across the line of the railroad, and proposed to leave a passageway for all the water that came down the valley through a cast iron pipe forty-eight inches in diameter, fifty to seventy rods southeast of where the natural waterway crossed the line of the railroad. The cross-bill prayed that the railroad company be enjoined from closing this waterway, and prayed that 'they be required to provide at that place a bridge of not less than fifty feet in length for the passage of the water through this valley from the north to the south side of the railroad. "Upon a hearing, the original bill was dismissed for want of equity and a decree entered on the cross-bill perpetually enjoining the railroad company from filling the water course from north to .south at the southwest corner of section 24, by the construction of their grade or in any manner obstructing the free flowage of water through it, and it was further decreed that a passage for said water at this place should be left by the railroad company of at least forty feet in width and fifteen feet high, measuring from the natural surface of the ground, and from that decree complainants in the original bill and defendants to cross-bill prosecute this appeal.

The proof abundantly establishes that after the basin or depression in the lands of appellees and Kustes is filled, the water naturally flows-to the west and south under Bridge Uo. 2 on the east and west highway, and thence south across the right of way of the railroad and over the land of appellants Holleran and Wolters. It is not denied by appellants that this is the natural outlet and course of the waters brought into the valley from the high lands on the east in times of heavy rains and freshets. The only conflict is as to the quantity of water coming down this outlet and course. The proof shows the soil of the lowlands where the water spreads out north of the highway is of a sandy nature, and appellants contend that except in times of extraordinary rains, the water seeps into the soil or evaporates so that only a small quantity flows south through the valley to the railroad. One of the engineers of appellant testified that not more than one-fifth or one-sixth of the waters brought in the valley from the gulch ever passed south of Bridge B o. 2. The proof shows that other waters are brought to these lands in the valley by other ravines coming into it from, the - bluffs, and also that Otter Creek at times overflows and the overflow from that stream flows south into the same low lands and through the outlet mentioned, under Bridge No. 2, and down the valley across the right of way of the railroad. If the proposed ditch is constructed, all the water brought into the valley from the gulch mentioned will be carried west and discharged into the Worthington Ditch, about 120 rods south of Bridge No. 2, and none of it will reach the land north of the highway where it is now discharged.

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Bluebook (online)
122 Ill. App. 234, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fenton-thompson-railroad-v-adams-illappct-1905.