Gar Creek Drainage District v. Wagner

100 N.E. 190, 256 Ill. 338
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 100 N.E. 190 (Gar Creek Drainage District v. Wagner) 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
Gar Creek Drainage District v. Wagner, 100 N.E. 190, 256 Ill. 338 (Ill. 1912).

Opinion

Per Curiam :

Gar Creek Drainage District was organized under the Levee act in 1883, and a ditch constructed from Gar creek, the outlet, west to a bridge on a public highway, called the Lempke bridge. At that point it connected with a ditch already in existence. The work of constructing the ditch cost about $4000 and was completed in 1884. The upper end of the ditch was two miles east of the west boundary of the district. No work appears to have been done by the commissioners of the district after the completion of the ditch, in 1884. The ditch connecting with the ditch constructed by the commissioners, at the Lempke bridge ran south about a mile and a half, then westerly to a north and south public highway which was inside the district, the west line of the highway at that point being the boundary line of the district. At that point, which is very near the south-west corner of the district, there is a bridge in the highway, called the Schierholz bridge. In January, 1912, the commissioners of the Gar Creek Drainage District began proceedings in the county court of Kankakee county, under the statute, for the annexation of about nine thousand acres of land lying west and south-westerly of the district. The complaint set out the organization of Gar Creek Drainage District and the cost of the work done, and alleged that in June, 1911, the county court had made an order for the repair of the drainage system of the district by deepening, widening and extending the main ditch, repairing levees, deepening and widening the southern extension of the main ditch from the Lempke bridge to the south-west corner of the district, and replacing certain open ditches with tile drains, the cost of which, the order of the county court recited, would be $49,598.06; that when completed the proposed work would adequately drain all lands of the district and be sufficient to receive all waters therein from lands outside the district. The complaint alleged that the owners of the lands described outside the district had connected their lands either by tile drains or open ditches, forming a continuous line and branches with the drains of the district; that the said lands have been benefited by the work of the district and will receive additional benefits from the proposed work under the order of June, 1911, and that by connecting their drains with the drains of the district said land owners voluntarily applied to be included in the district. The complaint prayed that a date be fixed for a hearing, and that a judgment be entered annexing the described lands to and making them part of Gar Creek Drainage District. Frank Peters, one of said land owners, filed an answer denying the connection of his land with the drains of the district, denying that his land had been or would be benefited by the work done or proposed to be done in the district, and setting up the five year and twenty year Statutes of Limitation, and also a right of drainage by twenty years’ user. By stipulation the answer of Peters was adopted by each of the other land owners. A trial was had by jury. By their verdict the jury found that the lands sought to be annexed lying south of the public highway running east and west on the north line of sections 28, 29 and 30 of township 30, north, range 14, east, and section 30 of towmship 30, north, range 11, east, had not been connected with the drainage of the district, had not been benefited by the work done and would not be by the proposed work. As to all the lands north of said highway, except a few tracts as to which the complaint was dismissed, the jury found they had been benefited by the work done in the district, would be benefited by the work proposed to be done, and that the owners had connected them with the drains of the district. Twenty-seven land owners have joined in the prosecution of this appeal.

Section 58 of the Levee act (Hurd’s Stat. 1911, p. 893,) provides that “any land lying outside of the drainage district as organized, the owner or owners of which shall thereafter make connection with the main ditch or drain or with any ditch or drain within the district as organized or whose lands are or will be benefited by the work of such district, shall be deemed to have made voluntary application to be included in such drainage district; and thereupon the commissioners shall make complaint in writing, setting forth a description of such land or lands, benefited, and amount of benefits; the name of the owner or owners thereof, also, a description of the drain or ditch making connection with the ditches of such district, as near as may be; and file said complaint in the county court or before a justice of the peace,” etc.

The questions of fact whether the appellants had made connection with any ditch or drain in the district, and whether their lands have been or will be benefited by the work of the district, were answered by the jury in the affirmative, and the appellants insist that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence. The substance of the evidence in support of the allegation that the appellants had connected their lands with the district was as follows: •

When the district was organized, in 1883, a ditch, designated in the record as ditch “A,” was constructed from Gar creek across sections 12 and 11 to Lempke’s bridge. At that time there was a ditch, called ditch “B,” extending south and west to the south-western boundary of the district to the highway at Schierholz bridge. West of Schierholz bridge there are two ditches,—one running in a northwesterly direction across the Herscher and Trombly lands to the highway on the north side of section 21, and thence west along said highway to the western edge of the territory sought to be annexed. This is designated as ditch “C” in the record, and it and ditch “D,” which extends from Schierholz bridge south-westerly across section 21 and the south-eastern part of section 20, are the ditches which appellee claims have been constructed by appellants and connected with the ditches of the district. The testimony shows that in 1883 there was an irregular swale or depression across what is now the Herscher land. In 1888 ditch “C” was constructed across this tract of land, and later was extended across the Trombly land to the highway. In constructing this part of ditch “C” a portion of the depression or swale was followed, but the greater part of it was an entirely new ditch. There seems to have been either no ditch, or a small one, along the highway at this time, but since then the land owners have at different times opened one up, cleaned it out and deepened it at places. The lands of appellants along this ditch are drained into it by surface ditches or tile drains. Practically all the ditching has been done since the organization of the drainage district and all the tile has been laid within the last fifteen years. Ditch “D” has been constructed since 1883. In some places its course follows a natural depression along which the water flowed, but most of it is a new ditch. Work has been done along practically its entire course over the lands of appellants, the ditch widened and deepened, which, with the action of the water, has made a channel large enough to drain all the lands connecting with it. Ditch “E” is along the public highway on the north side of sections 16 and' 17 and runs east into the drainage district and connects with ditch “A.” This ditch was constructed in 1878, before the organization of the district, but during the past few years has frequently been cleaned out and deepened in places. It drains the land of appellant Fred Wagner, with which it is connected by an open ditch and a tile drain. The open ditch was made prior to 1883 but the tile has been laid since that time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 N.E. 190, 256 Ill. 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gar-creek-drainage-district-v-wagner-ill-1912.