Gottschall v. Zipple

140 N.E. 13, 308 Ill. 428
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1923
DocketNo. 15244
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 140 N.E. 13 (Gottschall v. Zipple) 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
Gottschall v. Zipple, 140 N.E. 13, 308 Ill. 428 (Ill. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the court :

The Chouteau, Nameoki and Venice Drainage and Levee District was organized more than thirty years ago and includes within its boundaries a substantial part of three townships. About five years ago there was an attempt to organize a sub-district in the northwestern part of the main district, but objections to its organization were sustained. (Kohl v. Chouteau Island Drainage and Levee District, 283 Ill. 69.) The opinion filed in that case gives a description of the territory sought to be included and the proposed plan for more minute drainage. In 1921 substantially the same lands were included in the proposed sub-district now before us but the scheme of drainage is entirely different. The commissioners of the main district filed their report recommending the organization of Long Lake Drainage and Levee Sub-district. Objections were filed and overruled and the order organizing the sub-district entered. This appeal followed.

The sub-district is about three miles long north and south and two miles wide east and west and includes about 3500 acres of low, flat lands located in township 4, north, range 9, west, in Madison county. Running through the district from north to south is the Chicago, Peoria and St. Louis railroad, which divides the district into substantially two equal parts. West of this railroad the lands are, generally speaking, high bottom lands and most of them are in cultivation. East of the ridge on which the railroad is built the lands are low and marshy and the territory is a succession of ridges, lakes and slashes. Extending from north to south along the entire eastern part of the sub-district is Long lake, which is a shallow body of water ranging in width from a few rods to a quarter of a mile'. The main ditch of the sub-district begins in the southwest corner of the district and extends northeast to the east part of the district,' thence north arid west to the northwest corner of the district, where a pumping station is to be located and the water pumped over -the levee into a portion of Long lake which is cut off by and is north of the levee of the main district. The principal lateral ditch leaves the main ditch about the middle of the district and runs to the middle of Long lake. Substantially 1000 acres in the east part of the district is wholly unfit for cultivation and about 500 acres in the middle of the district is subject to cultivation only a part of the time. The lands in the district are flat and there is little drainage in either direction, but what fall there is is to the southwest. The proposed improvement will take the water north through the district, thereby reversing the natural course of drainage. The fall of the surface of the lands is about six inches to the mile, so that rthe elevation at the north end of the district is about one • and a half feet more than at the south end of the district. The main ditch is designed to have a fall of six inches to the mile, so that the elevation of the bottom of the ditch •is about 412*4 (Memphis datum) at the southwesterly end and substantially 410 at its northerly end. The elevation of the Mississippi river at normal stage is 408, — about two feet below the bottom of the main ditch at the pumping ■ plant and about ten feet below the average elevation of the . land in the sub-district. The 1000 acres of land that is now at all times under water or too wet to cultivate is very fertile land and will be worth more than $100 an acre when drained. The lands which can now be cultivated only during dry seasons will be doubled in value if properly drained. The engineers estimate that the entire improvement will cost $76,670.

This proceeding is brought under section 59 of the Levee act. Appellants contend that before a sub-district can be organized for the purpose of affording more complete drainage the main district must.have had as a part of its system, in addition to its levees, certain drains and ditches. This same contention was made in Kohl v. Chouteau Island Drainage and Levee District, supra, but the court refused to give the statute that construction. It was there held that the section should be liberally construed, so that the commissioners would have ample authority to provide complete and adequate drainage for all lands in the district. In 1919 this section was amended by adding in three places the phrase, “in any original district which maintains a levee as a part of its work.” (Laws of 1919, p. 456.) So far as we are able to see, this does not change the meaning of the section and we have no means of knowing why the words were added. Whatever the purpose of the amendment, it did not affect the construction heretofore given the section.

Chouteau Island Drainage and Levee District, which is immediately west of the sub-district, objects to the proposed scheme of drainage on the ground that the flow of water into the island district will be increased. In the southwest corner of the sub-district is Stanley ditch, — an artificial ditch which has afforded some drainage to the lands in the sub-district for more than forty years. This ditch empties into Chouteau slough, which flows along the easterly side of Chouteau island. By the proposed scheme of drainage for the sub-district the main ditch will begin in the easterly end of Stanley ditch. It is not contended that the flow will be increased through Stanley ditch if the proposed drainage system is successful, but it is contended that if the pumps fail, so that the water will not be taken out of the sub-district at the north end, it will flow southwesterly through the main ditch and continue through Stanley ditch into the Chouteau Island district. Four engineers who were widely experienced in drainage in the Mississippi river bottoms testified that the plan proposed by the commissioners was feas-r ible and that there would be no flowage west into Stanley ditch. So far as this record shows, the great preponderance of the evidence is that no additional burden will be cast upon the servient lands of the island district, and its objection was properly overruled.

Six land owners whose lands lie in the western part of the district object to being included in the district for the reason that their lands will not be benefited. As we have said, these lands are all second bottom lands and have little need for drainage. On most of the farms, however, there are low swales that are at times too wet for cultivation and the proposed system will give these places drainage. Furthermore, the draining of the swamp lands adjacent to these lands will improve the sanitary conditions an,d general appearance of the entire section, thereby benefiting all of the lands within the boundaries of the district. The only question for determination in this proceeding is whether the lands included in the district will receive any benefit at all. If they will, they are properly included in the district, and the question of the extent of benefit is left for determination in another proceeding. Hayes Branch Drainage District v. Illinois Central Railroad Co. 290 Ill. 124.

Gillian F. Richmond, who owns lands inside the levee and who also owns lands on the outside of the head levee over which it is proposed to pump the water from this district, contends that the plan is not feasible, and also objects to the pumping of water onto her land, claiming no provision is made for compensating her for the damage done her farm. The great weight of the testimony is that the plan is feasible, and so that objection was properly overruled.

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Related

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249 Ill. App. 133 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1928)

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140 N.E. 13, 308 Ill. 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gottschall-v-zipple-ill-1923.