Graham v. Keene

34 Ill. App. 87, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 212
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 16, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 34 Ill. App. 87 (Graham v. Keene) 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
Graham v. Keene, 34 Ill. App. 87, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 212 (Ill. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Upton, P. J.

This is a bill in chancery brought by appellee in the Circuit Court of De Kalb County against the commissioners of highways of the town of Victor in that county, and Joseph Smith, their employe and servant, appellants. The relief here sought was to restrain, by injunction, the digging of a ditch easterly and along the north side of a highway, described and located in the bill, through which to discharge and drain water accumulating in a pond or sag crossed by the highway upon the complainant’s land, used for cultivation, where in a state of nature it would not flow or be discharged, and at a point where there is no natural channel, watercourse or outlet therefor, thereby causing permanent and irreparable damage to complainant, as claimed. It was a sworn bill.

Upon this bill a preliminary injunction was issued. The defendants thereafter filed an answer and issues were made. The cause was referred to the master, who filed his report at the October term of that court, 1888, specially finding in effect that all the material allegations of complainant’s bill were true and that he was entitled to the relief thereby sought. To this report exceptions were taken by appellants, and thereafter, upon hearing, the court overruled the exceptions, approved and confirmed the master’s report, and entered a final decree pursuant to the prayer of the bill, to which appellants excepted, and the case is now before us on appeal from that decree. There cure no errors assigned upon this record.

In the trial court a stipulation was filed, signed by the solicitors of the respective parties, “that the objections filed before the master and overruled by him should be treated as exceptions to the report, for the purpose of a hearing before the court and any other court.” Under the rules of this court, therefore, the decree helow should he affirmed. But inasmuch as it will not change the result in this case, we incline to briefly state our views from a careful examination of the evidence in the record before us, upon the points made by the exceptions to the master’s report; as to those only complaint is made ; and if it be found that the findings of that report are warranted by the evidence, clearly, the decree should and must be affirmed on the merits of this contention.

The right of drainage is the same whether applied to farms or highways, not otherwise or different, it is conceded. Com’rs of Highways v. Whitsitt, 15 Ill. App. 318. Commissioners of highways can invoke the aid of the eminent domain act to the same extent as others and to no greater extent. Sec. 8, Chap. 121 R. S. (Starr & Curtis); Nevins v. City of Peoria, 41 Ill. 502.

It will hardly be claimed that owners of farm lands have the right of drainage upon adjoining lands, except to or along the natural line of such drainage, or natural channel or water course. In Hicks v. Silliman, 93 Ill. 255, it was held, that while it may be proper for the owners of land to use and cultivate it'according to the ordinary modes of good husbandry, although in so doing it may interfere with the natural flow of surface water in passing over his own land, so as to increase or diminish the amount that would otherwise reach the land of an adjacent proprietor, yet such owner has no right, by the construction of ditches or embankments or other artificial structures to precipitate collected surface water from his own land, or from those of other, persons, upon the land of his neighbors, and if he attempts to do so a court of equity will interpose to prevent the acts. It Avas further held in that case, that when it appears that the land upon Avhich such undue proportion of surface water is about to be cast is low and wet and barely susceptible of cultivation, the court would be fully warranted, without further evidence in the conclusion, that the land would be thereby injured, and the owner would be entitled to protection from such result.

The rule of law is well settled in this State, that the owner of a dominant heritage may, by ditches or drains, drain his. own land into the natural and usual channel or watercourse, even if the quantity of water thrown upon the adjacent heritage be thereby increased. The same rule in this State applies to surface water as to running streams. Peck v. Herrington, 109 Ill. 611; Gillham v. Madison Ry. Co., 49 Ill. 484; Gormley v. Sanford, 52 Ill. 158; Wagner v. Chaney, 19 Ill. App. 546; Totel v. Bonnefoy, 123 Ill. 638.

In the case of Wagner v. Chaney, 19 Ill. App. 546, which was a case in many particulars like the case at bar, this court said: “This case does not fall within the rule announced in this State, allowing the owners of the upper or dominant heritage to construct drains that will impose an increased burden of water upon the lower heritage, and for the reason that the water in the case at har was not to he discharged into any natural and regular watercourse or channel leading from the land. The reason given in the case last above cited is the distinction maintained in all the later cases in this State bearing upon the question involved in the case at bar.

The case of Anderson v. Henderson, N. E. Rep., Vol. 16, page 232, Ill. Sup. Ct., not yet reported, is in many respects identical with the case at bar. It is there said : “ It is a matter of common observation and needs no proof to establish the fact, that ponds, situate upon the upland, as they frequently exist, are surrounded by what may be termed a rim, with a slight depression at some point over which the water escapes, when more flows in from the higher lands than the basin will naturally contain. That is its natu/ral outlet.”

The facts stated in the bill and found by the master from the evidence, to which we think the foregoing principles stated apply, are, briefly:

That appellee is the owner of a farm of 160 acres, being the South of S. W. £ of Sec. 5, and the H. of H. W. £ of Sec. 8, Town 37, Range 4, in De Kalb county, through which runs a public highway from a northeasterly to a southwesterly course.

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Related

Nevins v. City of Peoria
41 Ill. 502 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1866)
Gillham v. Madison County Railroad
49 Ill. 484 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1869)
Gormley v. Sanford
52 Ill. 158 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1869)
Hicks v. Silliman
93 Ill. 255 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1879)
Peck v. Herrington
109 Ill. 611 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1884)
Comm'rs of Highways of Pre-emption v. Whitsitt
15 Ill. App. 318 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1884)
Wagner v. Chaney
19 Ill. App. 546 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1886)

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Bluebook (online)
34 Ill. App. 87, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-keene-illappct-1889.