Hadley Creek Sub-District v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad

120 N.E. 281, 284 Ill. 354
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1918
DocketNo. 11890
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 120 N.E. 281 (Hadley Creek Sub-District v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad) 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
Hadley Creek Sub-District v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, 120 N.E. 281, 284 Ill. 354 (Ill. 1918).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Cooke

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal by the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company from a judgment of the county court of Pike county confirming a drainage assessment made by a jury against appellant’s' right of way in the Hadley Creek Sub-district, a sub-district organized by a proceeding in the county court of Pike county out of lands lying within the boundaries of the Sny Island Levee Drainage District, hereinafter referred to as the Sny district. The Sny district was organized in the county court of Pike county in 1880 under the Levee act. It is about fifty miles long, northerly and southerly, and from three to seven miles wide, contains about 110,000 acres of land, and was organized for the purpose of protecting the low lands on the east side of the Mississippi river from overflow. It does not extend east to the bluffs but only to the high-water line established during the flood stage of the river in 1851. The main outlet of the Sny district is known as the Sny E’Carte canal. From the bluffs on the east Hadley creek flows across a portion of the lands in the Sny district into the Sny E.’ Carte canal, carrying the surface waters from seventy-six square miles of territory, which at times inundate lands both within the Sny district and east thereof. January 20, 1916, the commissioners of the Sny district filed in the county court of Pike county a special report under section 59 of the Levee act, which provides for the organization of sub-districts within drainage districts organized under that act, setting forth the necessity of further drainage in that portion of the Sny district subject to overflow from Hadley creek and consisting of about 8129 acres, proposing a plan of improvement by means of both levees and ditches at an estimated cost of $97,392.10, and praying for the organization of those lands subject to overflow from Hadley creek into a sub-district to be known as Hadley Creek Sub-district. . To this special report, which under the statute stands as the petition for the organization of the sub-district, was attached a report made to the commissioners by the engineer of the Sny district, in which it was stated that “the flood waters of Hadley creek flooded approximately 938.76 acres of land that lie outside of the Sny Island Levee Drainage District,” and that “the work herein proposed will benefit said lands and they should be taken into the district.” The statutory notices of hearing were given, and the Boyd Levee and Drainage District and certain land owners in that district appeared and filed objections to the report because it included lands within the Boyd Levee and Drainage District. The county court sustained these objections and ordered the lands in the Boyd Levee and Drainage District stricken from the report, but upon appeal by the Sny district we reversed the order of the county court and remanded the cause for further proceedings. (Sny Island Levee Drainage District v. Boyd Levee and Drainage District, 273 Ill. 533.) After the mandate of this court had been filed in the county court the cause was re-docketed and new notices of hearing were given. Appellant then appeared and filed objections to the report on the ground that the plan proposed by the commissioners would be unnecessarily expensive and burdensome to it, but expressly stated that it did not object to the making of the improvement in a proper and economical manner. On October 21, 1916, the county court entered an order overruling appellant’s objections, approving the plan of improvement proposed by the commissioners, fixing the boundaries of the district as recommended in the commissioners’ report, declaring the lands embraced within those boundaries to be organized into a sub-district to be known as the Hadley Creek Sub-district, and directing the commissioners to prepare and file a commissioners’ roll of assessments of benefits and damages. This order found, among other things, that the commissioners “have described all the lands which will be benefited or damaged” by the proposed work, and that all such lands are within the boundaries of the Sny district. Thereafter the commissioners filed in the county court their roll of assessments of benefits and damages, assessing the whole cost of the improvement, as well as the entire annual cost of maintenance, against the lands in the sub-district as organized. Appellant’s right of way in the sub-district was assessed $7534.91 for the construction work and $260 annually for maintenance. Upon the filing of the commissioners’ roll of assessments of benefits and damages the commissioners gave notice, as required by law, of the time and place fixed for the hearing before the jury in the county court upon all questions of benefits and damages to lands in the district. Appellant filed objections to the assessment roll, assigning as grounds for objection that all the lands which would be benefited by the proposed improvement were not included in the sub-district and were therefore not assessed for benefits; that the assessment against appellant’s right of way greatly exceeded the benefits which such right of way would receive from the proposed improvement, and that such assessment is more than appellant’s proportionate share of the cost of constructing and maintaining the improvement. At the time specified in the notice a jury was called in the county court. The commissioners presented their assessment roll, and the commissioners and the engineer of the district testified in support of the assessment made against appellant’s right of way. Appellant offered no evidence but was content to rest its case upon the evidence introduced by the district and the cross-examination of the commissioners and engineer. Appellant did not request that the jury view the premises, but, on the contrary, it was stated during the trial that neither the commissioners nor appellant desired the jury to' view the lands. During the progress of the hearing the commissioners, upon their own motion, were permitted to amend their assessment roll by reducing the amount assessed against appellant’s property for annual benefits from $260 to $200, and making annual assessments of $11.60 against the town of Pleasant Vale, $33.40 against the town of Cincinnati and $15 against the town of ICinderhook, in Pike county, for annual benefits to the highways in the sub-district. After hearing the evidence and arguments of counsel, and without viewing the lands in the district, the jury returned a verdict assessing benefits against all the lands in the sub-district, including appellant’s right of way, at the same amounts as fixed in the amended assessment roll of the commissioners, and the court rendered judgment on the verdict. From that judgment appellant prosecuted this appeal.

Appellant first contends that the county court should have sustained its objection that all the lands which would be benefited by the proposed improvement were not included in the sub-district and were therefore not assessed for benefits. The basis for this contention is the fact that it appears from the report of the engineer of the Sny district, which was attached to the commissioners’ report, and from the cross-examination of the commissioners and engineer at the hearing before the jury upon the question of benefits, that approximately 938.76 acres of land lying east of the Sny district will be benefited by the proposed improvement, but as those lands were not included within the Sny district they were not and could not be included in the sub-district as originally organized and consequently were not assessed in this proceeding.

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In RE PETITION OF COM'RS v. Dennis
207 N.E.2d 313 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1965)
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207 N.E.2d 313 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1965)

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Bluebook (online)
120 N.E. 281, 284 Ill. 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hadley-creek-sub-district-v-chicago-burlington-quincy-railroad-ill-1918.