Illinois Power & Light Corp. v. Parks

153 N.E. 483, 322 Ill. 313, 1926 Ill. LEXIS 1129
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1926
DocketNo. 16941. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 153 N.E. 483 (Illinois Power & Light Corp. v. Parks) 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
Illinois Power & Light Corp. v. Parks, 153 N.E. 483, 322 Ill. 313, 1926 Ill. LEXIS 1129 (Ill. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

On January 15, 1925, the appellant, the Illinois Power and Light Corporation, pursuant to an order of the Illinois Commerce Commission authorizing appellant to construct a high-tension electric transmission line from a point near the east end of the Keokuk dam in the Mississippi river, at Hamilton, Illinois, to the cities of Monmouth and Gales-burg, filed its petition in the circuit court of Hancock county for condemnation of a tower site upon which to locate one supporting tower, also an easement for right of way purposes three rods wide and approximately 670 feet long over certain lands owned by Alberta I. Parks, and a like easement 50 feet in length over a parcel of land of that width belonging to her son, Samuel P. Parks, for the construction, maintenance, operation and repair of such tower and transmission line. Mrs. Parks and Samuel P. Parks filed separate cross-petitions, alleging that they were the owners of the two tracts of land of which the land sought to be taken was a part; that the location of the three-rod strip as proposed would so divide the premises as to destroy the use and market value thereof for the building of summer residences thereon, to which use the property facing the Mississippi river, and over which it was planned to construct the transmission line, was most adaptable at the time of the filing of the petition to condemn. The cross-petitions prayed that damages to the balance of the property adjacent to the three-rod strip be determined and allowed. A trial was had before a jury that viewed the premises, and a verdict was returned, which was referred back to the jury by the court for correction. As corrected the verdict fixed the compensation to Mrs. Parks for the tower site located on the three-rod strip at $250, as damages for the use of the balance of the three-rod strip for right of way purposes at $1625, and for damages to property adjacent to such right of way at $1500. The compensation to Samuel P. Parks was fixed at $225 as damages for that part of the three-rod strip to be used as right of way. Motion for a new trial was overruled and judgment was entered upon the verdict, authorizing the petitioner to enter upon the lands described in the petition upon payment of all the costs of suit and the total compensation and damages awarded by the jury within forty days. From that judgment the petitioner has prosecuted this appeal.

The Parks tract of land consists of approximately eleven acres. It is located in the north part of the city of Hamilton and about a half mile above the Keokuk dam in the Mississippi river. The tract is in the shape of an “R,” and its greatest length is from east to west, along the north side of Cooper street. The greatest width of the tract is at its west end, and it is across this portion of the land from north to south, a distance of about 720 feet, that the transmission line right of way is sought. The west part of the Parks tract, with land to the north of it and a narrow strip west of it, both owned by the Mississippi River Power Company, forms a neck of land or peninsula, bounded on the west by the Mississippi river and on the north and east by Cheney creek. The Parks tract occupies the south half of this so-called peninsula. The Mississippi river at this point has been widened materially and the level of the water raised by the construction of the Keokuk dam. That portion of the river just above the dam is called Cooper (or Keokuk) lake. Title to the narrow strip along the entire west side of the Parks tract was obtained by the Mississippi River Power Company in June, 1914. The deed thereto was executed by Alberta I. Parks and her husband, and by her parents, Peter and Mary Egbers. Two other transmission lines, with wires or conductors on wood poles, are constructed and in operation upon this narrow strip of property lying along the Mississippi river and between the Parks property and the river. Each of these lines, one belonging to the Central Illinois Public Service Company and the other to the Mississippi River Power Company, extends further north over the land forming the north end of the peninsula and which belongs to the latter company. Upon the west end of the Parks property, approximately 150 feet north of Cooper street and 40 or 50 feet east of the proposed right of way strip, is an eight or nine-room brick and frame dwelling, with basement, which, was built several years ago. Mrs. Parks, the owner of the dwelling, resides in St. Louis, Missouri, and her son in Dallas, Texas. For the last three or four years the residence just mentioned has been occupied by Mrs. Parks during the summer months and at other times it was vacant. The east part of the Parks tract is rented to a tenant for farming purposes. South of the residence is a small log cottage facing on Cooper street, and the west half of the cottage is located within the proposed three-rod right of way strip. The cottage has been built about five years and is occupied by renters only during the summer season. The west end of the Parks tract, from its south boundary at Cooper street, rises in height toward the north line of the property, forming a low bluff along the east side of Lhe Mississippi river. From this part of the property it is possible to see up and down the river for several miles as well as across the river to the city of Keokuk. Immediately south of the Parks property there has been some development along the river in the way of summer cottages, bath houses and boat houses being constructed. Some distance north, and across Cheney creek, the Hancock County Automobile Club has buildings and grounds. All of the eleven-acre tract is the property of Mrs. Parks, except a small parcel therein 50 feet north and south by 136 feet east and west, which is located 262 feet north of Cooper street and faces or borders on the narrow strip belonging to the Mississippi River Power Company, which is the west boundary line of the whole Parks tract. The last parcel of land since 1917 has belonged to Samuel P. Parks, the son of Mrs. Parks. The entire eleven acres were formerly the property of Peter Egbers, deceased, he having acquired title thereto about 1904. The tract has never been platted or subdivided and the tillable part of it appears to have been used for farming and truck gardening purposes. The only summer cottage on the land is the one facing south, on Cooper street, and no part of the eleven-acre tract has ever been sold for any purpose except the small unimproved parcel to which Samuel P. Parks has title. The three-rod strip sought to be condemned for right of way purposes extends from a point a few feet east of the Mississippi river, at Cooper street, in a northerly direction a distance of approximately 720 feet, across the west end of the entire Parks tract. The right of way crosses over the 50-foot lot of Samuel -P. Parks at about the .middle thereof. At the north boundary line of the eleven-acre tract the three-rod strip is over 100 feet east of the river. Thus, west of the right of way strip is a triangular piece of ground extending from north to south across the entire Parks tract. Upon the three-rod strip there are some thirty-five or forty trees, varying in size and height. Two or three of the larger trees are in close proximity to the dwelling mentioned heretofore and afforded it some shade.

The transmission line to be constructed over the three-rod strip is a two-circuit line, having three wires to each circuit, carrying 66,000 volts of electric energy, and is to be suspended from steel towers. One galvanized steel tower is to be erected in the center of the strip at a point on Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
153 N.E. 483, 322 Ill. 313, 1926 Ill. LEXIS 1129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-power-light-corp-v-parks-ill-1926.