Jones v. Sanitary District

265 Ill. 98
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 265 Ill. 98 (Jones v. Sanitary District) 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
Jones v. Sanitary District, 265 Ill. 98 (Ill. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Vickers

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is a writ of error directed to the circuit court of Woodford county. By it a judgment for $5480.50 against the Sanitary District of Chicago is brought up for review.

By her declaration defendant in error alleged that the sanitary district had damaged her farm by inundating it with the waters from the sanitary district channel. The declaration originally consisted of twelve counts. All of the counts were withdrawn except the first, second, fourth, fifth arid eighth. At the close of all the evidence plaintiff in error made a motion to direct a verdict of not guilty as to each of the remaining counts, and this motion was overruled. An exception to1 this ruling was preserved, and it is urged that the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict of not guilty. The specific grounds relied upon in support of this assignment of error are, that certain material allegations of each count were not proven, and that there is a variance between the several counts of the declaration and the evidence relied upon to sustain them. In some of the counts upon which the case went to the jury it was alleged that plaintiff in error “wrongfully, unjustly and negligently obstructed, raised and elevated, or caused tó be obstructed, raised and elevated, the waters .of the Illinois river, and wrongfully and unjustly and negligently turned into, and caused to be turned into, said Illinois river, through the Desplaines river,” large quantities of water which in a state of nature would not have come there, and that thereby the waters of the Illinois river were caused to back out upon the lands of defendant in error, etc. It is urged that in order to sustain counts containing the words above quoted it was necessary to prove that the acts of plaintiff in error causing the damage were wrongfully and negligently performed. It is contended that since all of the actions of the sanitary district were had under a valid statute its action could not be wrongful, and that there is no proof that there was any negligence, either in the construction or operation of the sanitary district channel. This contention cannot be sustained. Defendant in error bases her right to recover upon the statute under which plaintiff in error was organized. The statute creates liability against the district for all damages that may result to any "land owner by reason of turning the water from said district into the Illinois river. The liability does not depend upon any wrongful purpose or negligent conduct on the part of plaintiff in error. The allegation that the action of plaintiff in error was wrongful and negligent is surplusage. The substance of the charge in each count of the declaration is, that plaintiff in error turned a large quantity of water from Lake Michigan into- the artificial channel constructed by the sanitary district and caused the same to flow into- the Illinois river, thereby causing the waters of the Illinois river to overflow, submerge and render wet and useless the lands of the defendant in error. Each of the counts stated a good cause of action, in substance, under the statute, and the introduction of the immaterial and unnecessary words, “wrongful and negligent,” did not affect the sufficiency of the counts, nor did a failure to prove that the acts of plaintiff in error were wrongfully and negligently performed constitute a variance. In further answer to this alleged error it may be said that this objection does not apply to all of the counts of the declaration. Defendant in error was within the rules of good pleading in stating the cause of action in different language in the several counts of her declaration, and she was not bound to prove each count of the declaration in order to entitle her to a verdict. If there be one good count in the declaration and sufficient proof to support it, this court would not reverse the judgment merely because there were other counts in the declaration -which were either defective or unsupported by proof. (Scott v. Parlin & Orendorff Co. 245 Ill. 460; Grannon v. Donk Bros. Coal Co. 259 id. 350; Humason v. Michigan Central Railroad Co. 259 id. 462.) There was no error in refusing to direct the verdict of not guilty.

Plaintiff in error next contends that the court erred in admitting proof of a difference in the condition of fann lands in the Illinois river bottom before and after the water was turned into the Illinois river from the sanitary district. Evidence was received, over objection of plaintiff in error, that the tendency had been to increase the overflows from the Illinois river since 1900, and that lands which before that time were above high-water mark were inundated and damaged; also, proof was received that the creeks tributary to the Illinois river had filled up at the mouths with sand, rubbish and silt as a result of the dead water from the Illinois river backing up into the. creeks for a greater distance than before the waters of the sanitary district were turned in. As a result of the filling up of the creeks near the river the head waters flowing down the creeks were obstructed and dammed up and were thus backed up and spread out over adjacent lands. This condition was shown to exist in regard to a creek which ran through the lands involved in this suit, and the evidence objected to tended to show that the same condition existed in other creeks which flow into the Illinois river below the mouth of the sanitary district channel.

Plaintiff in error insists that it was error to receive evidence in regard to the effect of turning the waters of the sanitary district into the Illinois river upon any lands other than those of defendant in error. Plaintiff in error sought to account for the higher stages of the Illinois river by reason of the organization of drainage districts in the Illinois river bottom and the construction of levees both above and below the lands of defendant in error, and in attempting to establish its contention in this regard plaintiff in error saw proper to extend the scope of inquiry over the entire length of .the Illinois river and some of its tributaries in the State of Illinois. Numerous witnesses were introduced to describe the nature and extent of the local improvements made by different drainage .districts and numerous photographs were introduced showing various conditions that had been found to exist at different places on the Illinois river. Having thus gone into a general inquiry in regard to conditions that have been found to exist at numerous points up and down the Illinois river, plaintiff in error is in no position to complain that defendant in. error was also permitted to introduce evidence of a similar character tending to show the general condition as it existed before and after the turning in of the sanitary district water, of the lands in the Illinois river valley. A party cannot complain of an error committed against him when a like error appears to have been committed in his favor. Niagara Fire Ins. Co. v. Bishop, 154 Ill. 9; Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Co. v. Murowski, 179 id. 77; Kuhn v. Eppstein, 239 id. 555; Wetzel v. Firebaugh, 251 id. 190.

Plaintiff in error complains that the damages are excessive, and that the verdict is, in its amount, against the clear weight o f the evidence. The testimony upon the question of damages is quite voluminous. The abstract contains about 450 pages and is largely made up of the testimony given on both sides upon the question of damages. As is usually the case in the trial of an issue of this character, the witnesses differ widely both in regard to the value of the land prior to 1900 and subsequent to that date.

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Bluebook (online)
265 Ill. 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-sanitary-district-ill-1914.