Kankakee & Seneca Railroad v. Horan

23 Ill. App. 259, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 285
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 9, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 23 Ill. App. 259 (Kankakee & Seneca Railroad v. Horan) 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
Kankakee & Seneca Railroad v. Horan, 23 Ill. App. 259, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 285 (Ill. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Lacey, J.

Almost immediately after the completion of the railroad, the appellant, the Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St. Louis & Chicago Railroad Company, admittedly took possession of the railroad, and has operated it from that time to this. It is substantially argued by both the appellants and appellee that both companies would be liable from the time the latter named company commenced operating the road, for all damages that might be done to appellee’s crops by reason of insufficient embankments and openings, causing the water to flow into appellee’s land. In other words, that both would be liable for damages caused by maintaining the nuisance. On the other hand, if the so-called Cincinnati Company had no share or did not participate in the construction of the railroad, then it would not, in any event, be liable for damages caused by the first act of construction, and it follows would not be liable for the loss of appellee’s crop of corn in the fall of 1881, before the Cincinnati Company took possession. The appellee recognizes this principle of the law in his fourteenth given instruction, and the appellants in their given eighteenth instruction. The appellants, in the last named instruction, after reciting that in the event the Cincinnati Company 66 were in no manner implicated in the original construction of the road, it can not be made liable in this action for the creation of any permanent structure, ditches, culverts or artificial work done by the Kankakee & Seneca Railroad Company in the original construction of said road, injuriously affecting the value of plaintiff’s crop; but the Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St. Louis & Chicago Railway Company can only, in such case, be liable for any damages resulting to the plaintiff’s crops from the time that the evidence shows it commenced operating said road, to the time of the commencement of this suit.”

It is insisted by the attorney for appellants that there is a failure on the part of the appellee to produce any evidence showing, or tending to show, that the Cincinnati Company had anything to do with, or was in any way implicated in the building of the Kankakee & Seneca Railroad, and hence the former company is not liable for any damages done to appellee by reason of the building of the railroad originally.

In this we think there is a misapprehension of what the record shows. It is true there is no direct and positive evidence to ' that effect, but circumstantial evidence from which the jury might reasonably find that the Cincinnati Company was the moving spirit in the building the railroad mentioned.

The proposed branch connected with the road already operated by the Cincinnati Company, running from Cincinnati to Chicago via Indianapolis, and this new section of road, made important connection with that company’s road. The Kankakee road was organized in February, 1881. Building operations commenced on it immediately and it was almost completed during the summer and fall of 1881, and trains ran on it, commencing December 24, 1881, and it was finally completed in May, 1882. The Cincinnati Company commenced to run and control it from that time.

As organized, the company had a capital stock of only §10,000 to build some forty miles of road costing several hundred thousand dollars. Host of the Kankakee & Seneca Company’s officers and men actively engaged in building it were officers of the Cincinnati Company, or closely connected with it The treasurer of the Cincinnati Company was at the same time the acting treasurer (if it had any treasurer) of the Kankakee & Seneca Railroad Company and resided in Cincinnati. He furnished all the money, and all the accounts were rendered to him and all the money received from the traffic on the road, under the management of Smith, the superintendent of the Kankakee & Seneca Railroad, sent to him. Smith was under his supervision. Bonfield, the president, seemed to have little to do with it. The road master, P. J. Kelley, having charge of laying the track, commenced acting in July, 1881. He was employed by the superintendent, Smith, and was at the same time road master of the western division of the Cincinnati Road; and Smith acted as paymaster a portion of the time and paid the men on the line oí the Kankakee & Seneca Railroad from a pay car marked with the initials of the Cincinnati Company. Smith was the superintendent for about eleven months, before that being superintendent of the Hartensburg branch of the Cincinnati Company’s road, and when he quit the employment of the Kankakee & Seneca Road went back into the employment of the Cincinnati Company, if indeed he was not in its employ all the time. He himself swears that he went into the employ of the Kankakee & Seneca Railroad Company to help build it. Smith sent all his remittances to Osborn, the treasurer of the Cincinnati Company, to Cincinnati, and received all his" money from him, and for two of the months while the road was being built there was paid out over §50,000 per month for construction expenses.

Being questioned on cross-examination, Smith declined to answer the question propounded to him by appellee’s counsel, whether the Cincinnati Road and the Kankakee & Seneca Road did not have a contract by which the former was to furnish money to build it. All their engineers seemed to be under the control of Smith. Bonfield appeared to he a mere figurehead—a mere nominal president of the road. It is true all the construction accounts were kept in the name of the Kankakee & Seneca Hoad and it was charged with cars, etc., but this does not necessarily prove that the Cincinnati Company was not controlling the building of the road. The accounts might have been kept, for many reasons, consistent with the fact that the Cincinnati Company was directing the work through its agents. In fact, while Kelley was ostensibly in the employ of the Kankakee & Seneca Company, superintending in part its construction and keeping his accounts with it, he built certain dams across "'the railroad ditch on Horan’s land at the trestle work on the west side of the east line, of stone, brush and dirt. The purpose was to prevent the water from running down on appellee’s land from the Whitamore and Parker sloughs. This was done in the last of April or first of May, 1882, as he swears, at an expense of $75 or $100, and on the request of Owen Horan, and with the agreement that the latter would take care of the water when it passed through the trestle work to the north side, and rebate all damages, which agreement, however, is denied by Horan.

By a reading of this evidence it would seem that three dams were put in by the Kankakee & Seneca Company, but by turning to the bill read in evidence, filed by the Cincinnati Company in the United States Circuit Court of the Northern District of Illinois, in January, 1885, seeking to enjoin this suit and the Owen Horan suit on account of the putting in of those dams, and the alleged compromise with Owen Horan and appellee, we find that the Cincinnati Company was at that time operating the road, and made the agreement with appellee to put in the dams, and he was to dig a ditch north and “ release the complainant, the Cincinnati Company and the Kankakee & Seneca Railroad Company, from said water in said ditches;” and the complainant, in that suit, it is averred in the bill, “ constructed such dams and embankments across said railroad ditchesetc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 Ill. App. 259, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kankakee-seneca-railroad-v-horan-illappct-1887.