Kendall v. Montgomery

222 Ill. App. 552, 1921 Ill. App. LEXIS 164
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 2, 1921
DocketGen. No. 6,925
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 222 Ill. App. 552 (Kendall v. Montgomery) 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
Kendall v. Montgomery, 222 Ill. App. 552, 1921 Ill. App. LEXIS 164 (Ill. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Partlow

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellants, seven in number, filed their petition in the circuit court of Bureau county against appellees as commissioners of the Green River Special Drainage District of Bureau and Whiteside counties, for a mandamus commanding appellees to enlarge the capacity, clean out and repair certain ditches in said district. A general and special demurrer was sustained to the petition. Appellants elected to abide by their petition and thereupon judgment was entered against them and this appeal was prosecuted.

The petition alleges, in substance, that appellants were landowners in said district; that the district was organized June 15, 1893, under the Farm Drainage Act for the purpose of constructing drainage for agricultural and sanitary purposes by special assessment upon the property benefited, and the district embraced 13,839 acres of. land. The commissioners determined upon a system of drainage which was considered sufficient to provide outlets of ample capacity for the future as well as present contingencies. One main ditch and several laterals were constructed, the main ditch being an improved portion of Green river, and, as originally constructed, the maximum width of the main ditch on the bottom was 50 feet. On May 24, 1906, the commissioners determined that the drains originally designed would not be adequate for the purpose of draining the district; that the ditches had become considerably impaired, and that heavy and additional volumes of water came upon the lands of the district because of improvements in drainage in the lands above the district and thereupon the commissioners caused certain changes to be made. The first 6,800 feet of the main ditch, extending from its upper terminus, was given a bottom 60 feet in width; the next 5,500 feet was given a bottom of 65 feet, and the remainder of the course, down to the canal aqueduct, was given a bottom of 70 feet in width.

The petition further alleged that the main ditch as originally constructed contained a section wherein a new channel was excavated, beginning at a point in the northwest quarter of section 33 in Greenfield township, and running in a southwesterly course to a- point where it again connected with the main channel of Green river and was designated as the old cutoff. In 1906 the old cut-off was not widened, nor was its capacity increased to take care of the water which was brought down in the ditch which was widened to a 70-foot bottom, but the old channel was widened from where it departed from the cut-off to where it again joined the cut-off to a width of 70 feet on the bottom. This section of the old channel runs in a northwesterly direction to the Village of New Bedford, and then curves in a southwesterly direction until it connects with the old cut-off and it is known as the New Bed-ford cut-off. The old cut-off is a little more than a mile in length and the New Bedford cut-off is about three miles in length. The petition further alleged that the New Bedford cut-off hud not been maintained in good condition since 1906, but the current having to travel farther than in the old cut-off, and in a less direct course, and with more friction, and on a grade decreased corresponding with its increased length, had become sluggish and filled with deposits of sand, dirt and with a growth of willows and brush, and at its head had become sealed to a height of 5y2 feet above its bottom, so that its water must rise to that height before it can run through the New Bedford cut-off. Great volumes of water came down the main ditch to the junction of the cut-offs. Green river is about 100 miles in length and its head waters are in Willow Greek township on the east side of Lee county, thence through the southern portion of Whiteside county and through Bureau and Henry counties and empties into Bock river near the Village of Colona in Henry county. From about the center of Lee county it has a width of 60 feet on the bottom until it enters Green Biver Special Drainage District, which is about midway between the head and mouth of Green river. That portion of Green river above the drainage district is the only outlet for 250,000. acres of land and the waters from this watershed are brought down through Green river and empty into the main ditch of the drainage district. Green river is fed by a great many natural streams, bringing dowm water which surrounds its basin; and by improved ditches constructed by other drainage districts, among which is the Inlet Swamp Drainage District, embracing about 35,000 acres in Lee county, and having more than 55 miles of drainage ditches.

The petition further alleged that the outlet for the waters from the lands of appellants was above the junction of the cut-offs at their upper portion into the main ditch, and from the cut-offs to its upper terminus in Whiteside county the ditch is filled with sand bars and other obstructions which have accumulated there since the ditch was improved in 1906. The main ditch has not been cleaned out since 1906 and is out of repair and filled in many places to a depth of 5 feet or more, its original depth being an average of 10 feet. The water of the main ditch is retarded and is backed upon the land of the appellants to such an extent as to deprive lands of drainage. This condition may be remedied by cleaning out the main ditch from its upper terminus to the canal feeder about 2 miles below the lower district boundary of the district on a grade which would give a fall of over 11 feet in 9% miles; and by widening the old cut-off to a width of 75 feet on the bottom. The capacity could be sufficiently increased by cleaning out to a width of 70 feet and down to grade of the New Bedford cut-off.

The petitioner further alleges that the lands of the appellants have been classified and all assessments have been paid, but that the lands of appellants are not drained as contemplated and have received only partial or no benefits, and that the benefits to the land would not exceed the cost of securing the drainage; that appellants have made repeated demands upon the commissioners to remedy the conditions and to give them adequate and proper drainage, yet the commissioners have failed to afford the relief requested.

The prayer was for a, writ of mandamus, commanding the commissioners to enlarge the capacity of the main ditch at the cut-off to such an extent as. will make it adequate to carry the water which it was designated to carry, and to clean out and repair the main ditch so that it will afford an adequate and sufficient outlet for the drainage of the land of the appellants, and to take such steps as will give to the lands their equal and proper drainage, and such as was contemplated at the time of the formation of the district.

The special demurrer contained twenty-four specific grounds why the petition was not sufficient. When the demurrer was sustained the appellants moved the court to rule specifically on each ground of demurrer, which the court refused to do. There is nothing in the record to show upon what ground the demurrer was sustained, but we do not deem it necessary to pass on each reason assigned although each is separately argued.

The first ground of special demurrer is that there are no facts stated upon which the alleged duty of appellees to appellants can be predicated.

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Related

Satterfield v. Fairfield Drainage District No. 2
152 N.E.2d 406 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
222 Ill. App. 552, 1921 Ill. App. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kendall-v-montgomery-illappct-1921.