Kreitzer v. Barnes

163 N.E. 476, 331 Ill. 549
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1928
DocketNo. 17842. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 163 N.E. 476 (Kreitzer v. Barnes) 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
Kreitzer v. Barnes, 163 N.E. 476, 331 Ill. 549 (Ill. 1928).

Opinions

This is an appeal by W.A. Kreitzer and a number of other land owners in the Blackford Slough Drainage District from an order of the county court of Champaign *Page 550 county denying their petition to abandon the work and abolish the district.

The Blackford Slough Drainage District was organized by an order of the county court of Champaign county entered March 9, 1925. The district as originally organized contained about 900 acres of land in Champaign and Ford counties. On April 20, 1925, over 1800 acres of land were added to the district by order of the county court of Champaign county and thereafter 90 acres more were added by consent of the owners thereof, making in all, as shown by the assessment roll, 2921.11 acres of land. After the additional lands had been annexed to the original district, on petition of the commissioners the county court on May 29, 1925, entered an order changing the character of the work to be done in the district and ordered an assessment of $25,800 against the lands thereof to pay the costs of the proposed work and the expenses of the organization of the district. On July 7, 1925, the commissioners filed their assessment roll of benefits and damages. After the assessment roll was filed the commissioners advertised for bids on the work of the district, which bids were to be considered and the contracts let on August 5, 1925. On that day the commissioners entered into two separate written contracts for the work of the district, one with R.D. Glick, of Fort Dodge, Iowa, for the open ditch work for $7342.99, and one with Robert Dillman, of Fisher, Illinois, for construction of the tile drain and concrete head wall of the district for $5306.71. The date for hearing on the assessment roll was set as July 22, 1925, but the hearing was continued from time to time until December 3, 1925, when the hearing was had before a jury, which returned its verdict on December 11, 1925. Motion for a new trial was filed by objectors, which was overruled and judgment was entered on the verdict on February 15, 1926. On November 3, 1925, the commissioners filed a report setting out their actions and proceedings to September 1, 1925, *Page 551 and reporting that they had on August 5, 1925, entered into the contracts above mentioned for the construction of the work of the district. Objections to their report Were filed by several land owners of the district, but after a hearing the court on December 31, 1925, approved the report. On September 14, 1925, the appellants filed their petition to abandon the work and to abolish the district under section 44 of "An act to provide for the construction, reparation and protection of drains, ditches and levees, across the lands of others, for agricultural, sanitary and mining purposes, and to provide for the organization of drainage districts," approved May 29, 1879, commonly called the Levee act, which is the act under which the district was organized. The petition had sixty-six signers, purporting to be the owners of 2321.2 acres of land in the drainage district. The petition did not set out the names of the owners of land in the district or allege the number of acres in the district, but did allege that the signers constituted a majority of the adult land owners of the district owning more than one-half of the land in the district. Seven signers of the petition were allowed by the court to withdraw their names from the petition. Objections were filed to the petition to abandon the work and abolish the district by the commissioners of the district, alleging (1) that no proper notice of the presentation of the petition had been given, as required by law; (2) that valid contracts had been entered into for doing the work of the district; (3) that thirty-three of the signers of the petition were not land owners of the district; (4) that seven names were signed to the petition without authority; (5) that all but two of the signers of the petition were not land owners in the district as originally organized; and (6) that the owners of land whose names were in fact signed to the petition did not constitute a majority of the owners of land in the district or own a majority of the land in the district. A hearing on the petition to abandon the work and abolish the district *Page 552 was finally had in April, 1926, and on April 30, 1926, the county court entered an order denying the prayer of the petition and allowing an appeal from that order to this court.

Appellees have filed a motion in this court to dismiss the appeal on the ground that section 44 of the Levee act, under which the petition was filed, contains no provision for an appeal to this court from an order entered by a county court under that section. The motion was taken with the case for consideration. It is true that there is no provision for an appeal in section 44, but section 3 of "An act to give circuit courts of this State and the superior courts of Cook county, in term time, and judges thereof in vacation, concurrent jurisdiction with the county courts, in all matters pertaining to the organization of farm drainage districts and farm drainage and levee districts, and the operation thereof, and to repeal all acts in conflict herewith," approved June 5, 1909, (Smith's Stat. 1927, chap. 37, p. 870; Cahill's Stat. 1927, chap. 37, par. 151;) provides that "appeals may be taken from the final orders, judgments and decrees from either of the county or circuit courts to the Supreme Court." That section of the statute has been held constitutional in Kline v. Barnes,250 Ill. 404, and under it this court has jurisdiction of this appeal, as decided in that case and in Mason v. Browner,303 Ill. 511.

Section 44 of the Levee act as amended in 1927 (Smith's Stat. 1927, p. 1078; Cahill's Stat. 1927, p. 995;) provides, in substance, that at any time before the contract for the construction of the proposed work shall have been made, upon presentation to the county court of a petition signed by a majority in number of all the land owners of such district, and owning more than one-half in area of lands in the district to which the petitioners belong, praying that the whole system of proposed work may be abandoned and the district abolished, the court shall enter upon its records an order granting the prayer of such petition *Page 553 upon condition that the petitioners pay all court costs within thirty days from the rendition of such order.

Appellants contend that the contracts entered into by the commissioners on August 5, 1925, are invalid and void because the assessment roll of benefits and damages had not been confirmed at the time they were executed, and that therefore on September 14, 1925, when the petition to abandon the work and abolish the district was filed, there was no contract for the construction of the work of the district. In other words, they contend that the commissioners of a levee drainage district have no authority to enter into contracts for work in the district before the assessment roll is confirmed. They rely upon the cases of People v. Carr, 265 Ill. 220, and DrainageComrs. v. Kinney, 233 id. 67. Both of those cases involved districts organized under the Farm Drainage act and not under the Levee act. In the former case the court held that before assessments can be spread against the lands in a farm drainage district there must be adopted by the commissioners of such district a resolution ordering the amount of money to be raised which is spread in the assessment, and that the adoption of such resolution must be shown by the clerk's record of the commissioners' proceedings.

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Bluebook (online)
163 N.E. 476, 331 Ill. 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kreitzer-v-barnes-ill-1928.