Lambert v. Alcorn

21 L.R.A. 611, 144 Ill. 313
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 21 L.R.A. 611 (Lambert v. Alcorn) 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
Lambert v. Alcorn, 21 L.R.A. 611, 144 Ill. 313 (Ill. 1893).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in chancery, brought by Menzo Lambert and Hannibal Hill against Joseph Alcorn, to restrain the defendant from putting in a system of tile drains on his own land, and extending the same across certain adjoining land belonging to Mary Wilson, whereby the surface water on the defendant’s land would be discharged into a ditch in a public highway, whence it would flow on to and across the lands of the complainants towards a stream known as Indian Creek. The defendant is the owner of a tract of land of somewhat irregular shape, containing about 160 acres, the north line of the tract being the line running east and west through the centres of sections 8, 9 and 10, of a certain township in La Salle county. Adjoining the defendant’s land on the west is a tract about 40 rods in width belonging to Mary Wilson. Lambert, one of the complainants, owns a tract of land 80 rods in width east and west, lying immediately west and north of and cornering upon the land of Mary Wilson. Immediately west of Lambert’s land is another tract 80 rods in width, also belonging to Mary Wilson, and adjoining that land on the west is the land of complainant Hill. Indian Creek runs some distance to the west of Hill’s land. The defendant’s land, and the first mentioned tract belonging to Mary Wilson, are bounded on the north by a highway, which runs from a point a considerable distance east of those tracts to a point a few rods west of the south-east corner of Lambert’s land, where it terminates in another highway running from the north-east to the southwest, and cutting across Lambert’s land near its corner.

The bill alleges that the defendant’s land is very wet, and at certain seasons of the year filled with sloughs and ponds; that such sloughs and ponds are the natural receptacles for the most of the surface water falling on the defendant’s land; that if left to its natural course, very little, if any, of the surface water would flow to and upon the lands of the complainants; that their lands are good farm lands and under good cultivation and very valuable; that the defendant is preparing, by means of a tile drain, to drain all of his land upon the lands of the complainants, to their irreparable injury ; that the natural course of the water is not to and upon the lands of the complainants, and that it could never reach or damage their lands save by artificial means.

The defendant, by his answer, admits, that some portions of his land are low and wet, but not boggy or swampy ; that there are upon portions of his land low basins or natural depressions that, during wet seasons of the year, fill up with water, forming small ponds; that above a certain point or level, such ponds will overflow and pass off from the defendant’s land in a westerly or north-westerly course, down through a natural depression in the surface of the land, into Indian Creek ; that all the water accumulating on the defendant’s land, (except in a designated part of the south-west portion thereof), and except as retained in the natural depressions in the surface of the soil, has so passed off along such draw or natural depression in the surface ever since the original settlement of the country, and before any of the lands were fenced or any ditches or drains were cut through them; that this natural depression in the surface is and for all time has been a natural water-course for the water accumulating on the defendant’s land to pass off into Indian Creek; that the water accumulating in some of the ponds on the defendant’s land naturally passes off of itself; that in others, the water having no means of escape except by evaporation, percolates through the adjoining land, rendering much of it wet and unfit for cultivation, and rendering the land unhealthy for the defendant and his family; that if the water should be drained off, as it easily can be, the land would become healthy, rich and productive.

The answer further alleges that, in the year 1890, he decided to drain certain portions of his land, and for that purpose, he purchased large quantities of drain tile, and employed com-potent and skillful persons to lay out drains across that portion of his land along the above natural depression in the surface, west into a similar drain laid along the same natural depression across the land of Mrs. Wilson ; that he had cut a ditch and laid a tile drain from the west line of his land easterly some 50 or 60 rods, when the injunction in this suit was served ; that he intended to extend his tile drain to the east line of his land, and to lay lateral drains south from the main drain on so much of his land as would naturally discharge its waters in that direction, although he had not yet attempted to determine how far the waters would naturally flow in that direction. The answer denies that his proposed drains would work permanent or irreparable injury to the complainants, and denies that he proposed or had attempted to drain the water accumulating on the south-easterly part of his land, above mentioned, into the draw or natural depression running towards the west, and discharging water on to or through the complainants’ lands, but, on the contrary, disclaims any intention of ever doing so.

The cause being heard on pleadings and proofs, the court found that the defendant’s land is flat and wet, and that there are several ponds thereon formed by natural depressions in the surface; that in times of heavy rains and melting snows, these ponds fill with water; that there is a natural depression, slough, swale or draw extending across the defendant’s land, except the south-east part thereof, and extending westerly across the lands of both the complainants, and emptying into Indian Greek, wherein surface water from rains and melted snows have always, in a state of nature, passed from the defendant’s land, except as above mentioned, across the lands of the complainants to the creek, and when in times of high water these ponds have overflowed, the natural course of the water has been through the same natural draw or water-course to the creek ; that about 50 acres in the south-east part of the defendant’s land do not naturally discharge their surface water westerly through this draw or water-course.

The court further found that the material allegations of the bill were not sustained by the proofs, except as to the 50 acres above mentioned, and that the material allegations of the defendant’s answer were sustained by the proofs, except as to the 50 acres; that as to the 50 acres, the equities were with the complainants, and they were entitled to have the injunction made perpetual, but that as to all the other lands of the defendant, the equities were with the defendant, and he was entitled to have the injunction dissolved. A decree was accordingly entered making the injunction perpetual as to the 50 acres, and dissolving it as to the residue of the land, and the defendant was adjudged to pay one-tenth of the witness fees and of the fees of the sheriff for serving subpoenas, and the complainants were adjudged to pay the residue of the costs.

By leave of' the court, the defendant filed his suggestions of damages on dissolution of the in junction, and upon the hearing of his suggestions, the court assessed his damages at $338.55, and a decree was thereupon rendered in his favor and against the complainants for that sum.

From the foregoing decree the complainants appealed to the Appellate Court and assigned various errors.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 L.R.A. 611, 144 Ill. 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lambert-v-alcorn-ill-1893.