Lepski v. State

10 Ill. Ct. Cl. 170, 1937 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 67
CourtCourt of Claims of Illinois
DecidedDecember 14, 1937
DocketNo. 1984
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ill. Ct. Cl. 170 (Lepski v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Claims of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lepski v. State, 10 Ill. Ct. Cl. 170, 1937 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 67 (Ill. Super. Ct. 1937).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Linscott

delivered the opinion of the court:

Claimant brings this suit in this court as Administrator of the Estate of Orilla Garwood, deceased, and seeks an award of $18,000.00, alleging that in the construction of a highway, the State caused damage to her property in that sum.

In July, 1931, deceased was the owner of a tract of land described as follows, to-wit:

Beginning 296.8 feet Bast of the Northwest corner of the Northeast quarter of Section Fourteen (14) Township Forty-six (46) North, Range (9) East of the Third Principal Meridian; thence South fourteen degrees East 588 feet; thence South 510 feet and being the Southwest corner of real estate conveyed to Harmon A. Garwood by deed dated March 19, 1912 and recorded in the Recorder’s office of Lake County, Illinois, in Book 181 of Deeds on page 601; thence East from said point of beginning 290 feet along the South line of said real estate of Harmon A. Garwood; thence South 226 feet; thence West parallel with the North line 290 feet; thence North 226 feet to the place of beginning; situated in the County of Lake and State of Illinois (except that part North of State Route Highway Number 173.

At that time, the land was bisected by a gravel road. Some four acres of land lay north of the road, and some two or three acres of this land were submerged, and some six acres lay south of the road. The State built Eoute 173 in 1931 and the road seems to have been relocated and claimant’s intestate conveyed a right of way for highway purposes to the State for $150.00. The State proceeded with the construction of the highway on the right of way so acquired.

From the testimony it would appear that the grade of the new roadway was some four feet higher than the grade of the old gravel road. The strip of land deeded to the State was some 290 feet long and the grade in front of the house, about eight and one-half feet, we assume, above the level of a nearby lake, and as one proceeds westerly this grade increases so that on the west line, it is several feet higher. No claim is made for the property so deeded. The adjoining lake is known as Channel Lake.

Owing to the great variance in the testimony of the witnesses for the State and the witnesses for the claimant, this court went to the premises in question, and viewed the roadway, the premises and adjacent property.

It is contended by claimant that she had sold approximately four acres abutting Channel Lake, being the north four acres of the tract, and also being north of the highway, for the sum of $7,000.00, and because of the increase grade in the highway built by the State, the south part of the land, consisting of approximately six acres had been greatly damaged.

We found a very uneven tract of land oh the south side of the road grown up with weeds, with a sign located therein advertising “Worms for Sale.” The claimant no longer has any interest in the land north of the road. There were some trees on the premises; a part of the premises had been used as a sand or gravel pit, and an old dilapidated house, barely fit for human habitation, was located on the south six acres.

It would serve no purpose to review the evidence in detail. A part of this six acres, and a comparatively small part, had been used for gardening, and it is contended that the highway built and known as Route 173 cut off the drainage of this land, and also cut off a view of the lake from the house, being a story and a half high. It is also contended that the approach driveway from the highway onto the premises was short and steep, and people were reluctant to drive with automobiles or other vehicles down onto the premises. From a view of these premises, it would appear that there were not many occasions when one would find it convenient or necessary to drive down upon the six acre tract. The sand and gravel pit it appears, has been abandoned.

We have, however, carefully examined the testimony of Francis S. Baker, a Chicago realtor, a witness for the claimant. He testified that he had known the property for two years prior to 1931, and that before the highway was built, the value of the six acres lying south of the road was $2,800.00 per acre and that after its construction, the total value was $5,000.00, and that he had considered the future use of the property, that is, the six acres in fixing this value.

It appeared to the court, as we viewed the premises in question, and the surrounding territory, that there were not many homes in either direction in close proximity to the house in question, and the testimony of Mr. Baker is not persuasive as to value.

Claimant herself testified that at one time she had been offered $25,000.00 for all of the premises, and that this offer had been made by an ice man, and it also developed that he was related to her. Like Mr. Baker’s testimony, that also was not convincing to the court.

A witness for the State, Mr. Robert C. Abt, a man who had a vast amount of experience in real estate business for a period of fifteen years in that vicinity and who knew the property in question, and had seen it many, many times, both before and after the construction of the highway, testified that the house was about sixty-five years old and in a poor state of repair; that the six acres of land, prior to the construction of the highway, that is prior to July 1, 1931, had been used for a gravel pit; that the elevation of the premises on the six acres in question, had been materially changed; that the entire property consisted of holes where sand and gravel had been removed; that there was always an incline at the point of approach to the new highway; that there is adjoining the property, ninety acres of a subdivision to the east and south of these six acres, about three per cent of which had been sold and improved prior to the construction of the highway for summer cottages; that the highest and best use of that portion of the Garwood property before construction was for a gravel pit and that after construction, the highest and best use, was the same; that neither before or after construction, was the property in question desirable for subdivision purposes; that the cost of putting the property in condition would not justify the expense; that the fair cash market value immediately prior to the construction of the highway was $250.00 per acre and that the fair cash market value immediately after the construction, was $250.00 per acre; and this in the main is the testimony of Mr. Meinersmann, a real estate man with vast experience in selling real estate in that vicinity, with possibly the exception that he was of the opinion that the building of the highway had improved the property.

In Lampp vs. State, 6 C. C. R. 349, and in Baber vs. State, opinion filed by Court óf Claims December 11, 1935, and rehearing denied February 9,1937, this court held that a claimant is not entitled to an award for damages to land not taken where compensation has been paid for land taken; in a voluntary conveyance of a right of way over land to the State it will be conclusively presumed that all damages were included in the consideration paid for such conveyance the same as an assessment of damages in a condemnation suit would be presumed to embrace.

The claimant had testified that she had discussed the change of grade with three men from Waukegan.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ill. Ct. Cl. 170, 1937 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lepski-v-state-ilclaimsct-1937.