Lovell v. Sny Island Levee Drainage District

159 Ill. 188
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 159 Ill. 188 (Lovell v. Sny Island Levee Drainage District) 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
Lovell v. Sny Island Levee Drainage District, 159 Ill. 188 (Ill. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the court:

The original Sny Island levee was constructed in the years 1878,1874 and 1875, under the Drainage act of 1871. The decisions of this court in Updike v. Wright, 81 Ill. 49, and other cases, resulted in an amendment to the constitution, which authorized the organization of drainage districts, with power to construct and maintain levees, drains and ditches, and to keep in repair all drains, ditches and levees theretofore constructed under the laws of the State, by special assessments upon the property benefited thereby. (1 Starr & Curtis’ Ann. Stat. p. 122, sec. 31.) And the legislature passed an act, which was approved and went in force May 29, 1879, 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. (Laws of 1879, p. 120; 1 Starr & Curtis’ Stat. p. 919.) Under the provisions of this act the Sny Island Levee Drainage District, the appellee herein, was organized in 1880. The Sny Island levee is more than fifty-two miles long, and is intended to reclaim a body of land lying between the east bank of the Mississippi river and the bluffs in the counties of Adams, Pike and Calhoun. The drainage district is from five to eight miles wide, and contains about 110,000 acres of land. In 1880 an assessment of $100,000 was levied on the lands for the purpose of repairing and maintaining the old levee. In the spring of 1888 the levee broke in twenty-four different places and inundated the lands in the district, and in the latter part of that year an additional assessment of $100,000 was made.

The litigation now before us arises out of a petition of the commissioners of the drainage district that was filed in the county court of Pike county on the 30th day of July, 1892, asking for an additional assessment of $150,000 to complete the work of raising and strengthening the levee, and making it protective against waters equal to the high waters of 1851, the waters of that year being the highest ever known in the upper Mississippi river. At the August term, 1892, of the court, objections were filed by some of the property owners, but these were overruled, and the court made an order that the prayer of the petition be granted, and that the assessment prayed for be made by a jury of twelve men, who should make a special assessment against the several tracts of land in the district sufficient to produce the sum of $150,000. Thereafter a jury was impaneled and sworn, as required by law.

Andrew J. Lovell and the other land owners, who are appellants herein, duly filed objections to the assessment roll that was made by the jury, and they afterwards appealed to the county court from said assessment roll as corrected and confirmed by said jury. Those parts of the assessment roll not appealed from were confirmed by the court and spread upon the records. In the county court the several appeals of the land owners were consolidated under the title of “Sny Island Levee Drainage District vs. Andrew J. Lovell et al.” Thereafter the matter of the objections involved in the consolidated case was tried before the court and a jury. The assessment made upon the lands of the objectors by the first jury amounted in the aggregate to §3145.02, but the jury before which the objections were tried, on the appeal, in the county court, reduced said aggregate assessment to §1746.95. Andrew J. Lovell and others entered a motion for a new trial, which was overruled by the court, and they took an exception. The court thereupon ordered the assessment roll to be changed and amended so as to conform to the verdict of the jury, and entered a judgment approving and confirming the same as so amended; and it further ordered that the costs of the proceeding should be apportioned as follows : That the Sny Island Levee Drainage District should pay one-fourth of all the costs taxed in the appeal cases, and that the objectors (appellants in the appeals) should pay three-fourths of all costs incurred in said appeal cases, to be apportioned among them by the clerk in the manner directed in the order made by the court. This appeal from the judgment of confirmation was then taken by said objectors.

It is urged by appellants that it was error for the county court not to sustain the objections filed by them at the August term, 1892, to the petition of the commissioners, but, on the contrary thereof, to order an assessment made as prayed for. This contention is based on the claim that the report filed as an exhibit with said petition nowhere shows an itemized account of the manner in which the moneys received by the district had been expended.

By section 37 of the Drainage act approved and in force May 29, 1879, and known as the “Levee act,” as amended in 1885, (Laws of 1885, p. 108; 3 Starr & Curtis’ Stat. p. 422, par. 63, sec. 37,) it is provided that “assessments, from time to time, may be levied on the land within any district where it shall appear to the court that the previous assessment or assessments have been expended or are inadequate to complete such work, or are necessary for maintenance and repair, or when it shall become necessary for the construction of any additional work, or the completion of any work already commenced within any drainage district to insure the protection or drainage of the lands in said district, under the order and directions of the court, * * * on the petition of the commissioners, accompanied by an itemized statement of accounts made by the commissioners, under oath, showing the moneys received by the district and the manner in which they have been expended, together with plats, profiles of such additional work, and estimated cost of the same.”

It is to be borne in mind that the “itemized statement” required by the statute was of moneys theretofore received by the district that the commissioners could only “use * * * under the direction and approval of the court,” and that such statement was addressed to the court, and was intended for its information in a matter that the statute submitted to its supervision, and in and about the preliminary matter of ordering an additional assessment, and was and is not intended for the purpose of affording information or knowledge to the jury. The statement of expenditures here made by the commissioners under oath gave the consecutive numbers of the several warrants paid and the amounts of each of said warrants, but did not state the names of the persons to whom the respective warrants were issued or paid, nor the consideration or claim for which they were severally issued. An item is a separate particular, of an account, and to itemize is to state in items or by particulars. Here the numbers of the respective warrants, and the amounts included in each of such warrants, were separate particulars of the expenditures. It is manifest that all the particulars that would tend to limit or make specific were not given. But the court held that the report filed as an exhibit was an itemized statement of accounts, and that the manner in which the moneys received by the district had been expended was sufficiently shown to fully advise it in the premises, and we are not prepared to say that it committed substantial error in so holding.

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Bluebook (online)
159 Ill. 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lovell-v-sny-island-levee-drainage-district-ill-1895.