Minnie Creek Drainage District v. Streeter

158 N.E. 383, 327 Ill. 236
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1927
DocketNo. 16352. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 158 N.E. 383 (Minnie Creek Drainage District v. Streeter) 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
Minnie Creek Drainage District v. Streeter, 158 N.E. 383, 327 Ill. 236 (Ill. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

The Minnie Creek Drainage District was organized in Kankakee county in 1893 under the Levee act. The main ditch of the district runs from west to east along the center line of sections 28, 27, 26 and 25, township 30 north, range 14 west of the second principal meridian, in Kankakee county, thence northeast toward the northeast corner of section 25, crossing the Illinois Central railroad, which runs in a northeasterly and southwesterly direction, and thence in an easterly direction to the Iroquois river. The lands involved in this appeal are that part of the west half of the northeast quarter of section 36 which lies west of the Illinois Central right of way and the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section 36, which is immediately south of section 25, and the southern boundary of the drainage district is the center line of the public road between sections 25 and 36, which is also the section line between those two sections. These lands, and all of section 25, were formerly owned by George W. Schrader. On his death appellant, Clara Streeter, succeeded to the title to the lands here involved. Other persons now own section 25. The drainage district filed a petition in the county court of Kankakee county alleging the further facts that tile drains have been constructed in the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section 36, extending north across the road between sections 36 and 25 and connecting with the tile drains in section 25 which empty into the main ditch of the drainage district; that tile drains have been constructed in that part of the west half of the northeast quarter of section 36 that lies west of the Illinois Central railroad and running in a northerly direction and connecting with the tile drains in section 25 which connect with the main ditch of the district, and that the lands of appellant will be benefited by the work done and to be done by appellee in the construction and maintenance of its drainage ditches. Appellant filed an answer to the petition, by which she denied all direct or indirect connection of her lands by drain tiles with the drains of the district, denied the construction of the particular drains alleged in the petition, and denied that she, or any former owner of the lands owned by her, has made any voluntary application to the drainage district under the provisions of section 58 of the Levee act. She alleged that her lands are dominant to the district and are adequately drained by the natural flow of the waters, and that she has not diverted or cast upon the district any more water than naturally flowed thereon. A hearing was had before the court, and after an examination of the lands by the court it was ordered that the lands of appellant described in the petition be annexed to the district. She has perfected this appeal.

The evidence of Samuel Devere, Adolph Maulbetsch and Henry F. Nordmeyer tends to show that George W. Schrader, about three or four years previous to the filing of the petition, tiled the tracts of land involved in this suit and connected such tile drains with other tile drains passing under the public road aforesaid, which latter tile drains were connected with other tile drains in section 25 which drained into the main ditch of the drainage district. These three witnesses were commissioners of the drainage district and had been such commissioners since about the time it was organized. They lived in Otto township, which is the name of the township in which appellant’s lands are situated, and were thoroughly acquainted with the character and condition of the lands both before and after they had been tiled by Schrader and drained into the main ditch of the drainage district. They were also thoroughly acquainted with the effect of tiling and draining farm lands that were too wet for agricultural purposes, and this knowledge enabled them to determine with certainty that the lands of appellant were tiled and drained into the drainage district ditch three or four years or more before the filing of the petition. The testimony shows without question that the lands of Schrader in section 25 were tiled by him about four years previous to the beginning of this proceeding and that such tile drains drained into the main ditch of the drainage district. It is also shown, beyond question, that the tiling in section.25 was connected with two lines of tile that pass under the public road between sections 25 and 36 and then extend southward to the south line of the road and at that point connect with two lines of tile running northward and northwesterly across the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section 36. The line of tile running northerly across said forty acres crosses the north line thereof about thirty rods east of the northwest corner of the forty. The other line of tile that runs northwesterly across that forty crosses the north line thereof about forty-eight rods east of the northwest corner of the forty. These three witnesses testified to a number of facts by which they showed that the lands of appellant were tiled as aforesaid, and that the tiling thereof connected with other tile drains which drained into the main ditch of the drainage district. On each side of the public road there were two ditches, and the tiles that passed out of section 25 and into the tiles passing southward under the public road and to the south line thereof were exposed on both lines of the tile drains in the ditch north of the road and in the ditch south of the road. As much as two or three feet of each of these lines of tile drains were exposed on both sides of the road, and one of the witnesses testified that he was able to see through these two lines of tile from one side of the road to the other by reason of the fact that the tiles on both sides of the road which were exposed were broken or chipped out. The witnesses were énabled to trace these lines of tile in section 25 across the road and into section 36 by evidences of the ditches that were dug and into which the tiles were placed. These evidences were the sunken condition of the ditches dug for the tile, both across the .lands in sections 25 and 36 and across the road. They were also enabled to trace these lines of tile by the growth on top of the ground and other effects which the tiling and draining of the land had on the appearance thereof, and the growth of grass and weeds in the immediate vicinity of the drain ditches. They were also enabled to know with certainty about the two lines of tile across the west forty of appellant’s lands by the use of iron rods that were sunk into the ground in the tiling ditches. One witness testified that he thus tested the ditches for tile and struck the tile with the iron rod in several places as he went south and southeasterly from the north line of the forty along the tile ditches. On both sides of the tile ditches running into section 36 there was a strip of forty feet or more on each side of both ditches which presented a much drier appearance than the ground further away from the ditches. The witnesses followed these ditches for about twenty rods south of where they entered into appellant’s lands, and from the point to which they followed the ditches, as far as they could see southwardly and southeasterly, the ground and the growth of the vegetation presented the same appearance and evidence of drained land as appeared at the point from which they were looking. These witnesses also stated that very much better crops were raised on the lands of appellant after they were drained than before, and that before they were drained they were wet and soggy and not fit for agricultural purposes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 N.E. 383, 327 Ill. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minnie-creek-drainage-district-v-streeter-ill-1927.