Morgan Creek Drainage District v. Hawley

99 N.E. 68, 255 Ill. 34
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 99 N.E. 68 (Morgan Creek Drainage District v. Hawley) 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
Morgan Creek Drainage District v. Hawley, 99 N.E. 68, 255 Ill. 34 (Ill. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

The county court of Kendall county confirmed an assessment against a large body of land owned by Frank O. Hawley, one of the plaintiffs in error, levied by the Morgan Creek Drainage District, the defendant in error, and the record was brought to this court for review pursuant to a writ of error sued out by him. The judgment of confirmation was reversed for three reasons: (1) The oath taken by the commissioners was not sufficient in law; (2) the assessment was levied on lands taken for the use of the district and included benefits to such lands; (3) the assessment was for a greater sum than the estimated cost of the work, which was the limit of any assessment that could be legally levied. The cause was remanded to the county court by a general order without any directions, and under that order the county court was bound to proceed in accordance with the statute and the law as declared in the opinion filed in the cause. (Morgan Creek Drainage District v. Hawley, 240 Ill. 123.) After the original assessment was confirmed Frank O. Hawley conveyed the.lands, in separate tracts, to the other plaintiffs in error, C. W. Rolfe, William E. Coplin and' Samuel Herron, and the ditches of the district were also constructed across the lands after such confirmation. The remanding order was filed in the county court on November io, 1909, and notice was served on the attorney for Hawley that on November 29, 1909, a motion would be made to re-docket and re-instate in the county court the cause and leave would be asked to file a petition for a re-assessment. Pursuant to the notice the cause was re-instated in the county court, and by leave of court a petition was filed which recited the original assessment, the conveyance of a portion of the land to C. W. Rolfe and the reversal of the judgment and remandment of the cause, and praying for an order directing the commissioners to re-assess the property. An assessment roll was made by the commissioners, and the county judge being a property owner in the district, a change of venue was taken, by consent, to the circuit court. Objections to confirmation were filed, and after the court had discharged two commissioners and appointed others in their places and one of the new commissioners had resigned and another had been appointed in his place, a final assessment roll was filed, upon which a hearing was had. The objections of plaintiffs in error were overruled, a judgment of confirmation was entered, .and a writ of error was sued out to review the judgment.

The plaintiffs in error urge a reversal of the judgment of confirmation for alleged errors concerning matters contained in the record at the time it was reviewed on the former writ of error. That, writ of error brought the case, as to Hawley, to this court in its entirety, and it was the duty of the plaintiff in error to present all the existing grounds for the reversal of the judgment. A party cannot on a second writ of error take advantage of any error which existed and might have been assigned on the former record. (Dilworth v. Curts, 139 Ill. 508.) No alleged er-rots will be considered except those claimed to have arisen since the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded.

It is also contended by the plaintiffs in error that by the former judgment of this court the judgment of confirmation as to every tract of land in the district was reversed and that their lands could not be re-assessed without re-assessing all other lands. The. judgment of confirmation was a judgment in rcm against the tracts of land severally, and the writ of error brought up nothing except the judgment against the lands of Frank O. Hawley. If there were errors which other owners might have taken advantage of but they were satisfied with the assessment, it was not the privilege of Hawley to raise objections for them. It did not injure him if other owners saw fit to pay more than could have been legally charged against their lands, and both by the law and a special provision of the Drainage act the judgment of this court did not affect the assessment against the lands of anyone but Hawley. (Vandalia Drainage District v. Hutchins, 252 Ill. 259.) On the reassessment the rules of law were to be observed that the assessment should not exceed the benefits to the lands nor their proportionate share of the estimated cost of the work, including the expenses of the proceeding, but that was the only right or interest of the plaintiffs in error.

Before the original assessment Frank O. Hawley, one of the plaintiffs in error, who then owned the land, released to the district the right of way over the same for the ditches in accordance with the maps, plans and profiles of the district, and additional lands upon which to deposit the earth excavated, far enough from the channel to leave a six-foot berme on each side. The release had the same effect as though the plans, maps and profiles which were on file and had been approved by the court had been copied in it. They called for a right of way for the main ditch of seventy feet in width and a right of way fifty feet in width for each of two branches. The ditches were constructed during the summer of 1908, and the plaintiffs in error in-, troduced evidence that the ditches were only in part within the right of way released; that the center line of the main ditch at the north end was fourteen feet west of the center line as shown by the maps and plans, and in its southerly course gradually diverged until at the south end the center line was two hundred and twelve feet east of the center line as shown by the maps and plans; that in the north branch the center line of the ditch throughout its entire length was twenty-five feet east of the center line shown by the maps and plans; that the right of way of the main ditch, including spoil banks, was one hundred and twenty feet wide, on the south branch from ninety to one hundred and ten feet wide and on the north branch from ninety to one hundred feet wide, and that the dirt piled on the land was from four to six feet high, so as to prevent cultivation unless leveled. Those portions of the lands not embraced within the maps, plans and profiles on file and approved by the court, and which were not included in the release of Hawley, had never been acquired by the district. No compensation had been agreed upon, assessed or paid for land so taken and the question of damages that might result to the remainder of the lands had not been determined. If the ditches had been constructed upon the right of way released by Hawley a re-assessment could have been made without any further proceeding to obtain right of way, but if other land was taken for ditches the district could not levy an assessment on the lands through which the ditches ran until the question of compensation and damages had been determined. (City of Chicago v. Mecartney, 216 Ill. 377; City of Joliet v. Spring Creek Drainage District, 222 id. 441.) It is manifest that this could not be done, because if damages are allowed to a tract of land the judgment is conclusive against a subsequent proceeding to assess the same land for benefits. If there are benefits and damages the benefits are necessarily taken into account in determining whether there is a balance of damages to be paid, and a judgment for damages is conclusive that they exceed all benefits to the land. The re-assessment excepted on the face of the roll the right of way for the ditches, but that did not obviate the objection just stated.

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Bluebook (online)
99 N.E. 68, 255 Ill. 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-creek-drainage-district-v-hawley-ill-1912.