People ex rel. Elliott v. Peeples

126 N.E. 151, 291 Ill. 537
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1920
DocketNo. 13024
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 126 N.E. 151 (People ex rel. Elliott v. Peeples) 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
People ex rel. Elliott v. Peeples, 126 N.E. 151, 291 Ill. 537 (Ill. 1920).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The county court of Gallatin county, on the application of the county collector, rendered judgment against certain lands for a special assessment made by the Cypress Special Drainage District, and the owners have appealed.

The district includes 11,200 acres. It was organized under the Farm Drainage act in 1902, and the improvements contemplated, consisting of one main and three lateral ditches, were made. In 1912 two land owners constructed ditches which were not a part of the drainage district, called the Dobell ditch and the Doherty ditch, which united and emptied into lateral No. 2 of the drainage district. On December 14, 1916, the commissioners, by a resolution reciting that the lands in which were the Dobell and Doherty ditches, comprising a territory of about 1500 acres, have not been and are not drained or protected as originally contemplated by the organization of the district although such lands are all within the district and were classified and have regularly paid all assessments made against them, and that the owners of those lands are demanding that the commissioners furnish more complete drainage for that territory and do the work and bear the expense thereof out of the funds of the district, determined that the district should furnish more complete drainage to such undrained territory and should do the work and bear the expense of such work out of its corporate funds, and should “take over, assume and bind itself to furnish to said undrained, and unprotected territory more complete drainage, as originally contemplated by the organization of said district.” Both the Dobell and Doherty ditches were described in the resolution. • It was found that the Dobell ditch needed to be cut deeper and wider; that both ditches were proper to be taken over, cleaned out and enlarged at the expense of the district, and that in order to properly drain the territory served by the two ditches it was necessary to remove 14,752 cubic yards of earth. A special tax of $1500 was levied against the lands of the district for this purpose as a part of the total levy of $2500.53. In May, 19x8, the district employed Charles Bastnagle to clean out the fills and drifts in lateral No. i and to connect the Dobell ditch with it, and by December i, 1918, Bastnagle, in pursuance of his contract, had dug a ditch about a mile and a quarter long connecting the Dobell ditch with the lateral. The funds of the district being exhausted he stopped work. On December 6, 1918; the commissioners adopted the following resolution, which was filed with the county clerk and was the authority upon which the tax in question was extended:

“At an adjourned meeting of the drainage commissioners of Cypress Special Drainage ■ District, etc., the matter of levying an additional assessment to enable the commissioners to clear out the drift and fills and to enlarge what is known as Dobell ditch or lateral, in said district, also to clear out the drift and fills and enlarge all that part of lateral No. 1 in said drainage district which is located in the southeast quarter in section 1, in township 9, range 9, Gallatin county, Illinois, so as to connect that part of lateral No. 1 with the Dobell ditch or lateral, in said district, was taken up and fully discussed, and said commissioners having had survey and estimate of the cost of 'Said work necessary to be done, it is found that the sum of $5200 is necessary and will have to be raised by an additional or special tax upon the lands in said district, and thereupon the following resolution was introduced, read, approved and passed:
“Whereas, the assessment or tax heretofore levied on the lands and property in Cypress Special Drainage District, in the county of Gallatin and State of Illinois, is found inadequate to enable the commissioners to clear out the drifts and fills and to enlarge what is known as Dobell ditch or lateral, in said district, and that part of lateral No. 1 which lies in the southeast quarter of section 1, in township 9, range 9, in said district, and that a deficit exists to properly perform said work in the amount or sum of $5200;
“Therefore we hereby certify that-we require the said sum of $5200 to be levied as a special tax levy or assessment for drainage purposes to do said work on the lands and property benefited in said Cypress Special Drainage District, which said assessment of $5200 shall be levied and collected with and as taxes of the year 1918.
“Given under our hands this 6th day of December, A. D. 1918.
D. A. Logan,
J. E. Logsdon, • Walter Drone, Drainage Comrs.”

It is insisted by the appellants that the commissioners had no authority to take over the Dobell and Doherty ditches, which were constructed by the owners of the land on which they were, and to assume on the part of the district the burden of their maintenance.

Section 41 of the Farm Drainage act authorizes the commissioners, if they find that by reason of error in locating or constructing the ditches, or any of them, or from any other causes, the lands of the district are not drained or protected as contemplated or some of them receive partial or no benefit, to use the corporate funds of the district to carry out the original purpose, to the end that all the lands, so far as practicable, shall receive their proper and equal benefits as contemplated when the lands were classified, and provides that if sufficient funds are not on hand the commissioners shall make a new tax levy. The theory on which a drainage improvement is constructed and the cost assessed upon the lands of the district is that all the lands assessed are benefited as much as the assessment amounts to, or more. The purpose of the classification of the land is to fix the proportionate share of the cost which each tract shall pay. It may happen that it is discovered, when the work is completed, that from some error of location or construction, or otherwise, some part of the land has not received the benefit which was expected, and the object of the provision which has just been mentioned, in section 41, is to enable the commissioners to remedy this failure and use the fund's of the district for that purpose. The commissioners found that the condition of facts required by the statute for this purpose existed and that territory of about 1500 acres of the district had not been drained or protected in the manner contemplated by the organization of the district. If the lands adjacent to the Dobell ditch and the Doherty ditch did not receive the benefits which it was supposed they would receive by the plan contemplated at the organization of the district and a construction of those ditches was necessary to enable them to receive such benefits, such construction was work within the scope of the commissioners’ authority. If they had constructed these ditches it would have been their duty to maintain them. Although they were constructed by the land owners at their own expense, it was nevertheless the duty of the commissioners thereafter to maintain them if their construction was necessary to give to the lands the benefit contemplated in the original organization of the district and was a work which the commissioners should themselves have performed. The resolution on its face shows that the assessment was made both for original work and for repairs.

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Bluebook (online)
126 N.E. 151, 291 Ill. 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-elliott-v-peeples-ill-1920.