People ex rel. Stewart v. Highway Commissioners of the Town of Anchor

117 N.E. 56, 279 Ill. 542
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1917
DocketNo. 11169
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 117 N.E. 56 (People ex rel. Stewart v. Highway Commissioners of the Town of Anchor) 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. Stewart v. Highway Commissioners of the Town of Anchor, 117 N.E. 56, 279 Ill. 542 (Ill. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellants, Daniel B. Stewart, Mary Stewart, Arthur D. Stewart and Clinton B. Stewart, filed their petition in the circuit court of McLean county to compel the commissioners of highways of the town of Anchor, appellees, to reduce the width of the public highway from sixty feet to forty feet between sections 4 and 5 in the town of Anchor, in the said county, as prayed for by them in their petition to appellees, which petition had b.een rejected. Appellants averred in their petition for mandamus that their petition to appellees was in due form of law and was signed by appellants, who were then, and still are, a majority of the land and lot owners along the line of said road, and that the village of Anchor, through which said road passes, is not incorporated. Appellees filed an answer to the petition for mandamus 'containing eight paragraphs, every one of which was relied on by appellees as setting up a defense in bar of appellants’ petition. Appellants demurred to appellees’ answer and set up special causes of demurrer to every one of the eight paragraphs in the answer. The court sustained the demurrer as to paragraphs 1, 2 and 8 and overruled it as to the other five' paragraphs. Appellees then amended their answer by adding another paragraph, to which the court also sustained a demurrer. Appellees again amended their answer by adding another paragraph numbered 9, to which the court overruled a demurrer. Appellants elected to stand by their demurrer as to paragraphs 3, 4, 5 j 6, 7 and g, and the court dismissed the petition and rendered judgment against appellants for costs. • The only errors assigned on this record are assigned by appellants.

In paragraph 3 of appellees’ answer it is averred that one-quarter of a mile of said road is within the limits of the village of Anchor and is the principal thoroughfare leading to and from the village, that the principal grain elevator of the township is located adjacent to the highway, and that it has a capacity of eighty thousand bushels of grain. The matters stated in that paragraph constitute no defense whatever to appellants’ petition. The only argument offered by appellees in support of that answer or plea is that the narrowing of the road to forty feet may cause special damage to the elevator property. It is inconceivable how that property may be damaged by simply narrowing the road to forty feet if a good, serviceable road of the width of forty feet is made as contemplated, by the legislature in the enactment of sections 73 and 74 of our present Road law. By re-establishing and narrowing the road to forty feet under said sections the newly established road will occupy the central portion of the old roadway, and the owners of the elevator property, and all other owners of property along the line of the old road, will become the owners of the vacated strips of the old roadway in front of their property. (Thomsen v. McCormick, 136 Ill. 135; LaSalle Varnish Co. v. Glos, 254 id. 326.) The owners will be free to continue the use of the vacated portions of the highway as ways of ingress and egress to and from their property or to use it in any other manner they may see fit. The mere fact, however, that the road district might be put to additional outlays to make the reduction of the road prayed for would not relieve the commissioners of highways from their duty of reducing the road when petitioned according to the statute.

It is suggested by appellees that when the facts in a case show that to reduce the width of a highway to forty feet would render the highway useless and impracticable the adjoining property owners along such highway would be entitled to recover for their damages occasioned by the destruction of their road. It is a sufficient answer to that contention to say that there are no facts set forth in appellees’ answer that show that the reduction of the road in question to the width of forty feet will destroy the road or render useless for a road the remaining forty feet of roadway.

Paragraph 4 of the answer sets forth that from Second street, in the village of Anchor, for three miles or more south, the traveled way of said road is a hard road constructed of rock and gravel by the commissioners, and that for more than a mile south of said street the hard road is just wide enough for one vehicle to travel; that the north travel for that mile is on the hard road elevated about four feet above the soft road on its side used for travel to the south; that the character of the road and the nature of its surface are such as to render it impracticable to utilize the road for public travel in any other manner, and that to narrow it to forty feet would destroy and render useless all improvements heretofore made on the road at a cost of about $15,000; that said road has been tiled on the west side with ten-inch tile, which drain the village of Anchor; that at the south end of the road is Mackinaw creek, which runs through the township of Anchor, having many tributaries and a large volume of water and frequently overflows its banks; that there is a large steel bridge fifty feet long over the creek at the south end of the road, and south of that bridge is another bridge thirty feet long over an overflow ditch made necessary by the overflowing of said creek; that south of the village to said creek both sides of the road for ten years have been utilized by ditches for the drainage of the road, and that to narrow said road would ruin the established drainage and make it impracticable to drain the highway properly and render the road impassable during a large part of the year for lack of proper and efficient drainage. Paragraph 9 sets forth that within the village of Anchor said road is eighty feet wide and 'that outside of the village it is sixty feet wide; that the traveled way is twenty-five feet wide and occupies the central portion of the sixty and eighty-foot road, which is now fenced; that the remainder of the sixty and eighty-foot roadway has been used for grading up the traveled way and to construct and maintain, the drainage ditches, and that it will be necessary in the future to use the untraveled portion of the road for the same purposes; that the proposed reduction of the road will require encroachments upon the traveled way to obtain materials for repairs and drains and render traveling dangerous when vehicles pass each other, and put appellees to great expense to cut down the traveled way, transport material and re-grade and re-surface the whole traveled way to make it conform to the highway when so reduced.

As has already béen suggested, there are no issuable facts stated in either of said paragraphs that show that the reduction of the highway to forty feet in width would destroy the highway or render it impossible or impracticable to make of the remaining forty feet a good and serviceable road by reasonable.effort and at reasonable cost to the road district. Bare statements that it would be impracticable to drain properly such narrowed highway or that it would become impassable during a large part of the year from lack of proper and efficient drainage are mere conclusions of the pleader, which are not supported by the facts set forth by the appellees or by common knowledge or experience. It is a common and well known fact that a good and well-' constructed traveled way eighteen or twenty feet in width and properly cared for is much more serviceable and safer for travel than a highway sixty or eighty feet wide of the character that has been usually heretofore constructed and maintained in this State.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 N.E. 56, 279 Ill. 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-stewart-v-highway-commissioners-of-the-town-of-anchor-ill-1917.