People v. Drainage Comrs.

143 Ill. 417
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 143 Ill. 417 (People v. Drainage Comrs.) 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 v. Drainage Comrs., 143 Ill. 417 (Ill. 1892).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shope

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Information in the nature of quo warranto was filed by the State’s attorney of Edgar county, on the relation of owners of land in the town of Shiloh, in that county, against the drainage commissioners of drainage district No. 1, in the town of Young America, also in said county, to enquire by what authority of law they were, as such drainage commissioners, exercising the taxing, power over lands of relators lying in the town of Shiloh. Upon hearing, the circuit court rendered judgment adversely to relators, and against them for costs, and they appeal.

The drainage district of which respondents are commission, ers was organized in 1879, the area of land included therein lying wholly within the town of Young America. It appears that shortly thereafter a main open ditch was constructed, from a point about fifty feet north of the south line of the township, near the center line of section 32, thence northerly and westerly through the district, and extending westwardly about a mile beyond the west line of the township, to an outlet. The town of Shiloh lies south of and adjoining the town of Young America, and sections 2, 3, 4, 9, 10 and 11, in the town of Shiloh, in which relators’ lands are situated, form part of a water-shed, from which the water naturally flowed north, through the natural depressions, upon lands in the town of Young America, and thence north and westerly through that township. In a state of nature the lands of the district, as well as those of relators, were flat and wet, and inadequately drained by the sloughs; which had their source upon and south of relators’ lands, and extended, as before stated, through the district.

Between A. D. 1881 and 1889 relators constructed upon their lands open ditches and tile drains, connecting directly, or through other ditches made or enlarged by them, with the main ditch of district No. 1, in the town of Young America, as the same had been constructed by its commissioners. We do not understand the fact of connection of the drains and ditches of relators with the ditches of the district to be controverted, but if it was, there is ample to show such connection. As early as 1881 the main ditch in the town of Shiloh, was opened down to the road, running on the line between the towns, and the water passed through a culvert into the ditch of the district, and the next year men were employed and the ditch cut across the road and into the district ditch, and relators’ ditches and tiles, then or thereafter made, connected ■ through said ditch so cut through the road, with the main district ditch.

Counsel for relators state the points relied upon for reversal to be: First, the drainage commissioners of drainage district No. 1, in the town of Young America, can not extend the boundaries of said district, and include the lands of the relators which lie wholly without the town of Young America and wholly within the town of Shiloh; and second, the drainage commissioners could not, by their order, without notice to relators, extend the boundaries of the district and include their lands, but that, as to such extension and inclusion, relators were entitled to notice, and to be heard. An order was duly made and filed by the commissioners finding that relators, severally, had connected with the drains of the district, and annexing and classifying their lands, with others, August 31, 1889.

The fact that relators had connected the drains and ditches upon their land with the ditches of the district, lay at the foundation of the right of the commissioners to make such order including their lands within the district. But that jurisdictional fact existing, relators were, by the statute, to be deemed as having voluntarily applied to be included in the district, and the commissioners, in such ease, are required to treat, classify and tax their lands as other lands of the district. (Bev. Stat. chap. 42, sec. 42.) But the point made is, that district No. 1, in the town of Young America, having been organized within that town only, and the highway commissioners of that town being ex officio its commissioners, they can not exercise jurisdiction over lands lying outside of the town in which the district is organized, and in and for which they were elected highway commissioners. It is to be observed that the statute is broad enough, and was intended, as we think, to include all individual land owners who should connect with the drains of the district. The highway commissioners, in respect of the drainage district, do not act as highway commissioners, —in which capacity their jurisdiction would necessarily be confined to the township,—but as drainage commissioners; and it is not, as seems to be supposed, requisite that the political subdivision in which they are elected should be coincident with the boundaries of the drainage district in which they exercise the functions of drainage commissioners.

In view of the construction given the provisions of the constitution prior to the amendment of 1878, it became necessary to invest the legislature with power to authorize the formation of drainage districts with power of special assessment of property benefitted, and the people, by the amendment adopted in 1878, (art. 4, sec. 31,) granted such power, without limitation as to the mode of its exercise. Such general grant carried with it, by necessary implication, all other powers necessary to make the grant effective. (Kilgour v. Drainage Comrs. 111 Ill. 342.) There is no limitation upon the legislature as to the mode of forming drainage districts, or as to the agencies to be employed in their creation. (Huston v. Clark, 112 Ill. 344; Owners of Land v. People, 113 id. 296; Village of Hyde Park v. Spencer, 118 id. 446.) Thus the legislature may give the county court power to form the districts, or vest the power in the highway commissioners of the town, or in persons selected from two boards of highway commissioners, (as in the case of the formation of union districts,) or county commissioners of the county, or corporate authorities of towns, cities and villages, (Blake v. People, 109 Ill. 504, and cases supra,) or the legislature may create another corporation within either, and define its powers, and determine the agencies through and by which its powers may be exercised. (Wilson v. Board of Trustees, 133 Ill. 443.) The mode and agencies through and by which the special assessment is to be imposed is left wholly to legislative discretion, and when it has chosen and designated the agency its selection is conclusive. When the highway commissioners, by virtue of their holding that office, exercise the special and added authority of drainage commissioners, they do not do so, in contemplation of law, as highway commissioners, but as a body of men to whom is delegated the power and authority of commissioners of the drainage districts organized by and under the statute. Their power and duties as drainage commissioners are separate and distinct from their duties as highway commissioners, and are to be exercised independently of any duty imposed upon them as highway commissioners.

The legislature having provided for the formation of “union districts,” where the land included in a single system of drainage lies in two towns, it would not seem proper, in the first instance, to include in districts of the class here organized, lands lying without the township of its organization. In such cases the law contemplates there may be a union of the lands to be benefited, into a district to be organized under the statute.

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143 Ill. 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-drainage-comrs-ill-1892.