People v. Texas Special Drainage District

168 Ill. App. 630, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1203
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 15, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 168 Ill. App. 630 (People v. Texas Special Drainage District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Texas Special Drainage District, 168 Ill. App. 630, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1203 (Ill. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Puterbaugh

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Circuit Court sustained a general demurrer to the petition for mandamus hereinafter substantially set forth, and upon the petitioner electing to abide thereby, dismissed such petition and rendered judgment against the petitioner in bar of action and for costs. From such judgment said petitioner has perfected an appeal to this court, contending that said petition is sufficient in law to warrant the issuing of the writ as prayed.

The petition, in substance, alleges that the relatrix is the owner of certain described premises included within the Texas Special Drainage District, consisting of about 1,000 acres, which premises are subject to assessments that may hereafter be levied for the construction and maintenance of the drainage improvement of said district. It further alleges the organization and confirmation of said district; that the signers of the petition fur the organization thereof were T. C. Grady, H. P. Grady, W. G. Phares, who are the only present commissioners of the district, and defendants in this action, R. B. Mayall, a former commissioner, Oscar M. Phares, a brother of said W. G. Phares, Lida Zigler, and Emma Bay; that the plan and purpose of said commissioners is to construct a drainage ditch to carry off water from an area of 6,000 acres; that in order to make the improvement of value to the lands of the petitioner, the said drainage ditch must be an open ditch, and that it is impracticable to construct a tile drain; that a tile drain will not afford the relief to the land contemplated, and that the expenditure of moneys for the construction of a tile drain would be wasteful; that the commissioners selected one Bell, a competent civil engineer, to design and plan said work; that said Bell recommended an open ditch; that the commissioners, in accordance with said recommendation and report of said civil engineer, then and there decided to construct an open drainage ditch; but thereafter, notwithstanding their action in that regard, with knowledge that the efficient and proper method of constructing said proposed improvement would be the construction of an open ditch, and that a tile drain would be inefficient and that the expenditure of money therefor would be wasteful, said commissioners, contrary to their honest and impartial discretion in said matter, and for the purpose of avoiding litigation, pending and threatened, against their title as commissioners, and to escape the possibility of being obliged to pay certain court costs and expenses to which they were then subject, fraudulently entered into a written contract with certain landowners in said district, which said contract is- set out verbatim in the petition, and recites, in substance, that whereas there was an election contest pending in the County Court to which said commissioners were defendants; and whereas a quo warranto proceeding to test the validity and organization of the said drainage district, in the Circuit Court of said county, was also pending, as well as an action on the case for damages on account of alleged filling in of a certain ditch in said alleged drainage district; and whereas, there had been.considerable controversy in the past in regard to whether an open ditch was required or whether it was practicable to tile the land in said district; and whereas, the parties to said agreement were desirous of settling the matter of a system of drainage, and all other controversies between them so as to avoid further litigation, costs and expenses, and desired that said system be constructed at the lowest minimum cost, in consideration of the premises it was thereby agreed by and between the parties whose names were signed to said contract, as landowners, and the said drainage commissioners: First, that the system of drainage in said district should be a tile drain or drains of sufficient capacity to take care of and properly drain the lands in said district, provided, however, that if said commissioners and the engineer for said drainage district should thereafter determine that it was more practicable to construct an open ditch as an outlet for said drainage system, on, in and through a certain described portion of said district, they might so construct said portion of said drainage district, without violating said agreement; second, that the then present drainage commissioners, W. G. Phares, T. C. Grady and. Hiram Grady, should continue to act as such commissioners, and that said election contest, quo warranto proceedings and damage suit should be dismissed; third, that the classification for assessments in said drainage district should first be made by three disinterested persons not the owners of land included in said district, as then constituted, but residing and owning land in the counties of Mason or DeWitt, Illinois, not related to any of the landowners or parties in interest in said district, by consanguinity or otherwise, who were to be selected one by said drainage commissioners, one by the other parties to the agreement, and the third by the two thus selected; that the classification as made by these three men should be adopted by the said commissioners and the assessments in said district should be based thereon; fourth, that the said commissioners should employ one Hicks as an engineer to survey and superintend the construction of said drainage system, — provided, that if the said commissioners deemed it wise and profitable, they might employ some other competent civil engineer to assist the said Hicks in the surveying and superintending the construction and installing of said drainage; fifth, that thereafter Fred Ball, Herrick & Herrick, John Fuller, M. J. Hinchcliff, B. F. Shipley and E. B. Mitchell should be employed by said drainage commissioners, as attorneys for said drainage district; sixth, that thereafter should any person or persons institute any legal or chancery proceedings of any kind against said commissioners or test or question the validity of said drainage district, or that was inconsistent with the execution or carrying into effect of such agreement, the parties to said agreement should lend their support and assistance in causing said lands to be drained as nearly as practicable by the system of drainage therein provided. The petition further alleges that by virtue of said contract, the commissioners, for various benefits to be derived by them, had contracted to exercise their discretion and power in determining the method and construction of said improvement, which contract, if carried out, would be directly in conflict with the disinterested discretion and judgment of said commissioners and in violation thereof, to the permanent injury and irreparable loss to the petitioner and other landowners, in the district; that the commissioners in consequence thereof, were incapable of exercising a disinterested, honest, impartial and unprejudiced discretion, and that it was impossible for said commissioners to exercise discretion in determining whether said improvement should be by open ditch or tile drain without being influenced, constrained and impelled to follow the obligations imposed by said contract. The petition further alleges that the commissioners threatened and intended to and would carry out the provisions of said fraudulent and improper contract, and let contracts for tile drains, and refused and would refuse to exercise their true, impartial and disinterested judgment and discretion as to the method of said improvement, by means whereof petitioner was denied her legal rights.

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Related

Langan v. Milk's Grove Special Drainage District No. 1
88 N.E. 182 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 Ill. App. 630, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-texas-special-drainage-district-illappct-1912.