Sanitary District of Rockford v. Johnson

174 N.E. 862, 343 Ill. 11
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1931
DocketNo. 20331. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 174 N.E. 862 (Sanitary District of Rockford v. Johnson) 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
Sanitary District of Rockford v. Johnson, 174 N.E. 862, 343 Ill. 11 (Ill. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Heard

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal by John A. Johnson from a judgment for the condemnation of 50 acres of his land on the petition of appellee, the Sanitary District of Rockford.

The Sanitary District of Rockford was duly organized under the statute and planned and surveyed a system of sewers, intercepting sewers and outlets, with a treatment and sewage disposal plant therefor. In order to complete this improvement and to properly treat the sewage collected from said system it became necessary for the district to acquire as and for a site for the treatment and sewage disposal plant certain real estate that belonged to appellant. An ordinance was passed by the board of trustees of the district providing for the site for the treatment and sewage disposal plant, and a petition was filed in the county court to condemn that site. A cross-petition was filed by Johnson setting up that he was possessed of other lands located contiguous to the land sought to be taken; that said lands formed a compact tract of 152 acres, more or less, all the lands being suitable and peculiarly adapted for platting and residential purposes; that if the real estate described in the petition should be taken and used as and for a site for the treatment and sewage disposal plant it would greatly damage his lands not taken. The cross-petition prayed that the value of the land taken or to be taken and damages to lands not taken be determined in the manner provided by law. To maintain the issues on behalf of the district and of Johnson approximately the same number of witnesses were called, and there was a finding by the jury that the value of the land taken was the sum of $16,500 and that there was no damage done to the lands not taken.

The land sought to be taken and the lands for which damages are sought constitute a tract of land of about 151 acres which hitherto has been devoted solely to farming and grazing purposes, except for a brief space of time during the World War when it was leased to the United States government and used as part of Camp Grant. The northerly boundary of this land is two miles south of the southerly limits of the city of Rockford. It lies between Rock river on the west and Kishwaukee road on the east. The only public highway from which these lands are accessible is the Kishwaukee road, on the easterly side thereof. A large public sewer, thirty-three inches in diameter, which carries the sewage from a very considerable area of Rockford, including a large manufacturing district, enters this 50-acre tract from the east, on the easterly neck thereof, and extends entirely across it and discharges its sewage into Rock river at approximately the lowest point of the 50-acre tract. The entire sewage of the city of Rockford and its environs is discharged into Rock river either above or at this property, and the waters of Rock river, saturated with this sewage, pass the property. A large part of the 50-acre tract is subject to periodical overflows from the sewage-laden waters of Rock river. In close proximity to appellant’s lands on the south is the present military camp owned by the Federal government and used for the training of troops. A very considerable portion of the lands, especially along the river and north of appellant’s farm, is open and unsubdivided and used for agricultural purposes, so far as used at all. In the area north of appellant’s farm is a large tract covered with sand and gravel pits and used in the conduct of a sand and gravel business. In the same general area and near the river is what is known as the LaPorge Rendering Works, where the carcasses of dead animals not commercially usable for any other purpose are rendered and the refuse discharged into the river. Chappell Bros.’ packing plant and business is maintained and operated on another considerable tract of the land in close proximity to the river and between appellant’s farm and the city of Rockford. The business conducted at this plant is the slaughter of large numbers of horses and the packing of horse meat. The refuse from this plant is also discharged into Rock river above appellant’s land. The treatment and sewage disposal plant which it is proposed to construct and operate on the 50-acre tract sought to be taken is to be located on the northwest part thereof, and will, when entirely completed, cover about 10 to 12 acres.

Nine witnesses for appellee gave their opinion as to the value of the property to be taken. Of these, one fixed the value at $10,000, two at $12,000, two at $12,500 and four at $15,000. Of appellant’s witnesses three fixed the value of the property to be taken at $600 per acre, one at $800, one at $900, one at $750 to $1000 and two at $1000. The jury viewed the premises.

It is contended by appellant that it was error to permit the witness Hanson, who was not a trustee but an engineer, to testify, over the objection of appellant, as to what was planned by way of the construction, as a part of the sanitary sewer system, of a sewage disposal plant on the property in question. The ordinance under which the work was to be done was made a part of the petition and no more specific plans were asked by appellant prior to the trial. In eminent domain cases the jury are empaneled solely for the- purpose of ascertaining the just compensation to be paid to the owner of the property sought to be taken or damaged. This is the only issue triable by jury in such a case. All other questions are preliminary and must be determined by the court before the jury are empaneled. (Department of Public Works v. Sohm, 315 Ill. 478; City of Chicago v. Chicago Title and Trust Co. 331 id. 322.) The law does not require that the petitioner shall set out in the petition of present plans covering the proposed structure or structures to be placed upon the land sought to be taken. The property holder has the right to request the court to compel the petitioner to produce such plans. In the absence of such a move on his part the property holder cannot complain that such plans were not produced. The production of such plans is not indispensable to the proceeding. (Alton and Southern Railroad Co. v. Vandalia Railroad Co. 271 Ill. 558.) It was competent for appellee to produce its engineer and by his testimony cover the nature and character of the structure proposed to be erected on the property sought to be taken. Although his declarations and admissions outside of court would not be admissible, his statements made under oath as to such plans, when called for by the petitioner, are not only admissible but binding upon it. Jacksonville and Savanna Railroad Co. v. Kidder, 21 Ill. 131.

Evidence was offered to show that odors escaped from other plants built from plans of the same experts who were designing the Rockford plant and that a large number of flies were attracted, to which an objection was sustained by the court for the reason that such evidence must be limited to the plant to be erected in Rockford, and that it was not proper to prove the conditions surrounding other plants unless the same conditions prevailed at appellee’s proposed plant in Rockford. The conditions surrounding other plánts not shown to be similar to the Rockford plant could throw no light upon any question involved in this case. There was no foundation laid for the introduction of this evidence and the court properly sustained the objection to it.

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Bluebook (online)
174 N.E. 862, 343 Ill. 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanitary-district-of-rockford-v-johnson-ill-1931.