Sanitary District v. Baumbach

270 Ill. 128
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 270 Ill. 128 (Sanitary District v. Baumbach) 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 v. Baumbach, 270 Ill. 128 (Ill. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cooke

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant, the Sanitary District of Chicago, filed its petition in the circuit court of Cook county for the condemnation, among others, of two tracts of land, one owned by Louisa Quade and one by Henry Haase, the appellees. Each of the appellees filed a cross-petition claiming damages to land not taken. The land proposed to be taken is for the channel of appellant’s canal and the necessary ground on each side for spoil banks, and consists of 6.47 acres of land belonging to Haase and 5.13 acres belonging to Mrs. Quade. The properties of appellees adjoin and together consist of about 22 acres which formerly belonged to their father. The 22 acres lie just outside the limits of the city of Blue Island, the east and south sides of the tract being adjacent to the city. The tract is somewhat irregular in shape and is 800 feet in width through that portion sought to be condemned for the right of way for the canal. Haase owns the northern portion of the tract and Mrs. Quade the southern portion. The petition seeks to condemn for right of way purposes 446.16 feet off the south side of the property of Haase and 353.73 feet off the north side of the land of Mrs. Quade. This leaves a triangular tract of land at the north end belonging to Haase which is not taken, and a tract of land not taken on the south belonging to Mrs. Quade, in the form of an irregular rectangle. The land of Haase not taken consists of 4.70 acres and the land of Mrs. Quade which is not taken consists of 6.06 acres. By the verdict of the jury Haase was awarded $7164 for the land taken and $2115 for the land not taken. Mrs. Quade was awarded the sum of $6156 for the land taken and $3030 for the land not taken, and judgment was entered accordingly. This appeal has been perfected to review the judgment of the circuit court.

Three grounds are urged for reversal: First, that the damages allowed are excessive; second, that the court erred in the admission and exclusion of testimony; and third, that the court improperly instructed the jury. .

It was the theory of appellant that the use to which this land was best adapted was that of truck-farming, while appellees contend that the most beneficial use of which the land was susceptible was that of subdivision for business and residence purposes. As before stated, the whole tract adjoins the city of Blue Island, which is á city of about 10,000 inhabitants and adjoins the city of Chicago. Four steam railroads and one electric interurban railway pass through . the city of Blue Island. The depots of two of the steam railroads are about one-half mile east of the two tracts sought to be condemned, the depot of the other steam railroad is about a block and a half east of these premises, and the interurban street railway runs within three blocks east of the two tracts. On the interurban line there are sixty trains or cars from Chicago and sixty to Chicago each day. On the steam railroads there are daily sixty-six passenger trains to Chicago and seventy-one from Chicago. The land adjoining these tracts on the east and south within the city of Blue Island is subdivided, and there are seventy-eight houses within 660 feet east and south of the 22-acre tract. Paved streets and sidewalks extend to the property and schools and churches are located in the immediate.vicinity. The witnesses for appellant, testifying upon the theory that the best use of which this land was susceptible was that of truck-farming, testified that the Haase land taken was worth from $400 to $500 per acre and that of Mrs. Quade from $400 to $700 an acre. These same witnesses estimated the damages to the remainder of the Haase land to be from nothing to $100 an acre and the damages to the remainder of Mrs. Quade at from nothing to $50 an acre. On the other hand, witnesses on the part of appellees, testifying upon the theory that the use for which the. land was best susceptible was that of subdivision for residence and business purposes, testified that the land of Haase taken was worth from $1500 to $2000 an acre and that of Mrs. Quade from $1600 to $2000 an acre, while the damage done to the lands of Haase remaining was from $600 to $800 an acre and to the lands of Mrs. Quade remaining from $800 to $1250 an acre. The witnesses called on each side were men of large experience in dealing in lands in that general locality and showed a familiarity with land values. -The jury viewed the premises and were thus enabled and empowered to use their own judgment, in connection with all the testimony, in determining the highest and best use to which the land could be put. Appellees were entitled to the highest fair cash market value of their land for the best use to which it was adapted. (West Chicago Street Railroad Co. v. City of Chicago, 172 Ill. 198; Hartshorn v. Illinois Valley Railway Co. 216 id. 392.) We have frequently held that where the jury have been permitted to view the premises in condemnation suits and have then fixed the compensation within the range of the estimates fixed by the witnesses for both parties as to the land taken and damages to the land not tqken, and this court cannot see that passion or prejudice influenced their action, we are not warranted in disturbing the verdict. In this case the damages awarded were within the range of the estimates fixed by the various witnesses. This range is large and the damages awarded are large, but we cannot see, from a careful consideration of the testimony, that there is any evidence that the jury were influenced by passion or prejudice or that the award made is excessive.

In eliciting the opinions of the witnesses for appellees as to the damages sustained by the lands not taken, counsel for appellees were permitted, over the objection of counsel for appellant, to ask hypothetical questions which assumed that the space on each side of the channel would be occupied by berms, spoil banks and levees, and that the spoil banks would be from 10 to 20 feet in height, or substantially as high as the first 100 feet of spoil banks west of Francisco avenue, being the avenue bounding the property of appellees on the west. Appellees' called the engineer of appellant to the stand and the plans of construction of the canal were offered in evidence. These disclosed that a large proportion of the lands sought to be taken was for the purpose of placing thereon the material excavated from the channel of the canal and piled thereon in the form of what is called and referred to as spoil banks. These spoil banks are of considerable width at their base, and the engineer testified they would be from, io to 20 feet in height.' The engineer further testified that the canal to be constructed through the land sought to be taken was to be constructed under the same contract as that portion of the canal immediately west of Francisco avenue which was already constructed. The matters assumed in the hypothetical questions were therefore based upon the evidence in the case and were not conjectural, as appellant contends they were. The witnesses for appellees testified upon the theory that the land on both tracts not taken was best adapted for subdivision purposes. That a high and unsightly spoil bank located so near the property not taken in both tracts would injure the sale of these tracts if subdivided for residence and business purposes is apparent, hence it was proper for the witnesses to take the spoil banks into consideration in estimating the damages to the land not taken.

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270 Ill. 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanitary-district-v-baumbach-ill-1915.