Schulte v. Warren

120 Ill. App. 10, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 592
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 20, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 120 Ill. App. 10 (Schulte v. Warren) 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
Schulte v. Warren, 120 Ill. App. 10, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 592 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Baume

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant filed his bill' in equity in the Circuit Court of Mason County to enjoin appellees from entering upon certain lands therein described and from hunting on said lands. A temporary injunction was granted, but upon final hearing, the same was dissolved, and a decree entered dismissing the bill for want of equity.

The bill alleges that appellant is the owner in fee simple of certain swamp and overflowed lands located in sections 19, 20, 29 and 30 in township 23, range 7, and sections 24, 25, 26, 35 and 36 in township 23, range 8, in Mason county, Illinois, bounded in part, on the west by the Illinois river and on the north by the north line of Mason county; that the lands are subject to overflow from the Illinois river in times of high water, and as surveyed in fractional subdivisions, completely surrounded a meandered body of water called Clear Lake and its southerly branch or arm, some times called Mud Lake; that prior to the placing of certain dams and locks in the Illinois river and the construction of the Chicago Sanitary Ditch, the said lands were valuable as pasture during the late summer and early fall; that the placing of said dams and locks and the construction of said ditch has resulted in permanently raising the water level on said lands to such a height that they are no longer valuable as pasture or for farming; that the only practical value of the land to appellant, in its present overflowed condition, is the exclusive right of hunting thereon the large quantities of wild fowl, and especially wild ducks, that frequent said lands in the spring and fall of the year; that for the purpose of availing himself of the exclusive right to hunt upon said premises, appellant caused notices to be conspicuously posted in numerous places on said lands, notifying the public to refrain from hunting thereon; that each of the appellees was personally notified that appellant was the owner of said lands and was requested to refrain from hunting thereon; that the appellees without the consent of appellant went upon said lands on various days and at various times in November, 1901, and in March and April, 1902-, and on other days before and after those dates, with boat and gun and decoys and hunted and shot ducks and other wild fowl thereon; that appellees had been and were acting in concert and combining and confederating together, to deprive appellant of his exclusive right to hunt on said lands and were threatening to continue so to dot that appellees and each of them are wholly insolvent and execution proof. The appellees answered the bill, denying all of its allegations, except they admitted that said lands were swamp and overflowed lands, situated in the Illinois river bottom; that they were subject to overflow; that locks and dams were placed in the Illinois river, and that a canal had been cut from Chicago. Alleged that appellant has no exclusive right to exclude the public from navigation and hunting and fishing; that the lands are situated in a low, deep basin, underlying or bordering upon a certain body of water or lake, known as Clear Lake, Mud Lake and Clear Lake Slough; that said body of water opens into the Illinois river directly and indirectly, was, in a.state of nature, and now is, and has been for a long space of time, to wit, more than twenty years last past, navigable water used by the public as a highway for commercial navigation, and used by the public and by appellees for fishing and hunting; that the public and the appellees have rights of navigation and hunting and fishing in said navigable waters; that appellant can have no monopoly or exclusive control of said navigable waters on said lands for such purposes; that said lands underlie the body of water known as Clear Lake, Mud Lake and Clear Lake Slough; that said body of water is a lake and was meandered in the original government survey of lands bordering thereon; is of sufficient depth and size to enable boats and barges conveying timber, grain and lumber and other articles of commerce over and upon said body of water, to be run and used thereon, and to accommodate navigation of said body of water for commercial purposes and for- pleasure; that such body of water is now and was in a state of nature, and for the space of twenty years and upward last past, had been navigable in fact, and used as a highway for boats in commercial navigation in conveying lumber, wood, grain and other products from the lands surrounding said body of water, through said body of water to the Illinois river; that said body of water was in a state of nature, then was, and for more than twenty years had been used, by the public in hunting thereon and in taking fish therefrom; that appellant had no exclusive right of hunting upon said land underlying said body of water, and could not acquire and enjoy such rights to the exclusion of the public, or of the appellees, or any other person, a,nd in attempting so to do, violated the law and the rights of the people of the State. To this answer appellant filed his replication and the cause was thereupon referred to the master to take and report proofs.

At the hearing it was stipulated by appellees that appellant had the record title to the lands described in the bill, except that part of the said lands, if any, included in the boundary of Olear Lake as originally bounded and meandered.

It is established by the evidence that the lands in question are swamp and overflowed lands; that since appellant has owned the same he has paid the taxes thereon and been in the possession and control thereof; that prior to 1901, the lands generally overflowed in the spring and occasionally in the fall of the year, and during high freshets they would be flooded to a depth of from six to twelve feet; that when not flooded, the lands were available for pasture and about twenty acres fit for cultivation; that of the 2,800 acres involved, 1,200 or 1,300 acres was timber and the remainder in willow, buckbrush and open places; that Clear Lake, a body of water, connected at its southerly end with the Illinois river, extended within the lands in question, in two branches or arms, one in a northerly and one in a westerly direction, fractional portions of sections 19, 20, 25, 29 and 30, designated in the record as the “ middle ground,” lying between the two branches or arms; that in the government survey of the lands involved, they were meandered on both arms of Clear Lake; that in consequence of the construction, by the United States Government about 1890, of a lock and dam in the Illinois river at LaGrange about sixtv-five miles below the lands in question, the water level in the Illinois river above said dam and in said Clear Lake was raised about eighteen inches; that owing to the construction of the Chicago Sanitary Ditch in 1901, and the consequent flow of water from.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Curson v. Monteiro
2 Johns. 308 (New York Supreme Court, 1807)
Adams v. Pease
2 Conn. 481 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1818)
Beckman v. Kreamer
43 Ill. 447 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1867)
Braxon v. Bressler
64 Ill. 488 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1872)
Mayer v. Erhardt
88 Ill. 452 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1878)
Washington Ice Co. v. Shortall
101 Ill. 46 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1881)
People v. Bridges
16 L.R.A. 684 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1892)
Fuller v. Shedd
33 L.R.A. 146 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1896)
Albany Railroad Bridge Co. v. People ex rel. Matthews
197 Ill. 199 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1902)
Cummings v. People
71 N.E. 1031 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1904)
Lincoln v. Davis
19 N.W. 103 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1884)
Willow River Club v. Wade
42 L.R.A. 305 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 Ill. App. 10, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schulte-v-warren-illappct-1905.