Swets v. State

22 Ill. Ct. Cl. 651, 1958 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 2
CourtCourt of Claims of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 14, 1958
DocketNo. 4661
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ill. Ct. Cl. 651 (Swets v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Claims of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swets v. State, 22 Ill. Ct. Cl. 651, 1958 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 2 (Ill. Super. Ct. 1958).

Opinion

Tolson, C. J.

On January 6, 1955, claimant, John Swets, filed his complaint for damages in the amount of $3,750.00 for the alleged neglect of the servants of the State of Illinois in spraying chemicals on the right-of-way of the Calumet Superhighway.

The matter was heard by Commissioner Herbert Gr. Immenhausen, and the following portion of his report is hereby adopted by the Court:

“Commissioner’s Report
John Swets, by his attorneys, Mathias, Meloy and Merker, filed a complaint in the above entitled cause op January 6, 1955, wherein claimant seeks to recover the sum of $3,750.00 from respondent, the State of Illinois, for damages to 8 acres of tomatoes, which were planted during the growing season of 1954.
On or about the middle of July, 1954, respondent’s employees and agents were in the process of spraying weed killer on the right-of-way of the Calumet Superhighway at or near 8 acres of land, which claimant had under cultivation. Claimant alleges that the employees or agents of the Division of Highways did not use care in conducting the spraying operation at a time when the wind was blowing across claimant's 8 acres of growing tomatoes, and, as a result, a substantial amount of weed killer was: deposited on claimant’s growing tomatoes, and his crops were damaged and destroyed in an amount of 75% of the crop, causing a loss of $3,750.00.
The bill of particulars filed by claimant alleges that claimant was raising tomatoes under contract with the Campbell Soup Company; that the tomatoes picked on the 8 acres in question totaled 51 tons; and, that the yield should have produced 22 tons per acre, or 176 tons. The loss was computed at $30.00 per ton, or 125 tons, making a loss of $3,750.00.
Respondent, the State of Illinois, did not file an answer, and a general traverse or denial of the fact shall be considered as filed. Repondent filed a Departmental Report (Exhibit 2) with the Court of Claims on February 13, 1957. The matters contained therein shall be prima facie evidence of the facts set forth therein, (Rule 16, Court of Claims).
Departmental Report
On July 13, 1954, the Larkin Spraying Service was doing work for the Division of Highways, and, at the direction of this office, was spraying the median strip of Calumet Expressway between 159th and 167th Street. This area includes that portion of the highway right-of-way, which adjoins the property of Mr. Swets.
The spraying was done with a truck mounted sprayer unit, which was equipped with a hand operated gun type nozzle. This nozzle was manipulated by a man from the truck.
The Expressway at that location mns in a north-south direction. The tomato field in question joins the Expressway right-of-way on the west side of the Expressway, and extends approximately 497 feet in a southerly direction and 624 feet in a westerly direction. The median strip, which was being sprayed at this time, is parallel to the east edge of the tomato field and 130 feet west. Thus, the nearest point of exposure was 130 feet.
The wind on this date was out of the northeast at a velocity of 6.1 miles per hour. The temperature was 84 degrees.
The chemical applied at this time was a low volatile tetrahydrofurfuryl ester of 2, 4-D. The solution was applied at the rate recommended by the manufacturer. The Larkin Spraying Service applied 2, 4-D to approximately 200 acres of right-of-way on the Calumet Expressway.
A letter, dated August 19, 1954, from the law office of Messrs. Mathias, Meloy and Merker, who represented Mr. Swets, informed us that the tomato crop of Mr. Swets had been damaged to the extent of 50% of the anticipated yield.
After the letter was received in this office, Mr. Tipsword of the Expressway office contacted Mr. Swets, and his report was as follows:
“I talked with Mr. Bernard Swets, who represented his brother, Mr. John Swets, who resides at 169th Street and the east frontage road of Calumet Expressway, relative to the above mentioned subject. Mr. Swets and I visited the field of tomatoes, which he contends were damaged by our weed killer spray.
The field is located at 165th Street and the west frontage road of Calumet Expressway, and extends 520 feet along the west frontage road, and 624 feet in a westerly direction away from the frontage road.
I walked over the field with Mr. Swets while he pointed out the alleged damage. He indicated curled leaves and fmit, which were imperfect, also leaves which were deeply serrated. He contends that these are symptoms of 2, 4-D damage. In my examination of the field, I noticed that the symptoms, which Mr. Swets indicated, were not more pronounced- nearer the roadway nor less pronounced at the opposite of the field, as one would expect, but were uniformly distributed throughout the entire field. In no case did we find any dead plants, and all plants, which we examined, bore fmit in various stages of maturity.
I, also, noted that a tomato field adjoins the field of Mr. Swets on the south, and lies in the same relative position along the frontage road; also, there is a field approximately one-half mile north of this location along the frontage road.
Mr. Swets and I then talked with a Mr. Thad Stoltz, who is a “Field Man” for the Campbell Soup Company. Mr. Swets is raising these tomatoes under contract with the Campbell Soup Company, and Mr. Stoltz related that representatives of his company had estimated the yield of this field earlier in the season and again recently; the latest estimate showed a 50% decrease over the earlier estimate. The Campbell Soup people contend that this decrease in estimated yield is due to the effects of 2, 4-D, which Mr. Swets contends was brought about by our operation.
I then talked, by phone, with a Mr. Robbins of the Campbell Soup Company Research Bureau. Mr. Robbins explained the procedure for estimating the yield of a field of tomatoes before they have come into production. This estimating is done, as he explained it to me, by a complicated process of counting the fruit blossoms on several plants, and multiplying this result by the number of plants in the field. He, then, explained that the later estimate, after the alleged damage, was made on the basis of results obtained by experiments, which the Campbell Soup Company has made, in which they applied controlled amounts of 2, 4-D to tomato plants, and compared the production of these affected plants with normal plants.
Since I am unskilled in the science of tomato growing, it is my recommendation that this office contact a person in the Agricultural Department to make a study to determine whether or not this field of tomatoes has been damaged, and whether or not this damage can be attributed to 2, 4-D, or to a disease or insects.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ill. Ct. Cl. 651, 1958 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swets-v-state-ilclaimsct-1958.