Town of Saratoga v. Jacobson

193 Ill. App. 110, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 8
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 27, 1914
DocketGen. No. 5,926
StatusPublished

This text of 193 Ill. App. 110 (Town of Saratoga v. Jacobson) 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
Town of Saratoga v. Jacobson, 193 Ill. App. 110, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 8 (Ill. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice

Carnes delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of injunction rendered on an amended bill filed by the Commissioner of Highways of the Towns of Lisbon and Saratoga against the appellants, Susan and Richard Duckworth, and the appellees Benjamin Jacobson and Hendrick Hendrickson, in matter of tile drainage of lands affecting a public road.

The township of Lisbon in Kendall county lies north of and adjoining the township of Saratoga in Grundy county. There is a public highway, established in 1856, between the two towns, which is under the control and management of the two boards, of highway commissioners of said towns, acting as one body. Benjamin Jacobson owns the N. W. 14 of Section 6 and about sixty acres of land adjoining on the south in Saratoga township, through which sixty acres extends Moore Creek, running in a southeasterly direction. Susan Duckworth owns the quarter section in Lisbon township adjoining the Jacobson land on the north and separated therefrom by said town line road. Her husband, Richard Duckworth, has charge of her land. Hendrick Hendrickson owns a tract of land adjoining the Duckworth land on the east. The three tracts in a state of nature drain southerly into Moore Creek, but are so nearly level that portions of each tract cannot be successfully cultivated without artificial channels ; and that portion of the land near the point in the road where the three tracts meet is low and consequently wet if not artificially drained. A part of the Duckworth quarter section naturally drains southerly onto the Jacobson land at or near this point (the northeast corner of the Jacobson land and the southeast comer of the Duckworth land), and another part naturally drains onto the Jacobson land at" a point about eighty rods west, and thence southerly to the creek; and probably another small part naturally drains onto the Jacobson land, at a point still further west. These lands were occupied as farms about 1850, and in the next five years open ditches were dug by the owners to facilitate draining in the direction of the natural depressions leading to the creek. There was a ditch from near the northeast comer of the Jacobson land southwesterly to the creek, and one running southerly from a point about eighty rods west, and others from the north, on the Duckworth lands, connecting with these ditches. The drainage so provided left the greater part of the land neat the ditches unfit for cultivation, and it was used for pasture, and while there is evidence of some effort to keep the ditches open from time to time, it is quite clear that for many years before this suit was begun, and probably before the Farm Drainage Act of 1889, they had, as is usual with open ditches on prairie land used for pasture, filled up so much that they could not be considered as constituting a system of drainage.

On May 20, 1891, a written contract was entered into by the highway commissioners and Jacobson, and Jacobson’s then co-owner of the land, in which it was agreed that Jacobson should lay a tile from a point designated in the north side of the road north of the northeast corner of the Jacobson land across that land into said creek, beginning in the highway with a nine-inch tile and increasing in size to a twelve-inch tile where it entered the creek, with the right to the commissioners to connect therewith for the purpose of draining the highway, and that the commissioners should pay a stated part of the expense of the work. All of which was accordingly done, and the commissioners laid tile some distance east and west in the road to connect therewith.

The drain so constructed was sufficient to take care of the surface water naturally deposited on the highway and Jacobson’s land, and to enable bim to cultivate all his land. The commissioners placed a culvert in the road to take the water accumulating on the north side of the pike and conduct it towards this tile drain, and with these improvements the road was fit for travel.

About the year 1906, the Duckworths tiled their land ending in a nine-inch tile inside their fence two or three feet below the natural surface, and from thence dug a ditch into the highway and in the north side of the highway to the head of the Jacobson tile, and connected branches on different parts of their farm with this main tile, thus bringing water to the point of outlet that, but for thé tiling, would have drained south eighty rods or more west of the point of outlet. Hendrickson connected tile from his land with the road tile emptying into the Jacobson tile. The commissioners built a large concrete culvert to let the water cross from the north side of the road into the Jacobson tile. The result was that the Jacobson tile would not take care of the water so brought to it, and he was unable to cultivate his land. He put an iron shing'le between two sections of the tile inside his fence which relieved the situation as to him, but of course made it worse as to the highway.

The commissioners filed a bill to compel him to remove the obstruction and to enjoin him from further obstructing the flow of water through the tile. Jacobson answered the bill, and a partial hearing developed the facts above stated in relation to the Duckworth and Hendrickson tiles. Thereupon an amended bill was filed by the commissioners making Hendrickson and the Duckworths parties defendant. Hendrickson defaulted. The Duckworths answered and filed a cross-bill, claiming the right to drain the water from their land onto the highway and across Jacobson’s land, and praying an injunction restraining the commissioners and Jacobson from interfering with such drainage. All the parties except Hendrickson answered the cross-bill. The chancellor heard the evidence and entered a decree granting the relief prayed in the original bill, and dismissing the cross-bill for want of equity, from which decree this appeal is prosecuted.

The decree after finding the facts substantially as above stated, and ordering Jacobson to remove the obstruction, and ordering Hendrickson to disconnect his tile and enjoining him from again connecting it with the tile in the highway, “ordered * * * that Susan Duckworth and Richard Duckworth be enjoined from further connecting or attempting, to connect their said trunk line of tile with the joint ditch aforesaid by means of excavations or otherwise; and that the said highway at the place where said excavations were made by Susan Duckworth and Richard Duckworth be restored to its former condition; and that Susan Duckworth and'Richard Duckworth be perpetually enjoined from draining onto the highway, without the consent of said commissioners of highway, at the southeast corner of the southwest quarter (S. W. %) of said Section thirty-one (31); and that the commissioners of highway be, and they are, hereby authorized to restore the highway to the condition in which' it was upon the north side thereof opposite the mouth of said tile of Susan Duckworth and Richard Duck-worth at the time said tile was laid.

“It is further ordered, that in case of default or refusal on the part of any or either of said parties’ to obey the mandate of this decree, the sheriff of Grundy county do forthwith execute the same.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 Ill. App. 110, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-saratoga-v-jacobson-illappct-1914.