Wiley v. Department of Public Works & Buildings

161 N.E. 783, 330 Ill. 312
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1928
DocketNo. 18536. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 161 N.E. 783 (Wiley v. Department of Public Works & Buildings) 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
Wiley v. Department of Public Works & Buildings, 161 N.E. 783, 330 Ill. 312 (Ill. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Heard

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the circuit court of Sangamon county dismissing for want of equity a bill for an injunction filed by appellants seeking to restrain appellees from letting contracts and building a part of Route 150 of the $100,000,000 Bond Issue act between Chester and Sparta upon the location selected therefor by appellees.

Appellants’ bill, in addition to alleging various provisions of . the $60,000,000 and the $100,000,000 Bond Issue acts and the designation of Route 150, alleged that there had been in use for more than fifty years a public highway running directly between Sparta and Chester known as the Sparta and Chester highway, and that, except for a parallel highway known as the Church highway for a small portion of the distance between.these cities, the Sparta and Chester highway is the only through and direct highway traveled between them; that the portion of the highway involved in this suit is the part thereof from the city of Sparta to an intersecting highway known as the Shawneetown-Kaskaskia public highway, which intersection is located approximately seven miles southwest of Sparta, and that this portion consists of a reasonably straight road containing few turns and windings; that it is well graded and contains few hollows, ravines or hills of any magnitude; that upon this highway, located about five miles southwest of Sparta, is a community known as Blair, consisting of two stores, a blacksmith shop, one garage, three filling stations and two churches, with numerous residences, having a population of approximately one hundred people; that the Department of Public Works and Buildings has arbitrarily refused to hold a hearing as to the location of this portion of the road and has arbitrarily refused and failed to cause surveys to be made and levels taken of this highway and the Church road for the purpose of determining whether they can be properly used as a part of Route 150, and has arbitrarily located Route 150 from Sparta south along a highway to a re-location thereof for about seven miles to the intersection of a road running west about two and a quarter miles east of the Sparta and Chester road; that the cost of constructing a hard-surfaced road along the route designated by the department, together with the cost of the remainder of Route 150 from the southerly end of this portion thereof to an intersection with the Chester and Sparta public highway, will be $100,000 greater than the cost of constructing it directly along the Sparta and Chester highway, with such minor changes as are necessary to comply with the provisions of the act; that the Department of Public Works and Buildings and its officers have arbitrarily located the road for the purpose of providing a hard-surfaced road for the cities of Steeleville, Percy, Cutler and other cities along a certain other road known as Route 151, and that none of these cities are communities between the cities of Sparta and Chester; that therefore they are arbitrarily departing from the route described by law for Route 150, to the irreparable injury of the intervening community of Blair and the other communities existing along and adjacent to the Chester and Sparta highway; that it was contemplated and stated by the General Assembly in the act that Route 150 should be constructed between the cities of Chester and Sparta on the highway known as the Chester and Sparta public highway, subject only to such minor changes of location as might be necessary to carry out the provisions of the act, and that it is the duty of the highway officials to construct the hard-surfaced road on the Chester and Sparta public highway as provided by such act.

Appellees answered the bill, denying that there is in existence and used a public highway running directly between Sparta and Chester known as the Sparta and Chester highway or that such highway is the only through and direct road used and traveled between those cities, and alleging that said highway runs indirectly and with many turns and bends between those cities; that other highways likewise run indirectly between them or part of the distance between them, and that each of said several highways has been used or traveled for many years by the public traveling between those cities; that they have not arbitrarily and without warrant of law decided upon the location but that they have had numerous conferences and discussions with the people who are interested in the location of the route, and that they are familiar with all of the local conditions and have exercised their best and most reasonable discretion and judgment in the location thereof for the best interests of the people of the State; that they have not aribtrarily refused or failed to cause surveys to be made and levels to be taken of other highways referred to in the bill, but that they have caused investigations and reconnaissance surveys to be made of the other roads and variations therefrom, and have fully considered the same in connection with the location of Route 150 from Sparta to Chester and have finally located the route pursuant to the provisions of the act; that the location of the route located by them will make the shortest and most feasible connection with Route 151 and will make such connection about two and one-third miles shorter than it would be to the road desired by appellants, and will thereby result in a saving of approximately the sum of $69,000 in the construction of the roads, will materially reduce the distance for traveling and will be particularly beneficial for the people desiring to use both routes; that from this intersection Route 150 will run in a southwesterly direction along a public highway for a distance of about two miles to its intersection with the Church road and thence in a southwesterly direction to the village of Bremen, where it will intersect and join with the Sparta and Chester road, running thence in a southerly direction to the city of Chester. The answer denied that the road as located will cost $100,000 more than if located on the route described by appellants, and alleged that it will result in a saving to the State of $69,000.

Chester, the county seat of Randolph county, a city of 3000 inhabitants, is situated six miles directly west of a point fifteen miles directly south of Sparta, which has a population of 3500. The evidence shows that there is no road running directly from one city to the other. For over forty years there have been three or more roads used for travel between them, among them the road called by appellants the Sparta and Chester road, which starts at the southwest corner of Sparta and runs diagonally, with many turns and windings, in a southwesterly direction through Blair to Bremen and thence to Chester; the Church road, which branches off the Sparta and Chester road a short distance southwest of Sparta and runs thence south for about eight miles and thence to Bremen. Blair is about one mile west of this road. Another road, known as the Ridge road, runs directly south from Sparta and about seven miles therefrom connects with an east and west road which intersects the other two roads. The distance from the center of Sparta to Bremen by the two west roads is practically the same as over the route located by the department. The westerly of these roads is low for a portion of the way and impassable after rains, at which times travel is compelled to detour over one of the other roads. To build a hard-surfaced road in conformity with the standards of the department would require a five-foot fill for a distance of over 500 feet and the acquisition of 20 feet additional roadway.

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Related

People v. McNeil
260 N.E.2d 82 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1970)
Department of Public Works & Buildings v. Challand
181 N.E. 405 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1932)
Stewart v. Department of Public Works & Buildings
168 N.E. 372 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1929)
Hayes v. Department of Public Works & Buildings
168 N.E. 364 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1929)
Hitt v. Department of Public Works & Buildings
168 N.E. 337 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1929)
Department of Public Works & Buildings v. McCaughey
163 N.E. 795 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 N.E. 783, 330 Ill. 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiley-v-department-of-public-works-buildings-ill-1928.