Zuidema v. Sanitary District of Chicago & Green & Sons Co.

223 Ill. App. 138, 1921 Ill. App. LEXIS 229
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 21, 1921
DocketGen. No. 25,687
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 223 Ill. App. 138 (Zuidema v. Sanitary District of Chicago & Green & Sons Co.) 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
Zuidema v. Sanitary District of Chicago & Green & Sons Co., 223 Ill. App. 138, 1921 Ill. App. LEXIS 229 (Ill. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice O’Connor

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff brought suit against defendants to recover damages claimed to have been sustained by him by reason of the defendants causing water to overflow and damage his growing crops. There was a verdict and judgment in his favor for $2,900, to reverse which defendants prosecute this appeal. Plaintiff has assigned cross errors because the court refused to allow attorneys’ fees as costs against the Sanitary District of Chicago.

The record discloses that the sanitary district obtained a right of way to construct what is known as the Calumet-Sag- Channel to connect the main channel of the sanitary district with the Little Calumet river, a distance of about 20 miles; that this right of way extended across the farm of Michael McMahon, and that he had rented that portion of the farm lying north of the right of way, which extended in a general easterly and westerly direction, to the plaintiff, Minard Zuidema; that the sanitary district let a contract for the construction of a part of the channel bordering on the McMahon farm to the defendant Creen & Soils Company. The declaration on which the case was tried was in one count and, so far as it is material, it alleged that the plaintiff was a tenant-occupying the farm along the north side of the channel; that the construction of the channel by Creen & Sons Company necessarily involved the changing of the drainage and waterways and that it was the duty of the two defendants not to interfere with the drainage of the land or to destroy plaintiff’s crops by causing the land to be marshy and soggy, yet the defendants did “negligently, carelessly and wrongfully and contrary to the statute in such case made and provided,” cut through the natural drainage creeks and watercourses, dammed up some of them, deposited great banks of spoil and erected settling basins so that plaintiff’s farm was not afforded drainage and the land became soggy and sour and water flowed upon it damaging the crops of 1915 and 1916. After the evidence was all introduced, by leave of court, the plaintiff filed an additional count which contained substantially the same averments as the count on which the case went to trial. It further set up that in the construction of the channel it was the duty of each of the defendants to so prosecute the work as not to negligently and unnecessarily injure or damage plaintiff’s property; that the defendants failed to perform this duty but on the contrary in constructing section 5 of the channel they carelessly and negligently cast upon plaintiff’s farm water, débris and spoil, which rendered plaintiff’s farm wet, soggy and sour and of little or no value and thereby damaged his crops and prevented him from raising any crops during the seasons of 1915 and 1916. The defendants filed separate pleas of not guilty and also pleas denying joint liability.

The evidence tends to show that the sanitary district on June 22, 1912, entered into a contract with Green & Sons Company to construct what was known as section 5 of the channel, which section extends from a short distance west of McLaughry’s Bridge east to a north and south road known as Ladies Lane, a distance of a little more than a mile. And on April 10, 1913, another contract was entered into between the same parties in reference to section 6 of the channel which section ran from Ladies Lane east to a point near the Wabash Bailroad, a distance of about one and one-half miles. The west end of the land in question bordered on Ladies Lane and was immediately north of the channel extending from Ladies Lane east about three-fourths of a mile. The tract contained about 135 acres.

The evidence further shows that before commencing the construction of the channel, Green & Sons Company dug a drainage ditch on both sides of the right of way. The ditch on the north of the right' of way* extended along the south side of the farm and was 16 feet wide at the top and 8 feet wide at the bottom. The right of way, channel and drainage ditches extended a considerable distance east of plaintiff’s farm where it tapped the Little Calumet river, and also extended a considerable distance west of the farm where they connected with the main channel of the district. Prior to the acquisition of the right of way by the sanitary district, Michael McMahon, the owner, of the farm,. had dug a ditch which ran in a northwesterly and southeasterly direction across his farm. At a point a short distance east of Ladies Lane, this ditch converged with the north drainage ditch dug along the north edge' of the right of way. Adjacent to the northwest comer of the McMahon farm and mnning in a northeasterly and southwesterly direction was an old ditch known as the Canal Feeder which had been constructed many years before the time in question. The water from McMahon’s ditch emptied into this feeder and it was the contention of the plaintiff that the feeder ran towards the southwest, while the defendants contended that the feeder at the time in question flowed towards the northeast. In the constmction of section.5 of the channel, defendants used what is designated as the hydraulic or wet system by which water and material were pumped from1 the channel to the spoil area. The spoil would settle and the water would return to the channel. On section 6, which was directly south of and bordering on the land in question, the drag line or dry method of excavation was adopted, and some distance east of the farm the hydraulic system was used. The spoil was deposited on both sides of the channel. After the work on section 5 was in progress for some time it was discovered that near the west end of that section there 'was so much spoil that the bank of the channel would not retain it and on January 27, 1914,' a supplemental contract was entered into between the two defendants which provided that no more spoil should be deposited on the north bank near the west end of that section. The effect of this was simply to decrease the spoil area bordering on the north of section 5. In the construction of this section, Green & Sons Company deposited spoil immediately west of Ladies Lane and north of the channel in the spoil area which contained some 40 or 50 acres. This spoil was deposited in what is designated by the parties as a settling basin' somewhat in the shape of a bowl. The evidence also tended to show that the north drainage ditch, which was dug along the north edge of the right of way, was dammed by what plaintiff calls a bulkhead, which was a considerable distance east of plaintiff’s farm. In order to provide water for use in the hydraulic dredge in the construction of section 5, a dam was built in the canal feeder just west of Ladies Lane and further on in this feedér near the west end of section 5, a distance of approximately a mile or more, was another dam. These two dams and the bulkhead were constructed by Green & Sons Company in the prosecution of the work.

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Bluebook (online)
223 Ill. App. 138, 1921 Ill. App. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zuidema-v-sanitary-district-of-chicago-green-sons-co-illappct-1921.