Kuhne v. Sanitary District

285 Ill. 129 | Ill. | 1918

Mr. Chief Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant filed her suit in the circuit court of Cook county for damages to injuries to crops, timber and pasturage upon certain lands owned by her and lying along the Illinois river, in Putnam county. The original declaration consisted of four counts, to each of which a special demurrer was interposed. The court sustained the demurrers to the second and third counts and overruled them to the first and fourth counts. The second and third counts were amended by leave of court, and demurrers were filed to the amended counts. The first and fourth counts were dismissed by appellant and the court sustained the demurrers to the second and third amended counts. Appellant elected to stand by the second and third counts as amended. The court entered judgment in favor of appellee, and appellant prayed and perfected an appeal to this court.

The substance of the allegations in the amended counts is that appellee, during the five years immediately preceding the beginning of this suit, caused water .to flow through its canal from Lake Michigan and through intermediate streams into the Illinois river above the lands owned by appellant, in such quantity as to flood them; that appellee is authorized by the act under which it is organized, to flow through its canal only a certain amount of water into the Illinois river, the amount of said flowage to be based upon the population of the district and the uniform flow to be increased only as the population of the district increased; that contrary to its legal duty appellee failed to maintain a steady stream or uniform flow of water through its canal in proportion to its population and thus violated the statute and thereby overflowed the lands of appellant, causing the damages for which she sued; that the Chicago river and the artificial channel of appellee were navigable streams during the five years preceding the filing of the suit and were subject to the jurisdiction and control of the United States government and its war department; that the war department had fixed and restricted the amount of water which appellee might flow through its channel, the same not to exceed 250,000 cubic feet per minute; that in violation of its duty appellee wrongfully and willfully admitted and caused to flow from Lake Michigan and the Chicago river through its channel into the Illinois river quantities of water greatly in excess of 250,000 cubic feet per minute, thereby causing the Illinois river to overflow its banks and the lands of appellant and caused said damages.

Both the amended counts positively averred ownership of the lands by appellant. The demurrers admitted that fact, and there was no contention as to the title to the lands in the lower court and there is none in this court. The only questions presented by this record are, as stated and argued by the parties, (1) whether or not the filing of a general demurrer after the filing of a special demurrer to a declaration waives the ground of special demurrer; (2) whether the second count as amended stated a cause of action by charging that the statutory duty of appellee to flow 20,000 cubic feet of water per minute for each 100,000 population of the district is a limitation, and that the district is flowing more than the amount required by the statute and that any flow in excess of the statutory requirement is wrongful; and (3) whether the third amended count states a cause of action in charging that the Federal government, through the Secretary of War, has limited the amount of water that may be taken from Lake Michigan and flowed through the Desplaines river into the Illinois river, and that the violation of that limitation order is illegal and wrongful.

No constitutional question or franchise is involved, nor any other question giving this court jurisdiction of this appeal unless a freehold is involved. The general rule is that a freehold is involved when one party gains and another loses a freehold by the decision in the case, or when the title to a freehold is so put in issue by the pleadings that a decision of the case necessarily involves a decision of such question. (Town of Mattoon v. Elliott, 259 Ill. 72; Sanford v. Kane, 127 id. 591.) In the cases of Jones v. Sanitary District, 252 Ill. 591, and Brand v. Union Elevated Railroad Co. 277 id. 356, both of which were suits for damages to real estate, this court held that a freehold was involved and that the appeals were properly prosecuted directly to this court, but in neither of those cases was the rule departed from. The declaration in each of those cases contained the necessary averment of ownership of the freehold, and pleas specifically denying ownership in the plaintiff were filed in both cases. In the former case the court said: “In this case, by filing its plea denying appellee’s title the freehold was directly put in issue, and a decision of the case necessarily involved a decision of that issue.” The jurisdiction of this court in the latter case was sustained on the holding in the former case. In the instant case no such issue was raised by the pleadings and no question of freehold was involved in the trial court and is not involved in this appeal. The appeal should therefore have been taken to the Appellate Court.

The cause is transferred to the Appellate Court for the First District, and the clerk of this court is ordered to transmit the record to that court.

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