In September, 1923, appellee began a suit in the circuit court of Schuyler county against appellant, the Sanitary District of Chicago, to recover damages for injuries to approximately 2000 acres of land located within the Coal Creek Drainage and Levee District, in Schuyler county, and adjacent to the Illinois river. The lands were protected from the waters of the river by the dikes and levees of the drainage district, and the injuries complained of were alleged to have been sustained by reason of appellant illegally and willfully causing the lands to be flooded and overflowed in April, 1922. The pleadings in the case were rather extensive, but issues were finally joined and a trial had during the early part of 1927 before a jury, which rendered a verdict in favor of appellee for damages in amount of $108,750. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were denied by the court and judgment was entered upon the verdict in favor of appellee in amount of $108,750 damages, with interest thereon in amount of $1178.12 and costs of suit, including $10,000 allowed to appellee as attorney's fees. From that judgment the sanitary district has prosecuted an appeal to this court.
No constitutional question or franchise is presented by this record and there is no other question present giving this court jurisdiction of the appeal unless a freehold is involved. The 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. The declaration on which the case was tried consisted of three counts, — a short trespass count and two additional counts, — and there were allegations therein that appellee was possessed of and the owner of the lands described and alleged to have been damaged by appellant. There appears to be some controversy as to *Page 560
whether demurrer to one count was ever disposed of by the court. However, numerous pleas were later filed by appellant, among which were the general issue, Statute of Limitations, and one denying ownership of the lands by appellee. A plea ofliberum tenementum appears to have been filed by appellant earlier in the proceedings and a demurrer thereto confessed. The plea of appellant denying ownership and possession of the lands by appellee made an issue as to the ownership of the freehold. On the trial appellee introduced evidence showing he and one Lowe had been in possession of, claimed ownership of and paid all taxes and special assessments upon the lands from 1895 to 1913; that Lowe and his wife executed and delivered, during August, 1913, a quit-claim deed for their interest in the property to appellee, which deed was introduced in evidence; that possession was then taken by appellee as the sole owner of the lands, and he has since retained possession and ownership thereof, has paid all taxes and special assessments thereon, has constructed many miles of fence, laid forty-one miles of tile and built nine sets of buildings upon the lands; that he has since rented and used the lands without interference from anyone. Appellee clearly established a primafacie case of ownership in the lands. This proof was not questioned in any way by appellant nor did it offer any evidence to the contrary. The plea denying ownership was apparently a fictitious defense, which appellant never sought to sustain, and it having presented no evidence under the plea, that defense must be held to have been abandoned. Tomhave v.Vortman,
At the conclusion of appellee's evidence, and again at the conclusion of all the evidence in the case, appellant made a motion to instruct the jury to find it not guilty. The abstract shows no reasons were assigned in either motion by appellant for a directed verdict. Appellant assigns error in this court that the trial court erred in not granting *Page 561 the motions just referred to, because appellee failed to prove title to the property alleged to have been injured. However, there is nothing to show that the motions were based upon that ground. The instructions tendered to direct a verdict could not have been properly given by the court if there was any evidence fairly tending to sustain the allegations of the declaration.
This case in many particulars is quite similar to Coal CreekDrainage District v. Sanitary District, supra, wherein the case of Jones v. Sanitary District,
We are of opinion no question concerning the ownership of the lands was preserved for review, and there being no issue involved whereof this court has jurisdiction, the cause is transferred to the Appellate Court for the Third District.
Cause transferred.
