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made thereon paid for with the funds of such town; that ever since that time said highway has been in general use as a public highway; that appellees have attempted to close the same by placing gates across the same, and the bill prays for an injunction restraining them from obstructing such public highway. A temporary injunction was granted as prayed. Appellees answered the bill, admitting that they composed the State Board of Administration and as such have had control of the Dunning Institution for the past three years, but denying that a highway was established over the strip of land in controversy in 1886, or that the same had been maintained, graded and improved under the direction and supervision of the highway commissioners of the town of Norwood Park, or that the same had for a period of twenty-five years been used openly, adversely, exclusively and uninterruptedly as a public highway. They alleged the ownership of the land in controversy was in the State of Illinois, and that they, as the State Board of Administration in charge of such land, had the right to close up such alleged highway. A replication was filed to the answer and the cause was tried before the court, which entered a decree finding the issues joined in favor of appellees, dissolved the temporary injunction and dismissed the bill for want of equity. The cause was appealed to the Appellate Court for the First District, and that court, being of the opinion that a freehold was involved, has transferred the cause to this court.

The issue as to whether or not there is a highway over the land in controversy involves a freehold and the cause was properly transferred to this court. Roloson v. Barnett, 243 Ill. 130.

Appellants rely upon a common law dedication of the land in question as a public highway and a prescriptive right in the public to use such highway. Appellees insist there is no sufficient evidence of a common law dedication of the highway, and that as the land in controversy is State

property the public can acquire no right to a highway over the same by prescription, for the reason that the Statute of Limitations and laches do not run against the State as to property held by it in trust for a public use. Appellees cite the following cases in support of this contention: County of Piatt v. Goodell, 97 Ill. 84; Russell v. City of Lincoln, 200 id. 511; City of Chicago v. Galt, 224 id. 421; Town of Brushy Mound v. McClintock, 150 id. 129; City of Chicago v. Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway Co. 152 id. 561; Township of Madison v. Gallagher, 159 id. 105; Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. City of Bloomington, 167 id. 9; O'Connell v. Chicago Terminal Railroad Co. 184 id. 308; Falter v. Packard, 219 id. 356. In those cases the property involved was held in trust for a particular use for the benefit of the general public, and the rule there announced has no application to cases such as the one at bar, where the property is held by a municipality for the special benefit of the inhabitants of that particular municipality. The exemption of the State, counties, cities, towns and other minor municipalities from the operation of the Statute of Limitations extends only to matters affecting their public rights as distinguished from private and local rights, with respect to which such municipalities, the same as individuals, are subject to the Statute of Limitations. (County of Piatt v. Goodell, supra; Board of Supervisors v. City of Lincoln, 81 Ill. 156; People v. Town of Oran, 121.id. 650.) In Brown v. Trustees of Schools, 224 Ill. 184, in speaking of what was meant by "public rights" as used in the decisions, we said: "The question in this case is whether there is an implied exemption from the Statute of Limitations in favor of trustees of schools with respect to property held for the use of a particular school district, and that depends upon the meaning of the term 'public rights' as used in the decisions. In one sense all property held by a municipal corporation is held for public use, and the public at large, or some portion of the public, have

rights or interests in such property. It may be held for the use of the people of the State generally, or the use may be limited to the inhabitants of the local subdivision or municipality, such as the city, village or school district, and the question whether the statute applies in the latter class of cases was considered in County of Piatt v. Goodell, supra. That case involved the title to swamp lands owned by the county, in which the inhabitants of the county were interested. It was held that the public right and public use must be in the people of the State at large and not in the inhabitants of a particular local district. It was said that there is a well founded distinction between cases where the municipality is seeking to enforce a right in which the public in general have an interest in common with the people of such municipality, and cases where the public have no such interest; that the public generally had no interest in the tract of land in question in that case in common with the voters and tax-payers of Piatt county, and that the county for that reason was subject to the limitation laws." We think the same may be said of the land in controversy here, and that as to such property the county of Cook, the same as an individual, is subject to the Statute of Limitations. The fact that the title of the property is now vested in the State of Illinois is of no importance for the reason the highway was established before the State acquired the property, and when it did so it took it subject to whatever easements or other incumbrances the county of Cook, the prior owner, had placed thereon.

The land in question through which the road runs is situated in section 18, township 4, north, range 3, cast of the third principal meridian, in the township of Norwood Park, and prior to the year 1912 was owned, controlled, managed and used by the county of Cook as a county poor farm and institution for the treatment of the insane of such county, and was commonly known as the Dunning Institution. For the past three years it has been maintained

by the State of Illinois as a hospital under the supervision of the State Board of Administration. The. grounds of the Dunning Institution comprise 234 acres of land in the south half of section 18, and are bounded on the south by Irving Park boulevard, which is on the south line of the section. The right of way of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad Company extends through the grounds from Irving Park boulevard in a northerly direction about 1300 feet west of the east line of the section. The road in question adjoins the railroad right of way on the west, and extends from Irving Park boulevard on the south to Montrose boulevard on the north line of the grounds. In 1886 the county commissioners of Cook county acquired a tract of land lying immediately south of the old county farm, spoken of as the Townsend tract. At the time this land was purchased there was a road on the north and south line between this tract and the land then comprising the county farm. It appears from the records of the county board of Cook county that at a meeting held on April 13, 1885, its committee on roads and bridges made a report, stating it had a communication from the highway commissioners of the township of Norwood Park representing that about six years before a public road had been duly laid out and opened on the north and south line between the county farm and the Townsend tract; that the highway commissioners were of the opinion that it would be more desirable to have a road parallel the west line of the railroad right of way, and that they would vacate the road along the Townsend tract if the county board would give the town of Norwood Park a right of way 60 feet wide over its land along and parallel to the railroad right of way above mentioned, which report was duly received by the county board and concurred in by it. It further appears from such records that on May 25, following, the highway commissioners of the town of Norwood Park made a report to the county board of Cook county setting forth that

they had vacated the road between the Townsend tract and the county farm. It further appears from the evidence that after this order was entered, and in the year 1886, the road commissioners of Norwood Park and four or five members of the board of county commissioners of Cook county met at the place in question and the road in controversy was staked out, and ever since that time, until closed by appellees, had been in general use by the public as a public highway, although it was more particularly used by those who brought produce to the institution located on the grounds. At the time the road was surveyed it was graded by the highway commissioners of Norwood Park, and since that time, until closed, has been constantly maintained, graded and improved by them as one of the public roads of such township. During all of the time since it was laid out it has been continuously in general use as one of the public highways of such township until closed by appellees, in 1915.

In order to constitute a common law dedication of land to a public use two things are essential: First, an intention on the part of the land owner to dedicate the same to a public use; and second, an acceptance of the same by the public. The vital and controlling thing is the intention of the land owner to dedicate his land to a public use. Whenever this is made to appear, either by a formal declaration to that effect or by acts and conduct from which such intention may fairly be presumed, the dedication is complete in so far as the land owner is concerned. (City of Chicago v. Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway Co. supra.) The law will imply an intention to dedicate land to a public use from any acts of the owner indicating an intention to so appropriate his property, and where his conduct has been such as to lead an ordinarily discreet and thoughtful person to infer an intention to make a dedication, and the public, relying upon such act as a dedication, accept the same for a public use and use it as a public highway, the dedication becomes complete and cannot be recalled by the land owner.

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