delivered the opinion of the court:
The counsel for appellee have presented numerous contentions which it is insisted establish the unconstitutionality of the act of 1903. It will be observed from the foregoing statement that the waters of the upper district which are situated upon the lands of sub-district No. 1,—that is, the waters of appellee upon lands south of Copperas creek,— have no outlet other than through Glancey lake and the ditches and drains of the lower district, and the flow of the waters of the sub-district into the river through the ditches, drains and outlet of the lower district is the flow which it is claimed by appellant has necessitated the increase of the size of the ditches, drains, pumping plant and outlet of the lower district, and is the expense of construction which the lower district by this proceeding seeks to recover from the upper district. It also appears from said statement that all the waters of the upper district which heretofore have flowed into the lower district from the watershed of Copperas creek are now confined by the levee on the south bank of Copperas creek and the levee which extends from the mouth of Copperas creek south to the levee of the lower district to the bed of Copperas creek and are excluded from the lands of the lower district. It is argued by the appellee that the waters which have been diverted from the lands of the lower district directly into the river through the new channel of Copperas creek and prevented from flowing upon the lands of the lower district by the levee of the upper district constructed from the bluff to the mouth of Copperas creek and from that point south to the north end of the levee of the lower district are far greater in amount than the waters which are thrown into the lower district from the lands of the upper district south of Copperas creek. Be this as it may, it is very apparent from the averments of the petition that a large volume of water which' heretofore flowed down from the watershed of Copperas creek upon the lands of the lower district is now diverted from its natural course and carried by Copperas creek directly into the river and thereby kept off the lands of the lower district. It would therefore seem very apparent, from the location and physical situation of the lands of the two districts, that while the lands of the upper district situated south of Copperas creek are benefited by the improvements made by the lower district, the lands of the lower district have been greatly protected from overflow, and thereby benefited, by the improvements made by the upper district; and it is contended by the appellee that if the benefits which the lower district received from the -improvements constructed by the upper district were offset against the benefits which the upper district received from the improvements constructed by the lower district, there would in no event be anything, in the way of benefits, due the lower district from the upper district. It is said that under the statute the upper district is given no remedy, either by way of offset or by an original action, to recover from the lower district the benefits which it has conferred upon the lower district by the improvements constructed by it, the result of which is that the lower district may, by virtue of the statute, recover for benefits as against the upper district, while the upper district is remediless, as against the lower district, for benefits conferred by the improvements constructed by the upper district, and that therefore the upper district is by said statute, as against the lower district, deprived of the equal protection of the law. In other words, the contention is that the act of 1903 has the effect to confer upon appellant and all other lower drainage districts similarly situated, as against the appellee and all upper drainage districts similarly situated, the special and exclusive privilege to sue for and recover damages for benefits which may be conferred upon an upper drainage district by improvements constructed by lower districts while no such right is conferred upon the upper district as against lower districts, which would deprive the upper district of the equal protection of the law,—and this would seem to be true from the language of the statute. Section 1 of the act of 1903 provides that whenever any drainage district shall enlarge or improve its ditches or drains or extend its outlet within or beyond its boundaries, in the manner provided by law, so as to' benefit the lands of a district lying above such district or emptying into such district, such upper district or districts so benefited shall be liable to the lower district so enlarging or repairing its ditch, ditches or drains, etc., for the just proportion of the cost thereof to the extent the upper district will be benefited by such enlargement, etc. While no provision is made for the recovery of benefits by an upper district from a lower district, the drainage laws of this State clearly contemplate that lands may be improved for agriculture and sanitation by draining therefrom the surface waters thrown upon the lands by rains, melting snow or otherwise, by a system of drains and ditches, or by protecting lands from overflow and wash by the construction of a system of levees and embankments whereby the waters of creeks and rivers are diverted from the lands. There can be in law or justice no reason why a lower district, which has carried away the waters of an upper district by drains and ditches, should be compensated, by way of benefits, for improvements made by it, any more than an upper district shall be compensated for benefits in case such upper district shall by a system of dykes, embankments and levees protect the lands of a lower district from being inundated from the overflow of creeks and rivers whose waters are situated at a higher elevation than the lands of a lower district. This being true, it would seem that a statute, in order to be free from constitutional objections, must confer the same right of recovery upon the upper district for benefits which have been conferred upon a lower district by improvements constructed by the upper district in the form of levees, dykes and embankments, that it confers upon the lower district to recover from an upper district for benefits which it derived from the use of ditches, drains and outlets constructed by the lower district. The constitution is a guaranty that all valid enactments of the legislature shall be uniform in operation upon persons and property and that all persons shall have the equal protection of the laws of the State. Clearly, one person or corporation cannot be given the right to sue and recover for damages or benefits and. another person or corporation similarly situated be deprived of such right. In Sanitary District of Chicago v. Bernstein, 175 Ill. 215, on page 218, it was said: “Every citizen has an equal right with every other to resort to the courts of justice for the settlement, and enforcement of his rights, and it is true that a discrimination between different classes of litigants which is merely arbitrary in its nature is a denial of that right and of the equal protection of the law.” In Jones v. Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway Co. 231 Ill. 302, the legislature sought to confer upon this court the right to review the findings of the Appellate Court in case that court found one way, while if the finding was the other way the finding of that court as to the facts was made conclusive upon this court, the effect of which was to give one party to' the litigation the right to an appeal to this court, while the other party, although similarly situated, was deprived of .the right to have his case reviewed in this court, and it was held the statute was unconstitutional and void, as depriving one party to the litigation of the equal protection of the law. We think that case, in principle, decisive of the case at bar.
It is urged that a recovery was permitted under the provisions of the act of 1903 by a lower district against an upper district in Drainage Comrs. v. Drainage Comrs. 211 Ill. 328, for benefits received by the upper district for an improvement made by the lower district, and that the remedy provided for by the statute of 1903 was approved in People v. Crews, 245 Ill. 318. The first case came to this court through the Appellate Court, and the .unconstitutionality of the statute was not raised in the Crews cáse.
Fór the reason given we are of the opinion the act of 1903 is unconstitutional, and that the county court did not err in declining to grant the prayer of the petition of the lower district, and that the judgment of that court should be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Farmer, Vickers and Cooke, JJ., dissenting.