Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. South Park Commissioners

233 Ill. 362
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 233 Ill. 362 (Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. South Park Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. South Park Commissioners, 233 Ill. 362 (Ill. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a bill filed by the Barber Asphalt Paving Company, a tax-payer of the town of South Chicago, against the South Park Commissioners, its individual members and officers, the Chicago Bitulithic Company and Warren Bros. Company, praying that a certain contract between the South Park Commissioners on the one hand and the Chicago Bitulithic Company and Warren Bros. Company on the other be declared illegal and void, and that the South Park Commissioners, its members, officers and agents, be enjoined from paying to the other parties to the contract any money tinder its provisions. A motion for a temporary injunction was denied by the court, and an injunction being the only relief sought, the court thereupon dismissed the bill for want of equity. The validity of a municipal ordinance being involved, the judge certified that in his opinion the public interest required that this case be taken directly to the Supreme Court, whereupon the complainant prayed for and was allowed an appeal to this court.

The contract sought to be annulled provided for the construction of certain pavement in Michigan avenue, Thirty-third street and South Park avenue, and the ground on which it was attacked was that it was not let to the lowest responsible bidder after advertisement.

Section 56 of the municipal code of the South Park Commissioners provides as follows: “All contracts exceeding in amount the sum of $500 for work, materials or supplies shall be let by the commissioners, after advertisement, to the lowest trustworthy and responsible -bidder, such advertisement in all cases to reserve the right to reject any and all bids: Provided, however, that such contract may be let without advertisement if authorized by a vote of four commissioners.”

The amount of the contract largely exceeded $500. It is claimed that the charter of the South Park Commissioners requires all contracts for public improvements, when the expense exceeds $500, to be let to the lowest responsible bidder after public advertisement, and that the proviso authorizing the letting, of a contract exceeding $500 without advertisement is therefore void.

The South Park Commissioners is a municipal corporation organized by virtue of a special act of the General Assembly, (i Private Laws of 1869, p. 358.) The act provides for the organization of the corporation; the acquiring by it, through gift, purchase or condemnation, of certain lands to be held, managed and controlled as a public park; for the borrowing of money and issue of bonds, and for the annual levy of a tax for the payment of interest and the expense of the improvement, maintenance and government of the park. The corporation consists of five commissioners appointed by the Governor. The officers required by the act are a president and an auditor, (who must be commissioners,) a secretary and a treasurer. To the five commissioners thus appointed is given the entire management, direction and government of the park by section 13 of the enabling act, in the following words:

“Sec. 13. The said board shall have the full and exclusive power to govern, manage and direct said park; to lay out and regulate the same; to pass ordinances for the regulation and government thereof; to appoint such engineers, surveyors, clerks and other officers, including a police force, as may be necessary; to define and prescribe their respective duties and authority; fix the amount of their compensation; and generally, in regard to said park, they shall possess all the power and authority mow by law conferred upon or possessed by the common council of the city of Chicago in respect to the public squares and places in said city; and it shall be lawful for them to commence the improvement of said park as soon as they have obtained one hundred acres of the premises herein prescribed.”

The powers, at the time of the passage of the act, conferred upon or possessed by the common council of the city of Chicago were those derived from the city charter. (Private Laws of 1863, p: 40.) In section 1 of chapter 7, and in numerous paragraphs in section 8 of chapter 4 of the charter, power is given to the common council over the pub-lie squares and places in the city, which is full and complete and is specified in great detail. In McCormick v. South Park Comrs. 150 Ill. 516, it was held that the South Park Commissioners were invested by the act of 1869 with powers generally at least as full and exclusive in regard to the park as those conferred upon or possessed by the city council of Chicago in respect to public squares and places in said city, each holding by the same kind of tenure, and in relation to the respective subject matters the one clothed with powers identical in extent with those vested in the other.

While the city charter conferred upon the common council full authority over the public squares, grounds and streets of the city, it also created an independent executive department of the municipal government known as the board of public works, composed of the mayor and three commissioners, elected in the same manner as other city officers, for a term of six years, one from each of the north, south and west divisions of the city. In 1867 the method of selection of the commissioners was changed, and thereafter they were appointed by the mayor with the advice and consent of the council. The common council could exercise its power and authority over the streets only by means of general ordinances, and, subject to such general ordinances, the board of public works had exclusive and special charge and superintendence, among other things, of all streets, walks and cross-walks, and public places, grounds, parks and buildings, except school houses; of all lamps and lights for lighting the streets, parks, public places and buildings, and of the erection and repair of such lamps and lights and of all public improvements by the city. Chapter 6 of the charter is devoted to the board of public works, sections 15, 16 and 20 of which chapter, so far as now material, read as follows:

“Sec. 15. Whenever any public improvement shall be ordered by the common council of said city, and the assessment for the same (where the same is to be paid for by special assessment,) shall have been confirmed and one-half of such special assessment shall have been paid into the city-treasury, the said board of public works shall advertise for proposals for doing said work. * * * The bids for the doing of such work shall be sealed bids, directed to said board. * * * Said bids shall be opened at the hour and place mentioned in said notice. When the expense of any work or public improvement shall exceed the sum of $500, and the same is to be paid out of the general fund or the water or sewerage fund of said city, the doing of such work shall be let by contract, in the same manner as is provided in cases where the expense of the same is to be paid for by special assessment.

“Sec. 16. All contracts shall be awarded by said board to the lowest reliable and responsible bidder or bidders who shall have complied with the above requisition.

“Sec. 20.

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Related

Haas v. Commissioners of Lincoln Park
171 N.E. 526 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
233 Ill. 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barber-asphalt-paving-co-v-south-park-commissioners-ill-1908.