Bigelow v. City of Chicago

90 Ill. 49
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 90 Ill. 49 (Bigelow v. City of Chicago) 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
Bigelow v. City of Chicago, 90 Ill. 49 (Ill. 1878).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is an appeal from an application for the confirmation of a special assessment to meet the expense of widening State street, in the city of Chicago, to the width of 100 feet, from Harrison street to Twelfth street. The original petition in the case was filed in the Superior Court of Cook county, Aug. 24, 1874, in pursuance of an ordinance of the city council directing that that portion of State street be widened to the width of 100 feet, and that the same be done by condemning the property on said street, between Harrison and Twelfth streets, to the depth of 27 feet. The damages were ascertained by a jury to the property so condemned. A supplemental petition in the proceeding was filed Aug. 4, 1875, praying the court to appoint commissioners to make a special assessment, as provided by the statute, for the purpose of raising the amount necessary to pay the compensation and damages awarded, which was done, and the assessment made. On the application for confirmation of the assessment roll, objections were filed by appellants. Upon the trial, verdict was rendered against the objectors, and judgment entered, confirming the assessment, from which they took this appeal.

There was a stipulation in the case, that State street is 120 feet wide from the river to Madison street; 100 feet wide from Madison to Jackson street; 73 feet wide from Jackson to Harrison street, with condemnation proceedings pending to widen it to 100 feet between those streets; 73 feet wide from Harrison to Twenty-second street, and 66 feet wide from Twenty-second street to the city limits, and that the distance from the river to the city limits, along State street, is four miles and a half.

The assessment roll, for widening State street from Jackson to Harrison street, was introduced in evidence, from which it appeared that no lots north of Jackson street or south of Harrison street were thereby assessed.

The only question presented for consideration, by this record, is as to the admissibility of the following evidence offered upon the trial by appellants and excluded by the court. The counsel for the objectors, after stating to the court below that he proposed to show that the real estate fronting on State street, north of Harrison street, would be specially benefited by the proposed improvement not less than $50,000, and that the real estate fronting on State street, south of Twelfth street, would be specially benefited not less than $20,000, and that the assess - ment as levied upon the property between Harrison and Twelfth streets was levied in the ratio of the benefits to the lots respectively, then inquired of a witness, whether, in his opinion, the lots fronting on State street, south of Twelfth street and north of Harrison street, would be specially benefited by the proposed improvement, and if so, what lots, and to what extent ? The question was objected to, the objection sustained by the court, and exception taken. The same question was repeated with respect to a particular specified lot north of Harrison street, and the like objection sustained. The only assignment of error is upon this ruling.

Section 145 of the act relating to cities and villages (Rev. Stat. 1874, p. 236,) under Avhich this proceeding is had, Avhich provides for the trial by jury after return of the report of the commissioners of their assessment, declares that if it shall appear that the premises of the objectors are assessed more or less than they avíII be benefited, or more or less than their' proportionate share of the cost of the improAmment, the jury shall so find, and also find the amount for AArhich such premises ought to be assessed, and judgment shall be rendered accordingly. The evidence offered being that property not assessed Avas benefited by the improvement, and so that the cost Avas assessed upon only a part of the property benefited, it is contended that the facts offered to be proved Avould establish that every lot objected for Avas assessed more than its proportionate share of the cost of the improvement, Avhich Avas the defense sought to be made. But section 139 prescribing the duties of the commissioners, and section 145 stating the issues, must be construed together. By section 139, it is made the duty of the commissioners to examine the locality Avhere the improvement is proposed to be made, and the lots, blocks, tracts and parcels of land that Avill be specially benefited by the improvement, and to estimate Avhat proportion of the total cost of the improvement Avill be of benefit “to the public, and Avhat proportion therof will be of benefit to the property to be benefited, and apportion the same between the city or village and such property so that each shall bear its relative equitable proportion; and havúng found said amounts, to apportion and assess the amount so found to be of benefit to the property, upon the several lots, blocks, tracts and parcels of land in the proportion in Avhich they will be severally benefited by the improvement: Provided, that no lot, block, tract or parcel of land shall be assessed a greater amount than it will actually be benefited. These tAvo things, in making the assessment by the commissioners, under section 139, to assess the lots “in the proportion in which they Avill be severally benefited,” and that no lot “shall be assessed a greater amount than it will be actually benefited,” appear to be what is put in issue by section 145; and it would seem that the words, “ proportionate share of the cost of the improvement,” in the latter section, should have no other meaning than the words, “ proportion in which they will be severally benefited,” in section 139.

If the “ proportionate share of the cost of the improvement,” taken in its literal reading, may be gone into, as claimed by appellants, it would, as it seems, open the inquiry as to whether the relative proportions of public benefit and special benefits had been correctly fixed by the commissioners; for if the relative amount of special benefits, as compared with the amount of public benefit, should have been estimated by the commissioners at too large a sum, then the objectors would appear to have been assessed more than their proportionate share of the cost of the improvement. But such an inquiry was held not permissible, in Fagan v. City of Chicago, 84 Ill. 227.

A witness was asked there, what proportion of the total cost of the improvement would, in his opinion, be of benefit to the public, and this court sustained the exclusion of the question, by the court below, on the ground that the question was wholly irrelevant; that the determination of the commissioners on that subject was final, and could not be reviewed.

And, indeed, the whole question involved in the present case would seem really to have been determined, in that case, adversely to the position of appellants. It was there said: “ We see no objection to the court below confining the examination of the witnesses to a comparison of the assessments objected to, on a particular lot, with the general assessment against all of the other lots. The question being tried ■was, what proportion the assessment on the particular lot bore to the assessment imposed on all of the other lots, and not as to that on another specified lot.

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90 Ill. 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bigelow-v-city-of-chicago-ill-1878.