Birket v. City of Peoria

57 N.E. 30, 185 Ill. 369
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 57 N.E. 30 (Birket v. City of Peoria) 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
Birket v. City of Peoria, 57 N.E. 30, 185 Ill. 369 (Ill. 1900).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

In October, 1898, the city council of Peoria passed an ordinance providing for the paving of Perry avenue, between Cornhill and Abington streets, with asphaltum, and for putting in on each side of said avenue a combined curb and gutter, and that ninety-five per cent of the cost of the improvement should be raised by special taxation upon contiguous property according to frontage, and the remaining five per cent should be paid by the city out of its general funds. Certain lots fronting upon the avenue were owned, as tenants in common, by the appellants, and Maybell Birket, who has not appealed. ' The appellants, only, appeared and filed objections to the confirmation of the assessment, and on this their appeal from the judgment of confirmation they assign for error that the court erred in overruling their legal objection that the ordinance was void because it apportioned the cost between the city and the property to be benefited. Their contention is, that the statute provides that such apportionment must be made by the superintendent of special assessments, and not by the city council.

It is expressly provided by the act of June 14, 1897, (Hurd’s ,Stat. 1897, secs. 36, 38, 39, p. 363,) that where the ordinance contains no provisions for condemnation, and provides that the improvement shall be paid for wholly or in part by special assessment, the court shall, upon the filing of the petition, enter an order directing the superintendent of special assessments to make a true and impartial assessment of the cost of the improvement upon the- petitioning municipality and the property benefited by the improvement. Section 39 provides that “it shall be the duty of such officer to estimate what proportion of the total cost of such improvement will be of benefit to the public and what proportion thereof will be of benefit to the property to be benefited, and to apportion the same between the city * * * and such property, so that each shall bear its relative, equitable proportion.” And sections 47 and 48 confer power on the court to determine whether or not the assessment as made and returned is an equitable and just distribution of the cost of the improvement between the public and the property, and to change or modify such distribution, but its decision upon that question is not subject to review on error or appeal.

Under prior legislation we have uniformly held that the court had no power to change the distribution, made by or under the provisions of the ordinance, of the cost of the improvement between the public and the property assessed. (Bigelow v. City of Chicago, 90 Ill. 49; Fagan v. City of Chicago, 84 id. 227; Watson v. City of Chicago, 115 id. 78; City of Sterling v. Galt, 117 id. 11; Billings v.City of Chicago, 167 id. 337; Walters v. Town of Lake, 129 id. 23.) This rule 6 was applied in both special assessment and special taxation proceedings, and it is clear that it was the intention of the legislature to change the rule as applied to special assessments, so that the court in which the proceedings shall be pending for confirmation of the assessment shall have power to revise and change the distribution of the' cost of the improvement between the petitioning municipality and the property to be assessed, so as to make the assessment a just and equitable one. But it does not follow that it was the intention of the legislature to confer the same power on the court in proceedings where the ordinance provides that the cost of the improvement shall be raised by special taxation of contiguous property. Indeed, the language of the sections above referred to does not embrace special taxation, but special assessments only, and can be extended to special taxation only, if at all, by virtue of section 35 of the same act, which is as follows: “When the ordinance under which a local improvement shall be ordered shall provide .that such improvements shall be made wholly or in part by special taxation of contiguous property, such special tax shall be levied, assessed and collected, as nearly as may be, in the manner provided in the section of this act providing for the mode of making, assessing and collecting special assessments: Provided, that no special tax shall be levied or assessed upon any property to pay for any local improvement in an amount in excess of the special benefit which such property shall receive from such improvement. Such ordinance shall not be deemed conclusive of such benefit, but the question of such benefit and of the amount of such special tax shall be subject to the review and determination of the court, and be tried in the same manner as in proceedings by special assessment.”

This section, without the proviso and without the words “as nearly as may be,” is substantially the same as section 17 of article 9 as it originally stood in the general Incorporation act. (1 Starr & Cur. Stat. 491.) The proviso was added by the amendment of 1895, (Laws of 1895, p. 100,) and the whole, with but slight changes, was incorporated in the said act of 1897 as section 35, so that by virtue of this section as it now is no special tax can be levied on property in excess of the special benefit which it receives from the improvement, and that question is not concluded by the ordinance, but is open to review by the court as in special assessments. Still, the section as it now is confers no more power on the court to review and change the apportionment, as made by the ordinance, of the cost of the improvement between the public and the property to be specially taxed, than it did before the proviso was added and when our previous decisions on the subject were rendered. And it may be further observéd that by the insertion in the section of the words “as nearly as maybe,” there is a clearer legislative recognition than formerly of the inapplicability of the procedure, as a whole, in cases of special assessment to cases of special taxation. It is no answer to say that by reducing the amount levied by the ordinance on contiguous property so that it shall not exceed the benefits the action of the court may result in increasing the amount to be paid by the municipality from its general funds, for that is a question which the municipality must deal with, and not the courts. As said in Hull v. People, 170 Ill. 246, the amendment of 1895 merely changed the rule which before prevailed by providing that the ordinance should not be deemed conclusive of benefits, but that the land owner might, if dissatisfied, have that question submitted to the court and tried by a jury in the same manner as in proceeding by special assessments. See, also, Pfeiffer v. People, 170 Ill. 347.

It follows, therefore, that the ordinance was not void because it fixed the proportion of the cost of the improvement to be paid by the city out of its general funds. And had the ordinance authorized the superintendent of special assessments to make such apportionment, it does not follow that in cases of special taxation as this is, his apportionment, as between the public and the property, could be reviewed by the court; and the case of City of Jacksonville v. Hamill, 178 Ill. 235, relied on by appellants, does not so hold, but, on the contrary, that such apportionment is final and not subject to review. It was not intended by what was there said to decide that all of the provisions of the statute applicable to special assessment proceedings are also now applicable to special taxation.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Elmendorf v. City of San Antonio
223 S.W. 631 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1920)
Holman v. Brown
215 Ill. App. 247 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1919)
City of Ottawa v. Colwell
103 N.E. 573 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1913)
Mushbaugh v. Village of East Peoria
102 N.E. 1027 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1913)
City of Peru v. Bartels
73 N.E. 755 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1905)
Graham v. City of Chicago
58 N.E. 393 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 N.E. 30, 185 Ill. 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birket-v-city-of-peoria-ill-1900.