Board of Supervisors of Warren County v. Patterson

56 Ill. 111
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 56 Ill. 111 (Board of Supervisors of Warren County v. Patterson) 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
Board of Supervisors of Warren County v. Patterson, 56 Ill. 111 (Ill. 1870).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Breese

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in equity, in the Warren .circuit court, exhibited by Azro Patterson and others against the board of supervisors of that county, the scope and object of which was to enjoin defendants from selling or disposing of block 16 in the city of Monmouth, on the allegation that the block in question was purchased as a site for a court house and other county buildings, and to which complainants had contributed the sum of $750, part of the purchase price thereof.

It appears this block of ground was the property of Mary W. Collins, and that the board of supervisors, in September, 1867, were negotiating with her and her husband, John W. Collins, for its pinchase, and that the price demanded by ■ Collins was $6,250. This the board declined to give, but were willing to pay $5,500 for the block. The complainants, feeling a c]eep interest in this matter, agreed among themselves, if the board would buy the property, they would make up the difference between the price asked and that offered, being $750. The block was purchased and conveyed to the county for the expressed consideration of $5,500.

In the agreement for the sale, which bears date September 11,1867, there is this clause : The party of the first part “ agree to sell to the said party of the second part, block number 16, in the city of Monmouth, in the said county of Warren, with appurtenances thereunto belonging, for court house and other county buildings.”

It is alleged in the bill of complaint that a proposition was made by the said defendants, that if the complainants would furnish the amount in difference on the purchase of the block, they, the defendants, would purchase it for the purpose of erecting thereon a court house and other buildings; and complainants being interested in property in the neighborhood of this block, and anxious for the erection of county buildings upon it, by which the value of their property would be enhanced, acceded to the proposition of the defendants, and, through one Hiram Baldwin, thereupon executed a promissory note to Mary W. Collins for the sum of $750, at ten per cent, payable thirty days after date, of which $710 had been paid at the time of filing the bill of complaint.

It is then alleged that the defendants had caused the clerk of the county court of Warren county to publish an advertisement in the county newspapers, that the county would receive sealed bids, to be opened at the meeting of the board on the second Monday of September, 1868, for the salo of this block, or for one or more lots thereof, by which the erection of a court house and other county buildings would be prevented; and the bill further charges that such sale is proposed to be made purposely to avoid the erection of such buildings, in fraud of the rights of complainants, and to their irreparable injury.

It is further charged, that complainants were especially invited and requested by the legal agents of the county to contribute their money toward the purchase of this block, to be purchased and used by the county, for the purpose of erecting upon it county buildings; and it is further charged, that the defendants do not possess the statutory power to sell and convey this block, or any portion of it, nor do they, by the terms of the grant to them, possess such power, but if such a colorable sale should be made, the erection of public buildings thereon would be prevented, and complainants defrauded of their money.

An injunction was prayed for to restrain the sale, which was granted.

The defendants in their answer deny any proposition to complainants of the kind and nature set up in their bill, and allege, if any note was executed for $780 to Mrs. Collins, it was not in pursuance of any agreement between the makers of the note and the defendants, and they distinctly deny that any agreement was ever made between these parties touching the purchase by the defendants of this block of ground; and, without making an exhibit of the deed from Collins and wife, they say that the deed is a deed conveying the premises to the county in fee simple absolute, and not upon any confidence, trust or condition whatsoever. The answer admits advertising for bids for the purchase of this block, and denies all combination and fraud, and thereupon the defendants entered a motion to dissolve the injunction. This motion was denied, and thereupon the complainants filed their replication, and the cause was heard on bill, answer, replication, depositions and exhibits, when, on the 2d day of February, 1870, the following decree was entered:

“ This day this cause comes on to be heard upon the bill, answer, proofs and exhibits in the cause, on consideration of all which the court do find the equity of the cause to be with the complainants, and that they are entitled to be repaid by the defendants the moneys advanced by the n toward the purchase of said block number 16. But it is hereby ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the injunction heretofore issued in this cause be and the same is hereby so far modified, that upon the payment by the defendants to the master in chancery of this court, for the use of the complainants, the sum of $710.00, and interest from the time it was so paid by complainants, said injunction shall from thenceforth be wholly and totally dissolved, and that the defendants pay the costs, to be taxed.”

To reverse this decree, the defendants appeal.

The first question to be considered is, were appellants a party to any agreement such as is set forth in the bill of complaint ? We have examined the record carefully, and can find no evidence that appellants, or any authorized committee of their body, made any proposition to appellees to advance the difference for this block between the prices defendants were willing to pay and the owners to take. The fair inference from all the testimony is, that at the meeting at Baldwin’s hotel, at which a committee of the board of supervisors was present, such was the anxiety of the complainants to have county buildings erected on that particular block, that they voluntarily assumed the payment of this difference, they themselves supposing that on the purchase being effected, their object would he accomplished, and they thereby derive, as individuals, more or less advantage. Ho promise or contract was made to or with them, that county buildings should be erected on the block, nor has the committee appointed by the hoard to make the purchase, any power so to bind their constituents or the county.

The main allegation of the bill, that such a proposition was made by the committee of appellants, is not established by the proof, and if it was, it is very clear the committee had no authority to make it. That appellees understood the block was to be used for the purpose of erecting upon it county buildings is quite probable, but we fail to see, no agreement having been made to that effect, how they can profit by it. The presumption is, they were willing to risk their money, the proportion of each being small, on the chance, which seemed a flattering one, that after the block was purchased the erection of buildings “ of magnificent proportions and fine architectural beauty,” by which the value of their property would be increased, would follow as a matter of course.

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Bluebook (online)
56 Ill. 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-supervisors-of-warren-county-v-patterson-ill-1870.