Chicago Consolidated Traction Co. v. Village of Oak Park

225 Ill. 9
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 225 Ill. 9 (Chicago Consolidated Traction Co. v. Village of Oak Park) 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
Chicago Consolidated Traction Co. v. Village of Oak Park, 225 Ill. 9 (Ill. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Chiee Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellee, the village of Oak Park, filed its petition in the county court of Cook county praying that steps be taken to levy a special assessment, in accordance with the provisions of an ordinance theretofore passed by said village, for the improvement of Lake street from the center line of Sixty-fourth avenue to the west curb line of Austin avenue, and Humphrey avenue from the southerly line of Lake street to the south line of North boulevard, in the village of Oak Park, by curbing, grading, and paving with brick, constructing concrete combined curb and gutter, and constructing, connecting and adjusting catch-basins and manholes. An assessment roll was made and returned into court, together with the certificate and affidavits required by the statute. Appellant, Chicago Consolidated Traction Company, appeared and filed a number of objections to the confirmation of the assessment against its property. The legal objections were overruled, and a jury being waived the cause was heard by the court upon the question of benefits. The finding upon this question was in favor of the petitioner. After overruling a motion for a new trial and a motion in arrest of judgment the court entered judgment confirming the assessment as to the property of appellant. The' record of the proceedings in- the county court is brought to this court for review by appeal.

Lake street, in the village of Oak Park, runs east and west. It is intersected by Austin avenue, Sixty-fourth avenue, and other streets and avenues running north and south. The improvement contemplated by the ordinance in question for Lake street extends east from the center line of Sixty-fourth avenue to the west curb line of Austin avenue.

It was admitted by-counsel for the village, upon the hearing of legal objections, that there now exists, in good condition and constructed under ordinances of the village of Oak Park, a combined curb and gutter extending from the west curb line of Austin avenue west along the north curb line of Lake street a distance of twenty-two feet, and a combined curb and gutter extending from the west curb line of Austin avenue west along the south curb line of Lake street a distance of seventeen feet; also a combined curb and gutter extending from the north curb line of Lake street north along the west curb line of Austin avenue a distance of twenty-one feet, and a combined curb and gutter extending from the south curb line of Lake street south along the west curb line of Austin avenue a distance of twenty-one feet.

It is first urged by appellant that the ordinance for the improvement is unreasonable, oppressive and void because it provides for the construction of a combined curb and gutter on each side of the roadway of Lake street and on the west side of Austin avenue at the intersection with Lake street, without excepting those portions of Lake street and Austin avenue where it was admitted a combined curb and gutter, in good condition, now exists. Appellee concedes thát the twenty-one feet of combined curb and gutter on the north side of Lake street and the seventeen feet of curb and gutter on the south side of that street were improperly included by the ordinance in the improvement, but contends,— and, as.we think, rightly so,—that the ordinance does not provide for the construction of a curb or a combined curb and gutter on the west side of Austin avenue.

The ordinance defines the eastern limits of the improvement as the west curb line of Austin avenue. The engineer of the board of local improvements, on cross-examination by appellant, testified that the curb line of a street is the roadway face of the curb, and appellant contends that the improvement therefore extends to the eastern or roadway face of the curb on Austin avenue, and necessarily includes that curb. Even though the use of 'the term “curb line” means the roadway face of the curb, yet we think it is apparent from an examination of the ordinance in this case that the improvement does not include the construction of a curb on the west side of Austin avenue. The ordinance for the improvement provides “that Lake street, together with all street intersections within the north and south lines of said Lake street from the center line of Sixty-fourth avenue to the west curb line o.f Austin avenue * * * be irnproved by curbing, grading and paving the same with a brick pavement and a concrete combined curb and gutter,” etc., the provision in regard to the curb and gutter being, that “a granite concrete combined curb and gutter shall be constructed * * * upon each side of all intersecting streets produced between said points, from the street line to the curb line of said Lake street,” etc. The expressions “street intersections” and “intersecting streets,” as used in this ordinance, evidently refer to those streets whose roadways intersect Lake street at some point within the limits of the improvement, as the improvement of the roadway is the principal object sought to be accomplished by the ordinance and the construction of a combined curb and gutter is but incidental to that improvement. Austin avenue is not an intersecting street within that meaning of the term, as no part of the roadway of that avenue is included in the improvement. This view finds support in the fact that the only curb' provided for by the ordinance is one combined with a gutter. Such gutter on the west side of Austin avenue would necessarily have to be placed east of the line which appellant contends forms the eastern boundary of the improvement, and it clearly cannot be included within the terms of the ordinancé. Considering the various provisions of the ordinance, we are satisfied that the ordinance does not contemplate, and the improvement does not include, the construction of a curb on the west side of Austin avenue.

The thirty-nine feet of curb and gutter on Lake street, however, are within the terms of the ordinance. The cost of constructing the combined curb and gutter was estimated by the engineer at seventy cents per lineal foot. The cost of constructing the thirty-nine feet improperly included in the improvement would therefore amount to $27.30. The total estimated cost of the improvement is $19,310, of which $1646.85 is assessed against the property of appellant. Appellant’s proportion of this $27.30 would therefore be less than $2.45. We consider this amount too trifling to render the ordinance unreasonable, oppressive and void or to require a reversal of the case.

The testimony of the engineer, to the effect that his estimate did not include the thirty-nine feet of curb and gutter in question, was improperly admitted, but its admission was not prejudicial to appellant.

The ordinance provides that the grade of the improvement shall be the grade established by the president and board of trustees of the village of Oak Park by ordinance passed on May 29, 1902. That ordinance, which was introduced in evidence by appellee, established a base or datum for the grades and levels of the village of Oak Park, and provided that in all cases where grades have not been established by the president and board of trustees the natural surface of the prairie shall be and is the established grade.

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

Related

Village of Northbrook v. Sterba
149 N.E. 258 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1925)
City of Chicago v. Wilshire
87 N.E. 383 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 Ill. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-consolidated-traction-co-v-village-of-oak-park-ill-1906.