Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. v. City of Chicago

28 N.E. 1108, 139 Ill. 573, 1891 Ill. LEXIS 1245
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 28 N.E. 1108 (Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. 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
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. v. City of Chicago, 28 N.E. 1108, 139 Ill. 573, 1891 Ill. LEXIS 1245 (Ill. 1891).

Opinion

Per Curiam :

This was an application by the City of Chicago to the County Court of Cook County for the confirmation of a special assessment levied for the purpose of paying the cost of curbing, filling and paving Boot or 41st Street from State to Halsted Streets in said city. The appellant company owned a large lot or block on the south side of Boot street, through which ran its right of way and the tracks thereon, a part of said lot or block lying east of the right of way, and a part thereof lying west of the right of way. The lot in question lies between State Street on the east and an alley a short ■distance east of Wentworth Avenue on the west, and between 41st or Boot street on the north and 43d street on the south. The commissioners appointed by the county court to make the assessment, in the assessment roll filed by them, assessed ■on the east 100 feet of the north 396 feet of said lot, $372.65, and on the north 100 feet of said lot, except the east 100 feet thereof, and except railroad right of way, $3048.62, making the whole amount assessed against the property, exclusive of right of way, $3421.27. The company filed objections to the confirmation of the assessment roll. The trial was had before the court without a jury, the jury being waived'by agreement. The assessment roll was modified by the trial court in the respect hereinafter indicated; the objections were overruled; the assessment roll as modified was confirmed, and judgment was rendered against said lot for $3421.27. The present appeal is prosecuted from such judgment of the county court.

The appellant claims, that the assessment was levied upon its roadway or right of way and for that reason was invalid. The railroad company had never made any subdivision of the lot in question, which is known as lot 1 of the Superior Court partition of the South |- of N. E. J sec. 4, etc., but the commissioners had separately assessed different parts of the lot in the manner above stated. It seemed to be the opinion of the counsel for the city and of the county judge upon the trial of the case, that the action of the commissioners in separately assessing two parts of a block which had not been subdivided ■by the owner, instead of assessing the block as a whole for one amount, was in conflict with the decision of this court as announced in Warren v. City of Chicago, 118 Ill. 329. In that case there was a special assessment upon lots fronting on a street for “water service pipes” to be laid from the lots and connected with the main pipe in' the street; the lots of some -of the property owners had a frontage upon the street of only 25 feet, and each of such lots was assessed for only one service pipe to connect it with the main pipe; Warren owned 32 lots, 16 on the east side and 16 on the west side of the street, each ■of which, according to a subdivision theretofore made by him, had a frontage of 45 feet; each of his lots was assessed for two service pipes, one to each half of the lot; it was held that it was erroneous to assess each lot fronting 45 feet on the street for more than one service pipe, all the lots being at the time vacant, upon the grounds that Warren was thereby compelled to pay a larger assessment than other property owners in proportion to his frontage, and that the subdivision of his lots into lots having a frontage each of 22¿- feet for the purposes of the assessment, was arbitrary, and made without ■authority in law or in fact. It was there said, however, that if two tenements had been erected on each lot having a frontage of 45 feet, showing the owner’s intention to divide the lots for residence or business purposes, a different question would be presented.

After the hearing of the evidence and arguments of counsel upon the trial of the case at bar, the court offered the objector the alternative of allowing the assessment to remain as it was, or of aggregating the sums assessed and spreading the total against the entire lot “except the railroad right of way,” upon which offer the company declined to elect; and thereupon the court modified the assessment roll, so that the same should show an assessment of $3421.27 against said lot 1. Without passing upon the correctness or incorrectness of this action of the trial court, we are unable to see how the company was in any way injured by it for the reasons hereinafter stated.

It does not appear, that the company was assessed any more than its share of the whole assessment in proportion ta the amount of frontage owned by it. It is not shown that, if appellant’s lot had been assessed as a whole for one amount, such assessment w.ould be any less than the aggregate of the, two assessments against the two parts of the lot as above described. Nor is it shown, that the lot is not used in such a-.. way for business purposes as would justify the separate assess- • ments made by the commissioners. It appears that the portion of the lot west of the right of way is occupied in part with tracks used for storing loaded cars, while the portion of the-' lot east of the right of way is covered with engine houses, car-repair shops, coal docks, washing sheds, storage and repair-tracks, etc.

We do not deem it necessary to decide whether the right of' way of a railroad company can be assessed for a street improvement or not, as the question does not arise in this case.. The authorities, referred to by counsel as holding that such right of way cannot be specially assessed for a street improvement, are cases where it was sought to assess the right of way alone and by itself. Here, the property assessed is a large ■ block of ground in a city through which the right of way passes, and of which the right of way is but a small part. It ■ will not be contended, that the depot and depot grounds of a • railroad company cannot be assessed for a public improvement because the right of way, with the tracks thereon, runs into-such depot.

But, however this may be, it is sufficient to say, that, in the - present case, the commissioners in their assessment roll spe- • cially excepted the right of way from assessment, and made - their assessments against the portions of the block which did not include the right of way. Although the court so modified., the assessment roll as to spread the aggregate of the two assessments over the whole block, yet that aggregate consisted-, of two sums which had been arrived at by excluding the right of way, so that practically, and so far as any injury to the-railroad company is concerned, the right of way was no more assessed after, than before, the modification of the assessment-roll. For these reasons, the objection to the validity of the-assessment, upon the alleged ground that the same was levied upon the right of way, was properly overruled.

It is next objected that the portions of the lot in question outside of the right of way were not benefited by the paving of the street. Whether or not the property assessed was benefited by the improvement was a question of fact. The county judge, hearing the case without a jury, found that the premises in question were benefited by the proposed improvement to the extent of the assessment thereon, and, after a careful examination of the evidence, we are satisfied that his finding was correct.

The assessment of appellant’s property is claimed to be invalid, upon the alleged ground that it is in excess of the proportionate share of the cost of the improvement which such property should bear.

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.E. 1108, 139 Ill. 573, 1891 Ill. LEXIS 1245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-rock-island-pacific-railway-co-v-city-of-chicago-ill-1891.