Chicago Telephone Co. v. Northwestern Telephone Co.

100 Ill. App. 57, 1901 Ill. App. LEXIS 498
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 24, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 100 Ill. App. 57 (Chicago Telephone Co. v. Northwestern Telephone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago Telephone Co. v. Northwestern Telephone Co., 100 Ill. App. 57, 1901 Ill. App. LEXIS 498 (Ill. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Higbee

delivered the opinion of the court.

At the time ordinance No. 630, under which appellee claims the right to erect and maintain its telephone system in the city of Aurora, was presented to the city council, and at the time it was passed, there was in full force and effect an ordinance of the city reading as follows : “All ordinances, after being presented and read, shall lie over one week before final action shall be taken thereon.” The record of the proceedings of the city council of July 17, 1899, the day on which the ordinance in question was presented to the council, contains the following : “Alderman Linden presented an ordinance granting a franchise to the Northwestern Telephone Company in the city of Aurora, which on his motion was laid over under the rules.” Three weeks later the ordinance was taken up, read section by section and passed. Appellant insists that the record of the city council above referred to shows that the ordinance was presented but not read at the first meeting; and also that the journal must show affirmatively that the ordinance was read before it was laid over, in order to give validity to its final passage. The general ordinance requiring that all ordinances after being presented and read should lie over a week, does not require that the journal of the proceedings of the city council shall affirmatively show such facts. The statute in reference to cities and villages, from which the city council gets its powers, provides that the council shall keep a journal of its proceedings, but it does not provide what entries shall be made except in certain instances, as in the passage of ordinances, where it requires that the yeas and nays shall be taken, “ which shall be entered on the journal of its proceedings.” Rev. Stat., Chap. 24, Secs. 40 and 41 (Hurd, 1899). In the case of Supervisors of Schuyler County v. The People ex rel,, etc., 25 Ill. 181, where the constitutionality of an act of the General Assembly was in question, it was said:

“ It is next objected that the Senate journal does, not show that the bill was read three times in that body before it was put upon its final passage, and that hence the constitutional requirements to make it a law were not observed. The constitution does require that every bill shall be read three times in each branch of the General Assembly before it shall be passed into a law, but the constitution does not say that these several readings shall be entered on the journals. Some acts performed in the passage of laws are required by the constitution to be entered on the journals in order to make them valid, and among these are the entries of the ayes and nays on the final passage of every bill, and we held in the case of Spangler v. Jacoby, 14 Ill. 297, that where the journal did not show this, the act never became a law. But where the constitution is silent as to whether a particular act which is required to be performed shall be entered on the journals, it is then left to the discretion of either house to enter it or not, and the silence of the journal on the subject ought not to be held- to afford evidence that the act was not done. In such a case we must presume it was done unless the journal affirmatively shows that it was not done.”

In Wabash Railroad Co. v. Hughes, 38 Ill. 174, it is also said upon the same subject, “ Some acts must appear from the journals to have been performed, as well as the proper authentication upon the bill, before it can be regarded as a law of the land. Everything which the constitution has required to be entered upon the journals, in the progress of a bill through the two houses, is essential to its binding force, and must appear from the journals to have been performed. Other acts required to be done by the two houses but not required to be spread upon the journals, will be presumed to have been done, when a statute appears in other respects to be regular, unless the contrary appears from the journals themselves.” As neither the ordinance nor the statute required that the journal must affirmatively show that the ordinance was read at the time of its presentation, it will be presumed from the authorities above cited that as the ordinance appears regular in other respects, it w'as read when presented. We are also of opinion that by the language of the journal which recites that the ordinance of appellee “ was laid over under the rules ” is meant that the ordinance was laid over in compliance with the rules.

. It is also said that the ordinance was void for the reason that the corporation had no legal existence at the time the ordinance was presented to the city council, its certificate of organization not having been issued at that time. The statement for the incorporation was filed with the secretary of state July 7th. The certificate of organization was issued July 22d, and filed July 24, 1899, in the office of the recorder of Will county. The ordinance was presented to the city council July 17, 1899, which was after the application for incorporation had been filed, but before the certificate of organization had been issued by the secretary of state. The ordinance was • not passed, however, until August 7, 1899, which was after the certificate of organization had been issued and recorded. Appellant insists that as the corporation had. no legal existence at the time the petition was presented, it could not be contracted with and could not be the subject of a grant. There was no grant made, however, or contract entered into until the final passage of the ordinance, at which time appellee had a legal, existence and was fully organized. The ordinance was a license which became a binding contract between the city and appellee, when the latter accepted the privileges and entered upon the use of the streets for the purposes specified in the ordinance. People v. Central Union Tel. Co., 192 Ill. 307. It was therefore the acceptance of the ordinance by appellee that made it a contract.

In the case of Lauder v. Peoria Agricultural and Trotting Society, 71 Ill. App. 475, the contract sued upon by appellee was dated March 23, 1895, while appellee’s certificate of organization was dated April 24, 1895, and filed for record May 20, 1895. The point was made that the contract was void for the reason that appellee corporation was not in existence at the time of the date of the contract. This court, however, in sustaining the contract, used the following language:

“ Appellant urges this contract is invalid because appellee was not in being at its date. The date of the instrument may be assumed to be the time when it was executed and delivered arid became binding, where nothing to the contrary appears, but such date is not conclusive upon that subject. Appellee offered the contract in evidence. The contract, therefore, came into its possession at some time after its organization was completed, so that it could do business and enter into contracts. Ho matter when it was dated and signed by appellant, it could not have been delivered to appellee until appellee’s organization was complete. As the contract was signed by appellant alone, it was in the nature of a proposition to the corporation, and could become a binding contract by appellee accepting it, and either signing it or performing the contract on its part.” (See also Clarksburg El. L. Co. v. Clarksburg, 47 W. Va. 739, 50 L. R. A. 142; Spring Garden Bank v. Hulings Lumber Co., 32 W. Va. 357, 3 L. R. A. 583; Rotch’s Wharf Co. v. Judd, 108 Mass. 224; Richelieu Hotel Co. v. Mil. Encampment Co., 140 Ill. 248.)

In the case of Arnold v. Conklin, 96 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
100 Ill. App. 57, 1901 Ill. App. LEXIS 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-telephone-co-v-northwestern-telephone-co-illappct-1902.