Chicago v. Tilley

103 U.S. 146, 26 L. Ed. 371, 1880 U.S. LEXIS 2101
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 28, 1881
Docket1034
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 103 U.S. 146 (Chicago v. Tilley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago v. Tilley, 103 U.S. 146, 26 L. Ed. 371, 1880 U.S. LEXIS 2101 (1881).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Woods

delivered the opinion of the court.

On Aug. 28,1872, the City of Chicago entered into a contract with the County of Cook, of which it was the county seat, for the joint occupancy of block No.' 39, in the city, known as the court-house square, whereby, among other things, it was agreed as follows : —

“ The said parties shall join in the erection of a public building on said, block 39, for the use of the county and city governments respectively, and the courts of record of said county. -
“ The general exterior design of said building shall be of a uniform. character and appearance, as may hereafter be agreed upon by the board of county commissioners and the common council of’ the city of Chicago.
“ That portion of said building situate west of the north and south centre line of said block shall be erected by the city of Chicago at its own expense.”

In June, 1875, the county, being ready to proceed with its portion of the building, appointed James J. Egan as its architect, who entered upon the preparation of plans and the construction of the foundation for the county’s portion of the building.

On Aug. 9,1875, the city council passed an ordinance which repealed all former ordinances, orders, and resolutions of the council, pertaining to the erection and construction of the city’s portion of the new city hall and court-house, and rescinded all former action in relation to the appointment of architects, and *147 expressly provided that “ nothing in this ■ ordinance shall be construed as to in any manner affect, or in any wise rescind, impair, or amend any.contract or other agreement now subsisting between the city of Chicago and the county of Cook.”

On the same day the council passed an order, the material portion of which is as follows: —

Ordered, that one architect shall be appointed, whose duty it shall be to prepare the necessary plans and specifications for the erection of the city’s portion of a new city hall and court-house, upon block 39, in the original town of Chicago, commonly known as the court-house square, and the general exterior design of the same to be of a uniform character and appearance, as shall be agreed upon by said architect and board of public works and said county commissioners, said architect, when the plans and specifications shall have been prepared by him, and agreed upon by said board, to take charge of and superintend the construction of said building to its completion under the direction and control of said board of public works, and said architect shall also do and perform every other service or thing necessary to be done, in and about the construction and erection of the city’s portion of said building to completion, which shall be required to be done and performed by him as such architect, by said board of public works, and said architect shall receive from the city of Chicago as his full compensation for his entire services as such architect the sum of $37,500, said sum being three per cent of the sum of $1,250,000, which shall be the entire cost of the city’s portion of said building; and such compensation shall be in full for all services of such architect, and no other or further compensation whatever shall be paid to him by said city.”

The order further provided that, whenever the plans and specifications should be agreed upon in manner aforesaid, the board of public works should proceed with the city’s portion of said building.

After the passage of this order the city council proceeded to elect an architect to act under its provisions, and Tilley the defendant in error was chosen.

On August 24 he was officially notified of his election, and on the same day made known to the officers of the city his acceptance of the office, and offered to enter into a written contract *148 and give bonds; but .they were not deemed necessary by tbe city authorities, and were dispensed with.

Soon after the acceptance of employment by him as architect, under the order of August 9, he proceeded to prepare plans for the city’s portion of the building.

He made plans for the several floors or stories of the buildings, consulted with the heads of the various departments of the city government as to the accommodations their departments would respectively need, and from the information thus obtained made interior plans for the proposed building, and he also prepared designs and plans for the exterior of the building ; these plans or designs were exhibited to the members of the board of public works and to the city, officers, from time to time, during the months of September, October, and a part of November, 1875.

The board of public works proceeded to advertise for bids for excavations for the foundations, and the plaintiff prepared the plans and specifications for such excavations, and also prepared plans and specifications for the foundations and subbasement of the proposed building.

Early in November it was ascertained that the plans prepared by Tilley did not harmonize with the plans which had been prepared by Egan, the architect of the county, and pursuant to a resolution of the common council, passed November 15, a joint meeting of the mayor, the city board of public works, the building committee of the common council, the president of the board of county commissioners, and the building committee of the county board, was held to consult in regard to some feasible plan by which the difference arising between the city and county architects might be satisfactorily settled. This joint meeting was held, and was attended not only.by the city and county officials mentioned, but also by the plaintiff as architect of the city, and Egan as architect for the county. They had their respective plans there, and explained them to the officials in attendance. The result of this meeting for consultation and examination of plans was a direction by the joint meeting to the architects to prepare a joint compromise plan for the exterior of the building.

The joint meeting adjourned to a future day, for the purpose *149 of giving the architects time to prepare their new plan or plans. On the day to which the adjournment was taken the joint meeting reassembled, and Egan presented sketches of a compromise plan, embodying substantially the features upon which the building is now being constructed; but Tilley presented no plan, and did not concur in or indorse Egan s plan.

After an examination and discussion of Egan’s compromise plan, the proof tends to show that it was adopted by the joint meeting, and the county authorities proceeded to act upon that plan as the one which had been agreed upon and settled by' them and the city authorities. After the last joint meeting the proof tends to show that Tilley proceeded to prepare “ compromise plans,” which, after a time, he exhibited in the ante-room of tbe council-chamber, and also to members of the board of public works at the office of the board.

‘ On Jan.

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Bluebook (online)
103 U.S. 146, 26 L. Ed. 371, 1880 U.S. LEXIS 2101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-v-tilley-scotus-1881.