Chicago & Western Indiana Railroad v. Dunbar

95 Ill. 571, 1880 Ill. LEXIS 211
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 11, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 95 Ill. 571 (Chicago & Western Indiana Railroad v. Dunbar) 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 & Western Indiana Railroad v. Dunbar, 95 Ill. 571, 1880 Ill. LEXIS 211 (Ill. 1880).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dickey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Application is made for an order to dismiss these proceedings from this court. The determination of this application turns upon the question whether a franchise is involved in this case. By the act of 1879, all cases in which a franchise is involved must be taken directly to the Supreme Court. (Laws 1879, p. 222.)

Dunbar and Valentine filed a bill in chancery, in the Superior Court of Cook county, against the Chicago and Western Indiana Railroad Company and others, and procured a decree enjoining the defendants in that court from bringing the railroad of that company within the limits of the city of Chicago, and from proceeding to condemn a certain city lot, belonging to Dunbar, in the city, which lies adjacent to a part of the railroad of that corporation already constructed within the city.

The ground stated in the bill, for the relief sought, (and on which the decree is based,) is as charged in the bill, that “said Chicago and Western Indiana Bailroad Company had no authority to construct and operate its line of railroad in the city of Chicago * * * or to purchase, hold or own any land or other property within the said city.” The reason in support of this proposition alleged in the bill is, that the city has passed no valid ordinance locating the line of said railroad, or fixing its terminus.

The record shows that the court below decided, as a basis of its decree, “ that the passage of a valid ordinance, locating the precise route of the railroad, * * * is a condition precedent to the exercise of the power of eminent domain by the railroad company to acquire private property within the city for corporate purposes, and that no such ordinance was passed.”

In the answers defendants assert the right of that corporation, under its articles of association, and the statute of the State, (without the passage of any ordinance by the city,) to locate, construct and operate its road within the city in all respects, except in the crossing of streets, and also claimed the right to condemn private property for corporate purposes along its proposed line, without any city ordinance whatever.

The case, then, not only involves, but in a vital point turns upon, the question whether the railroad corporation is or is not now clothed with power lawfully to condemn private property within the city of Chicago.

The decision of this motion must then depend upon the question whether power in a railroad company to exercise the right of eminent domain in a given city is or is not a franchise, within the meaning of that word as used in our constitution and laws.

The question as to the precise sense in which that word is so used is not free from difficulty. It would perhaps not be wise to attempt, in the decision of any one case, to define its limits in every respect, or to attempt to enumerate all the cases to which the word franchise, under our laws, must be held to apply.

This court has held that a license by a city to use a street for a horse railway is not a franchise—C. C. R. R. Co. v. The People, 73 Ill. 547—and said in that case: “Corporate franchises in the American States emanate from the government, or the sovereign power, owe their existence to a grant, or, as at common law, to prescription, which presupposes a grant, and are vested in individuals or a body politic.”

The word franchise is used with various meanings. In its broad and popular sense it embraces the right of trial by jury, the right to habeas corpus, the right to vote at an election, the right to membership in voluntary associations or corporations, the right to hold an office, and perhaps other rights.

This court has decided that the right to membership in the board of trade is not a franchise, within the meaning of our constitution and statutes. Board of Trade v. The People ex rel. 91 Ill. 80. In the opinion of this court in that ease reference is made to Blackstone’s description of a franchise as “a royal privilege or branch of the king’s prerogative, subsisting in the hands of the subject, and, being derived from the crown, must arise from the king’s grant,” and also to the language of Chief Justice Taney, in Bank of Augusta v. Earle, that “it is essential to the character of a franchise that it should be a grant from the sovereign authority.” 13 Pet. 595. And this court in that opinion adopts the language of the court in the case of City of Bridgeport v. New York and New Hampshire R. R. Co., in which, speaking of the term franchise, it is said: “When it is used in a statute or elsewhere in the law, it is generally, if it is not always, understood as a special privilege conferred by grant from the State or sovereign poAver, as being something not belonging to the citizen of common right.” And it is said by this court: “It must have been in this restricted sense the term franchise was used in the statute we are considering.”

Examining, then, the term franchise in this restricted and legal sense, it will be found to be used sometimes in a more extended, and sometimes in a more limited sense. It is, in law, sometimes used to mean an exclusive right held by grant from the sovereign power,—such in its nature that the same right can not be granted to another without an invasion of the franchise of the first grantee. The strictly legal signification of the word is not always confined to exclusive rights; but the term is used in law to designate powers and privileges which are not exclusive in their nature. The Supreme Court of the United States, speaking through Chief Justice Taney, has said: “Franchises are special privileges conferred by government upon individuals, and which do not belong to the citizens of the country of common right.” The term, according to Blackstone, embraces in its legal meaning several kinds of rights, some exclusive and some not exclusive. Kid says: “A corporation is a political person capable of enjoying a variety of franchises.” Spencer, J., says: “If there are certain immunities and privileges in which the public have an interest, as contradistinguished from private rights, and which can not be exercised without authority derived from the sovereign power, it would seem to me that such immunities and privileges must be franchises.” 15 Johns. 387. And so the Supreme Court of New York held in that case, unanimously, that the right of an insurance company to carry on banking business was a franchise, although the judges differed on the question whether the defendant in that case had lawful right to such franchise.

Our constitution making provision for inferior appellate courts provides that appeals and writs of error should lie to the Supreme Court in all criminal cases, and cases in which a franchise or freehold, or the validity of a statute is involved, and as to appeals and writs of error in other cases, the legislature was left to exercise its discretion.

These cases specially named seem to have been regarded of a nature so important that the parties interested therein should not, by the legislature, be deprived of a hearing before the Supreme Court. The fact that a franchise is classed here in importance with a freehold, and with questions as to the validity of a statute, indicates that the term, as here used, had no light signification. And, accordingly, this court haa.

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Bluebook (online)
95 Ill. 571, 1880 Ill. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-western-indiana-railroad-v-dunbar-ill-1880.