City of Alton v. Middleton's Heirs

41 N.E. 926, 158 Ill. 442
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 41 N.E. 926 (City of Alton v. Middleton's Heirs) 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
City of Alton v. Middleton's Heirs, 41 N.E. 926, 158 Ill. 442 (Ill. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is a proceeding commenced by the city of Alton for the construction of a pipe-sewer in a portion of Second street, in said city, by special assessment. The appellees herein, who are objecting property owners, filed in the county court various objections to the confirmation of the assessment roll, and some of these objections were sustained by the’court, and the petition for judgment of confirmation was dismissed as to the property of appellees. From the order and judgment of the court in that behalf made and rendered, this appeal is prosecuted by the city.

Among the objections made to the assessment are the following: First, “the ordinance does not specify the nature, character, locality and description of the improvement, as required by the statute, and for that reason is illegal and contrary to law;” and second, “the ordinance does not designate a certain point of beginning of ending, nor a certain course for said sewer on said Second street from beginning to end, and for that reason is illegal and void.”

Sections 1 and 2 of the ordinance providing for said improvement are substantially as follows:

“Sec. 1. That the following local improvement be and the same is hereby ordered to be made in the manner hereinafter specified, to-wit: That there be constructed in Second street, from the connection with the Piasa street sewer, in Piasa street, to a connection with the Ridge street sewer, in Ridge street, an underground pipe-sewer, commencing at a connection with the Piasa street sewer, on Piasa street, running thence east in the center line of Second street (or as near the center as practical, taking into consideration where the water mains are now laid, so as not to interfere in any way with them,) to a connection with the sewer on Alton street; thence east in the said center line of Second street, or as near the center as practical, to a connection with the Ridge street sewer. Said main sewer, laid in the center of said Second street, shall be of the best stone-glazed pipe, (and known as vitrified-stone pipe,) the size of which shall be eighteen inches (18 in.) in diameter. All joints shall be uniform, and cemented, and filled with the best Louisville cement mortar. All connections with cross-sewers now laid shall be carefully cemented. There shall be inlets to said sewer at the following places, to-wit,” etc.

“Sec. 2. That said sewer and inlets shall be laid at a proper depth and grade to give proper fall and drainage; and in addition to the foregoing all of said improvement shall be done under the supervision of the city engineer and the committee on sewers of" the city of Alton, in •accordance with the plans, maps, profiles and specifications to be furnished by the city engineer, and now on file in his office.”

Section 19 of article 9 of the City and Village act, as amended June 17, 1887, (Laws of 1887, pp. 107, 108,) provides: “Whenever such local improvements are to be made wholly or in part by special assessment, the said council in cities or board of trustees in villages shall pass an ordinance to that effect, specifying therein the nature, character, locality and description of such improvement, either by setting forth the same in the ordinance itself, or by reference to maps, plats, plans, profiles or specifications thereof on file in the office of the proper clerk, or both.”

The first question that arises is, whether or not an ordinance which describes the proposed improvement by a reference to plans, maps, profiles and specifications on file in the office of the city engineer, is in compliance with the requirement of the statute that permits the description to be made by reference to maps, plats, plans, profiles or specifications on file in the office of “the proper clerk.”

It has been said that a substantial compliance with the statute is all that is required in an ordinance of this kind. (City of Kankakee v. Potter, 119 Ill. 324.) But a legal and sufficient ordinance is the foundation of a valid special assessment, and hence, if the ordinance does not contain a specification or description of the nature, character and locality of the improvement, either within its own four corners or by reference to maps, plats, plans, profiles or specifications on file in the office designated by the statute, the court will have no authority to confirm the assessment. (Levy v. City of Chicago, 113 Ill. 650; Ogden v. Town of Lake View, 121 id. 422). In City of Kankakee v. Potter, supra, this court said (p. 327): “As the ordinance affords the only authority for what is proposed to be done by the municipality, there necessarily can be no authoritative way of making that known except through the ordinance, as required by the statute. It is the basis of all contracts for the construction of the improvement,” etc. And in Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railroad Co. v. City of Chicago, 56 Ill. 454, in speaking of an ordinance providing for a public improvement by special assessment, it was said (p. 456): “If the exercise of this great power over the rights of private property can be upheld at all, it can only be done by showing a close, straightforward, honest compliance with every substantial requirement of the law prescribed for its government.”

Prior to the amendment of 1887, permitting the nature, character, locality and description of the improvement to be set forth in the ordinance by reference to the maps, plats, plans, profiles or specifications thereof on file in the office of the proper clerk, the original section 19 required the improvement to be described in the ordinance itself, and a case then arose where the ordinance, instead of itself describing the nature, character and locality of the improvement, referred for the details thereof to the maps, plans, profiles and specifications of the same made by a “civil engineer, and now on file in the office of the city clerk of said city,” and this court held that the provision of the statute as it then stood was mandatory; that the fact of a reference to the specifications as being in the city clerk’s office could not alter the case; that that was not a source of information which the law recognized in these matters; that the statute, whether for wise or unwise purposes, had required this information to be inserted in the ordinance itself; that that had not been done or attempted to be done, and that therefore the ordinance was fatally defective. (City of Sterling v. Galt, 117 Ill. 11.) And so, by parity of reasoning, the. provision in section 19, as amended in 1887, requiring the specifications of the improvement, if not given in the ordinance itself, to be set forth by reference to maps, plats, plans, profiles or specifications on file “in the office of the proper clerk,” must be regarded as mandatory. If the legislature had intended that a reference to plans, etc., on file in the office of the city engineer should be a sufficient specification of the nature, character, locality and description of the improvement, then the statute would have mentioned such official, instead of designating the clerk, only. The statute does not recognize plans, etc., on file in the office of the city engineer as a source of information in these matters, but, whether for wise or unwise purposes, requires such information to be obtained either from the ordinance itself, or from maps, plats, plans, profiles or specifications on file in the office of “the proper clerk.” In Pearce v. Village of Hyde Park, 126 Ill. 287, and Steele v.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.E. 926, 158 Ill. 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-alton-v-middletons-heirs-ill-1895.