City of Champaign v. Forrester

29 Ill. App. 117, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 70
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 21, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 29 Ill. App. 117 (City of Champaign v. Forrester) 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
City of Champaign v. Forrester, 29 Ill. App. 117, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 70 (Ill. Ct. App. 1888).

Opinion

Wall, P. J.

The declaration alleged in substance that the city had control of a certain sewer which was constructed solely for the purpose of carrying water from certain streets, and that it was its corporate duty to so control and manage the sewer as to inflict no injury upon the plaintiff, yet that the city did knowingly authorize and permit divers persons and owners of property adjacent to said sewer and to other sewers emptying therein, to connect therewith and drain into it divers privies and cess-pools, in violation of the ordinances of the city, whereby filth was carried into an open ditch in the street in front of the premises owned by the plaintiff and occupied as a dwelling house, causing the air to become laden with foul odors, and producing annoyance, discomfort and injury to plaintiff and her family, and rendering the premises unwholesome and unfit for occupancy. The plea was not guilty. The case was tried by jury and there was a verdict for plaintiff, assessing damages at $425. From the judgment entered upon this verdict an appeal is prosecuted to this court.

It is urged that the court erred in admitting in evidence a certified copy of a resolution of the city council permitting the “ Carter House, ” a hotel, to connect its privy and cesspool with the sewer. It is argued that the city is not liable for a failure to prosecute those who violate its ordinances, and that it could not by a mere resolution give legal authority to violate the ordinance which prohibited making such a connection with the sewer, nor could it repeal the ordinance by such means.

It is not necessary to assume that the resolution had such effect in order to make it competent.

It was clearly admissible for the purpose of proving the allegation that the city knowingly permitted its ordinance to be thus violated. The resolution proved this and also that the city co-operated with the offender; and by other proof it appeared that it received a consideration of §50 for the permission. Grant that the ordinance was not repealed, still it is shown by this resolution that the city consented to its violation.

a A resolution is an order of the council of a special and temporary character; an ordinance prescribes a permanent rule of conduct or government.” Dill., Mun. Corp., Vol. 1, Sec. 244. note.

This was an official act of the city of a formal character, properly provable under the issues and strongly tending to make out a material allegation contained in the declaration. It was competent evidence.

It is further objected that the court erred in an instruction for the plaintiff as follows:

66 The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that the city of Champaign constructed the sewer in the street called Walnut street, and the open ditch into which it emptied, and had the control and management thereof, and that the aldermen and city council of said city knew that the said sewer and open ditch into which it emptied, mentioned in the evidence, were filthy and offensive, and knew that persons were draining privies into the same, and permitted the same to continue up to the time this suit was commenced, and that offensive matter from said sewers and privies was deposited in the street adjacent to plaintiff’s residence, and that odors arose from said offensive matter in said sewer and ditch into which it emptied and entered the dwelling of the plaintiff and rendered the same unhealthy, uncomfortable and offensive, and made the plaintiff’s house disagreeable and unhealthy to live in, as alleged in plaintiff’s declaration, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover such damages as the jury, may find from the evidence will compensate her for such injury, if any, to herself and family, by reason of such offensive odors.”

It is argued that this instruction does not confine the jury to the consideration of damages caused by the connection with the Carter House. Ho reason is suggested why the jury should he so confined. There was proof of other instances where the city had, not by resolution, knowingly permitted, if not expressly authorized, such connections, and the evidence was sufficient to predicate the instruction in this respect. It is said that it is objectionable because it asserts in effect an absolute duty on the part of the city to prevent the bad odors arising from the ditch which annoyed the plaintiff.

We see no objection in this regard. We think, upon the facts assumed, there was liability, and that is all the instruction asserts.

The further objection is made that it instructs the jury to give damages for injuries to the plaintiff’s family. It authorizes the jury to give the plaintiff “such damages as will compensate .her for such injury, if any, to herself and family, by reason of such offensive odors.” It is apparent that the head of a family, a householder,- is damaged by anything which renders his habitation uncomfortable and unwholesome to himself or bis family. It can not be denied that the discomfort and ill health produced by such a cause as here alleged may be an injury, not only to every person affected, hut especially so to the head of the family, the householder; and, when carefully considered, this is all the instruction affirms upon this point. Possibly the jury, on a careless reading, might give it the construction contended for; and if defendant, was apprehensive that the jury might so misunderstand, it was its privilege to ask another instruction making the point clear.

From the verdict we are satisfied there was no misunderstanding. The amount allowed was certainly warranted by the evidence, and if the instructions were justly subject to the complaint made we should hardly feel disposed to consider it ground for reversal.

The further point is urged that the court erred in refusing the second instruction asked by the defendant. That instruction is as follows:

“ The court instructs the jury that the city council of the city of Champaign has not the power to authorize any one to violate any ordinance of said city; that all persons must take notice of this fact, and that any attempt on the part of the city council," if any such is shown, to authorize any person or persons to empty any privy or cesspool into the sewer in question, is absolutely null and void, and does not make the city responsible for any injury occasioned by such privy or cesspool being emptied into said sewer.”

The point here made is, in effect, the same as that presented in the objection to the resolution of the council above referred to, extending to all cases where, by any means, the city had permitted the ordinance to be violated. The proposition assumed by this instruction goes to the foundation of the plaintiff’s case. We regard it as essentially unsound.

True, as suggested, a city is ordinarily not liable for omitting to prosecute those who violate its ordinances, but the case supposed goes much further. An act is permitted and authorized which not merely violates an ordinance but perverts a sewer to an improper use and inflicts directly an injury upon the plaintiff.

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Related

City of Bloomington v. Murnin
36 Ill. App. 647 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1890)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 Ill. App. 117, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-champaign-v-forrester-illappct-1888.