City of Chicago v. Chicago Union Traction Co.

59 L.R.A. 666, 199 Ill. 259
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 59 L.R.A. 666 (City of Chicago v. Chicago Union Traction Co.) 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 Chicago v. Chicago Union Traction Co., 59 L.R.A. 666, 199 Ill. 259 (Ill. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

The city of Chicago instituted an action before a justice of the peace against the defendant in error company to recover the fines provided by section 1717 of the revised code of ordinances of said city for the alleged violation of the provisions of section 1716 of the code. The traction company was adjudged guilty by the justice of the peace and a fine of $100 was assessed against it. In the criminal court of Cook county, to which the traction company brought the cause by an appeal, judgment was entered finding the traction company not guilty. The city has sued out this writ of error to bring the record into this court for examination.

The ordinances upon which the prosecution is based are as follows:

“1716. The several street railway companies at any time operating railroad tracks on and along the surface of any of the streets, avenues or alleys of the city of Chicago are hereby, respectively, required to remove all dirt, snow and' other accumulations from so much of the surface of each street, avenue or alley now or hereafter containing any of their railway tracks, as lies between the two outermost rails of such tracks, and also from such additional surface, in width, as may be prescribed in any ordinance relating" to or affecting any such street, avenue or alley, and shall, respectively, clean such portions of said street, avenue or alley and remove entirely from and out of such street, avenue or alley all such dirt, snow and accumulations at least once in each week, and as much oftener as the commissioner of public works shall, in writing, direct; such dirt, snow and accumulations to be removed and disposed of in' accordance with the ordinances of the city in relation to the removal of street cleanings, and subject to the rules and regulations of the department of public works in that behalf.

“1717. Any street railway company operating a street railway upon or along the surface of any street, avenue or alley in the city of Chicago which shall refusé or neglect to clean any part of a street, avenue or alley, as required by the last preceding section hereof, shall, upon conviction thereof, be fined in a sum not less than $50 nor more than $200 for each and every case of such refusal or neglect.”

The alleged violation of the ordinance consisted in the refusal of the traction company to remove the dirt and other accumulations lying on the surface of the street between the two outermost rails of the track of its railway in Kinzie street. That the defendant in error company so refused and failed to obey the ordinance was conceded. The judgment of acquittal proceeded upon the view urged by the traction company that the ordinances were void.

The defendant in error company is a corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Illinois, and is engaged in the occupation and business of carrying passengers for hire in street cars propelled by electricity, and otherwise, in the city of Chicago. Its tracks were laid in Kinzie street by virtue of an ordinance adopted by the city council of the city on the 14th day of March, 1887, authorizing the North Chicago Street Railway Company, its successors and assigns, to construct and maintain a double track street railway in said Kinzie street and operate the same by electricity conveyed by overhead wires. The defendant in error company is the successor of the said North Chicago Street Railway Company. It has constructed and maintains a double track railway on Kinzie street, in the city of Chicago, from Market to State street, and operates its street cars thereon by electric power.

It was stipulated that ever since the first day of July, 1899, the said defendant, the Chicago Union Traction Company, has had possession and control of said street car tracks on Kinzie street, and has run thereon street cars for the conveyance of passengers, operated by electric power only, by means of an overhead wire, and that during the week .beginning Sunday, August 6, 1899, and ending Saturday, August 12,1899, the said defendant did not remove, and refused, on demand, to remove, from the said street car tracks on Kinzie street the dirt and other accumulations lying on the surface of said street between the two outermost rails of said tracks, contrary to the form of said ordinance of April'8, 1897; that said Kinzie street is a public street in the city of Chicago, the fee title to the soil of which street is in the said city of Chicago for the use of the public as a street.

The sole question presented is, whether the city possessed power to adopt and enforce the ordinance. The position of counsel for the defendant in error company is that the ordinance is void, and that contention met the view of the criminal court.

There was testimony to the effect that the presence of the rails of a street railway track upon a street causes the dirt to accumulate in the portion of the street between the rails. The tendency is for dirt to gravitate towards the sides of the street when there are no rails to prevent it; that this tendency of dirt to gravitate toward the sides of the street is aided by the elements, and that little brooming is required to keep the center of streets clean if there are no rails upon them, but rails retain the dirt in the center of the street; that the presence of the tracks in Kinzie street added to the difficulty in cleaning the portion of the street outside the rails; that it took longer to clean an entire street with rails than if took to clean a street where there were none,— three times as long on the portion of Kinzie street in question; that Kinzie street was paved between the rails with granite and outside with cedar blocks, and has a flat crown between the rails and sloped from the outside rails to the gutter; that the dirt came from horse droppings, from excavation wagons, coal wagons and ordinary wear and tear; that street accumulations have an effect upon the general health, through dust, in two ways: one through the presence of irritating particles, which are injurious in this, as being irritants to the respiratory passages and the eyes, and also to the presence of pathogenic bacteria which are in and upon the particles of dust which are in the street. As to these points there was no countervailing proof.

It appeared from this testimony the health and comfort of the people required the dust and other accumulations should be removed from that portion of Kinzie street described in the ordinance. There is, it is conceded, a general police power possessed by the city by which the traction company and all persons, natural or artificial, may be subjected to such reasonable restrictions and regulations as are found to be proper and requisite to secure the health, comfort and convenience of the people. The ordinance, it is urged by counsel for the city, should be sustained as a legitimate exercise of the police power.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 L.R.A. 666, 199 Ill. 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-v-chicago-union-traction-co-ill-1902.