City of Chicago v. Cook

105 Ill. App. 353, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 3
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 8, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 105 Ill. App. 353 (City of Chicago v. Cook) 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 Chicago v. Cook, 105 Ill. App. 353, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 3 (Ill. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of appellee and against appellant, for the sum of $5,000, rendered in an action of assumpsit. The plaintiff is a contractor and builder, and was employed by the city in a large number of cases to estimate the damage which would accrue to buildings and structures of private owners, by reason of the taking or damaging of private property, in condemnation proceedings for public improvements, which the defendant, the city, proposed to institute or had instituted; and also to estimate the damages to buildings or other structures belonging to private owners, which had been damaged bv the making of public improvements by the city, and in respect to which such owners had sued the city. The evidence for the plaintiff tends to prove that the reasonable value of his services is $6,070.06, and there is no evidence to the contrary. It is not specified as ground for a new trial, nor assigned as error, that the damages are excessive, nor is it contended by appellant’s counsel that the employment of appellee was, in any instance, unauthorized, and it is obvious that services such as he rendered are necessary in the class of cases in which' he was employed.

The only reasons urged by counsel for appellant for reversal of the judgment are, first, “ The verdict and judgment are not supported by the evidence,” and second, “ The court erred in refusing leave to appellant to file a special plea of the statute of limitations.” The suit was commenced June 24, 1897. A bill of particulars was filed June 2,1898. An amendment thereto was filed October 12, 1898, and a further, amendment December 8,1898. The bill of particulars, as amended, sets forth, by items, and with sufficient particularity, the matters in respect to which appellee claims to have performed the services in question. The trial commenced September 30, 1901. After one witness for the appellee had been examined in chief and cross-examined at considerable length,appellant’s attorney moved the court for leave to file a plea of the statute of limitations, presenting such a plea in writing,- which motion the court overruled. The motion was not supported by affidavit, or otherwise, showing any excuse for not filing the plea earlier, and there was no abuse of discretion by the court in overruling the motion. Fisher v. Greene, 95 Ill. 94; Dow v. Blake, 148 Ib. 76, 88; Millikin v. Jones, 77 Ib. 372; C. & E. I. R. R. Co. v. O’Connor, 119 Ib. 586, 595.

Counsel for appellant contend that appellee’s services were legally payable only from a special fund, and that there is no evidence that there is such fund. This contention is based on the following, which occurred on the trial. Appellant’s attorney offered in evidence certain petitions, for the purpose, as he stated, of showing that in cases where the improvements were made by special assessment, the ordinance provided that all costs should be paid out of the special assessment fund. The court being averse to the admission in evidence of the petitions, it was finally admitted by appellee’s attorney that, in each of the so-called assessment cases, the ordinance provided that, the whole cost should be paid by special assessment. This admission was, apparently, made with reference to the cases to which the offered petitions referred, and the petitions not being in the record, we have no means of knowing what the cases were. It is manifest from the record that none of the services performed by appellee were performed in strictly special assessment cases. Such of his services as were not performed in suits brought by the owners of property damaged by public improvements, made by the city prior to the performance of appellee’s services, must have been performed in condemnation proceedings instituted or contemplated by the city; because in the case of special assessments for the improvement of streets or alleys already opened, damages to buildings or other structures are not contemplated, and therefore no estimate of damages is required. Therefore, by special assessment cases, counsel for appellant doubtless mean cases in which it was provided by ordinance that the compensation awarded in condemnation proceedings for public improvements may be raised by special assessment, as provided by section 53 of article 9 of the municipal incorporation law,- which was in force when the services in question were performed. 1 S. & C.’s Stat. 1896, p. 778, paragraph 169. That section authorizes the filing of a supplemental petition, praying the court to cause an assessment to be made for the purpose of raising the amount necessary to pay the compensation and damages awarded for the property taken or damaged, with the costs of the proceeding, etc. The section further provides :

“ The said court shall have power, at any time after such supplemental petition shall have been filed, to appoint three commissioners to make such assessment, and to ascertain, as near as may be, the costs incurred to the time of such appointment, and the probable further costs of the proceedings, including therein the estimated costs of making and collecting such assessment, and shall direct such costs to be included'by such commissioners in making said assessment.”

' Appellant’s counsel, if we understand them, contend that the costs of a condemnation proceeding include the expense of services suchas those performed by appellee; that it must be conclusively presumed that compensation for appellee’s services was included in the assessments made on the supplemental petitions, and that he can not recover, except on proof that the special assessments were collected.

We are of opinion that the word “ costs,” as used in the section, does not include the expense of employing a person to estimate the damage to buildings and other structures by the improvement, for the making of which the supposed prior condemnation proceedings were instituted. By a former city charter the estimate of the expense of an improvement requiring the taking or damaging of private property, was authorized to be assessed against property benefited by the improvement, but the charter was silent as to costs. Tuley’s Laws and Ordinances, 1873, p. 440 et sequens. The court held that costs could not be assessed; Morris v. City of Chicago, 11 Ill. 650; Canal Trustees v. same, 12 Ib. 403.

These cases clearly distinguish between expenses and costs.

John Adair, who was special assessment attorney for the city from May 1, 1895, till May 1, 1897, testified, in substance :

“ The expenses incident to opening these streets and assessing damages were paid by vouchers dravvn on what was known as special Fund W. This was a special assessment fund. The expenses of opening streets, etc., were paid by warrants drawn on said Fund W. They did not come out of the general fund. This Fund W was an arbitrary six per cent which was added to all special assessments for the purpose of covering court costs .and other incidental expenses, such as witness fees, etc. It was six per cent of the amount of the assessment, whether a special assessment for the purpose of paying for public improvements or any of other divers assessments; whether it was an assessment for the purpose of raising a fund to pay the award in condemnation cases or not. It was not part of the general fund of the city.

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Bluebook (online)
105 Ill. App. 353, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-v-cook-illappct-1903.