City of Chicago v. Megartney

172 Ill. App. 586, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 574
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 3, 1912
DocketGen. No. 16,969
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 172 Ill. App. 586 (City of Chicago v. Megartney) 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. Megartney, 172 Ill. App. 586, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 574 (Ill. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Fitch

delivered the opinion of the court.

In July, 1893, the City Council of the city of Chicago passed an ordinance providing for the opening and widening of South Park avenue between Garfield boulevard and Fifty-sixth street by condemning the east thirty-seven feet of three lots owned by appellant and others. One section of the ordinance provides that “said improvement shall be made and the cost thereof paid for by special assessment to be levied upon the property benefited thereby to the amount that the same may be legally assessed therefor, and the remainder of such cost to be paid by general taxation, in accordance with Article 9” of the City and Village Act of 1872. In pursuance of the provisions of that act a petition was filed in the Circuit Court, praying that the just compensation to be awarded to the several owners and parties interested in the property proposed to be taken or damaged for said improvement be ascertained by a jury. Separate trials were had and verdicts rendered finding the aggregate value of the several tracts required to be taken for the improvement to be $19,499.88, and in June and October, 1894, judgments were entered on the verdicts. These judgments, after reciting the several amounts awarded by the jury as just compensation for the parcels of land proposed to be taken, provided “that upon payment to the county treasurer of Cook county, Illinois, of the said several sums of money for the use of the owner or owners of any or each of the said lots,” or upon proof made of payment of the same to such owners, “the city of Chicago shall have the right at any time thereafter to take possession of and damage the property in respect to which such compensation shall have been so paid or deposited.” Later, appellant became the owner, by assignments filed of record, of all of the awards included in the several judgments. Pending these proceedings, by an agreement between the city and land owners, the city was allowed to take possession of the tracts needed for the opening of the street, to lay water pipes therein and to pave the street, upon the understanding that the city would proceed with the pending condemnation and special assessment proceedings, to ascertain the value of the land taken and to collect the amount of benefits accruing therefrom.

In December, 1894, the city filed a supplemental petition under Section 53 of Article 9 of the City and Village Act, praying that a special assessment be levied to raise the amount necessary to pay the awards. Under this petition an assessment was made and returned for the full amount of such awards and costs, apportioned among the lots and parcels of property alleged to be benefited. A large part of tbe whole assessment was levied upon tbe parts of tbe land owner’s lots wbicb remained after taking tbe east thirty-seven feet thereof for tbe street. To this assessment objections were filed and sustained by tbe court. A second assessment proceeding was begun in 1895, wbicb after several trials upon objections filed thereto, was dismissed by tbe city in February, 1897. A third supplemental petition and assessment followed, to wbicb objections were filed by appellant and others. In July, 1898, this third assessment was confirmed as to all property except appellant’s, and tbe amount thus confirmed, $12,033.74, except $1,885, was paid from time to time, as collected, to tbe owners of tbe land taken. Tbe item of $1,885 was contested by tbe owner of tbe land against wbicb it was assessed and such contest was not finally determined until tbe Supreme Court in 1903 sustained tbe assessment as to tbe property there involved. Bass v. People, 203 Ill. 206. Notwithstanding this favorable decision, tbe city made no attempt to enforce tbe collection of this item of $1,885 for nearly seven years thereafter.

As to appellant’s objections to tbe third assessment, a trial was bad in 1898 resulting in a verdict which reduced tbe assessment against bis property about $2,300. Tbe city was granted a new trial, and nothing further seems to have been done until June, 1901, when tbe court sustained appellant’s objections on tbe ground that tbe question of benefits to tbe remainder of appellant’s lots bad been adjudicated in tbe original condemnation proceedings. Three years later, in 1904, tbe city sued out a writ of error from this judgment, and the Supreme Court, in 1905, reversed and remanded it. City of Chicago v. Mecartney, 216 Ill. 377. For some unexplained reason, no remanding order was filed in tbe Circuit Court within tbe statutory two years.

Meantime, in November, 1895 — thirteen months after the condemnation judgments were entered — appellant and two others of the land owners had brought suits in assumpsit against the city to recover the amounts of their awards. In these suits, they alleged (in amended declarations filed in October, 1897) that the city had begun supplemental proceedings to collect the amounts of the awards by special' assessment, but failed to prosecute the same with reasonable diligence and had abandoned such proceedings, whereby it was claimed a general liability in assumpsit had accrued. The city demurred to the declarations as amended. The demurrers were overruled and the city elected to stand by its demurrers; judgments were entered against it aggregating nearly $23,000 for the amounts awarded in the condemnation suit with interest. From these judgments the city appealed to the Appellate Court, which reversed the decision of the lower court and remanded the cases with directions to sustain the demurrers. (Mecartney v. City of Chicago, 150 Ill. App. 275; Thomasson v. Same, 150 Ill. App. 281; Phelps v. Same, 150 Ill. App. 281.) The Appellate Court held that the special assessment method of payment prescribed by the ordinance was exclusive and (in effect) that so long as the ordinance remained in force no suit in assumpsit would lie against the city to recover the awards until the city had collected the money by special assessment. In pursuance of the mandate of the Appellate Court, the lower court sustained the demurrers, and the plaintiffs in said suits electing to stand upon the declarations filed, the suits were dismissed at plaintiff’s costs, from which judgments the plaintiffs therein appealed to the Appellate Court, where the suits are now pending and undisposed of, in another branch of this court.

In November, 1909, appellant, as owner of all the awards made in 1894, filed in the condemnation proceeding a petition praying for “an absolute and unconditional judgment” against the city for the amount of such awards with accrued interest. The petition was amended in January, 1910, and, as amended, it set forth, in detail the foregoing facts regarding the entry of the condemnation judgments, the taking of possession in 1893, the subsequent unsuccessful attempts to assess a large part of the amount thereof upon the remainder of the lots of appellant after taking the part condemned, the great length of time consumed in such efforts and the final apparent abandonment of all effort to collect anything; it alleged that the city’s power to collect had been exhausted; that appellant’s rights had been grossly violated; that to deny him judgment in the premises after such a lapse of time and such proceedings, or to require him to wait longer for his money, would amount to taking his property without just compensation and without due process of law and would constitute “an impairment of the contract rights” of appellant, contrary to the provisions of the constitution of this state and of the United States.

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Related

Mecartney v. City of Chicago
194 Ill. App. 592 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
172 Ill. App. 586, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-v-megartney-illappct-1912.