City of Chicago v. Pittsburg, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad

146 Ill. App. 403, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 372
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 26, 1909
DocketGen. No. 14,258
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 146 Ill. App. 403 (City of Chicago v. Pittsburg, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad) 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. Pittsburg, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad, 146 Ill. App. 403, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 372 (Ill. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Chytraus

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question as to the liability of the defendant railroad company in this action is considerably involved. The action is predicated upon liability in assumpsit. It is not controverted that the city has paid out and expended the sum of $3,189.18 for the repairs upon the sidewalks in question. But, on the other hand, there is no pretense that the defendant has made any express, either oral or written, request of, or promise to, the city in relation to the expenditure.

The defendant has at all times denied liability and continuously maintained a position inconsistent with any request or promise of or to the plaintiff. How, then, can the defendant be liable to the plaintiff? How can assumpsit be maintained? The classifications of liability sustainable in assumpsit are: liability upon express promises or contracts and liability upon implied promises or contracts. Here we have no express promise. Implied promises are divided into promises implied in fact and promises implied in law. -Contracts based upon promises implied in fact arise upon circumstances being proven which, according to the ordinary course of dealing and the common understanding of men, show what is in law regarded as sufficient for a mutual intent to contract — that is, circumstances from which the intent to contract can be inferred. The law in such case presumes or implies a promise in fact from the acts and conduct of the party. For instance, when one procures labor to be done for him or accepts the benefit of labor, or procures goods, wares or merchandise, or accepts such, without any express request or promise of payment therefor, under such circumstances that in equity and good conscience he ought to make payment therefor, the law will imply a promise to pay whatever the same may reasonably be worth. Such contracts are implied from the facts and circumstances, although there may be no privity between the parties. First Nat. Bank v. Gatton, 172 Ill. 625. But there can be no assumpsit based upon a promise implied in fact against the expressed intent of a party. Here the defendant’s attitude has been such that it must be regarded as having consistently expressed its intent not to be bound and, therefore, the action does not lie upon the theory of a promise implied in fact. Contracts based upon promises implied in law are a legal fiction adopted for the purpose of enforcing legal duties by actions ex contractu when no contract, either express or implied, in fact exists. Concerning this class of contracts it is, under the head of “Contracts,” in Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, said: “ ‘Contract implied in law’ is, however, a term used to cover a class of obligations, where the law, though the defendant did not intend to assume an obligation, imposes an obligation upon him, notwithstanding the absence of intention on his part, and, in many cases, in spite of his actual dissent.” In the case of a contract implied in law no evidence of an express promise or of facts and circumstances—conduct—, from which an intent to promise may be inferred, is necessary, for such contract does not rest on evidence of any promise. It can, however, never exist except where there is shown a plain duty and a consideration, which consideration may consist in a parting with something by the party seeking to enforce such implied contract. Intention is not sought for or regarded. The ordinary privity of contract is here unnecessary as the privity is regarded as existing through the relative duty or obligation. The necessary promise is conclusively presumed in order that there may not be a failure of justice. In this class of assumptual obligations the duty defines and limits the contract, while in the classes of express contracts and contracts implied in fact the contract defines and limits the duty. In this class of action in assumpsit a delinquent husband is at common law bound to pay for the necessaries of his wife. And in I Chitty on Pleading, 351, in a note, in connection with this form of assumpsit, it is said: “It is clear, however, that if money be paid by a person in consequence of a legal liability to which he is subject, but from which a third person ought to have relieved bim by himself paying, the amount, a request by the party primarily in duty bound to lay out and expend the money,- that it be laid out and expended, will be implied.” Authorities cited, which upon inspection are found to fully sustain this rule in principle, are: Hales v. Freeman, 1 Br. & Bing. 391; Spragg v. Hammond, 2 Br. & Bing. 59; Pownal v. Ferrand, 6 Barn. & Cress. 439. Other cases in point are: Port Jarvis v. First Nat. Bank, 96 N. Y. 550; Churchill v. Holt, 127 Mass. 165; Sceva v. True, 53 N. H. 627; Hertzog v. Hertzog, 29 Pa. St. 465; Hunt v. Amidon, 4 Hill (N. Y.) 345; Jacobs v. Pollard, 10 Cush. (Mass.) 287. The cases of Village of Port Jarvis v. First Nat. Bank and Jacobs v. Pollard are interesting as exceptions to the general rule that contribution between tort-feasors will not be compelled. These contracts, implied in law, are sometimes designated ‘‘constructive contracts.” Speaking generally of the theory of implied contracts as a basis for an action in assumpsit, Prof. Walker, in Walker’s American Law, sec. 179, says: “There is, perhaps no branch of the law, which the mind of an unprejudiced person will contemplate with more satisfaction than that which regulates implied contracts. The broad principle which governs them may be thus stated: Every member of society has impliedly contracted to do whatever the law requires of him.”

Only, then, if we find in the case at bar a co-existent duty on the part of the plaintiff and on the part of the defendant, to make the sidewalk repairs in question, and if, as between the two, the duty rests primarily upon the defendant, will there be a liability on the part of the defendant to the plaintiff.

Consequently, it becomes necessary to inquire into the legal duties and obligations of the city and of the railroad company, relatively considered, in connection with this viaduct and the approaches thereto, and from these duties and obligations to determine whether the law raises an implied contract on the part of the railroad company to pay or refund to the plaintiff city the money it has paid out and expended.

The defendant contends for a contract, with the city, of exoneration from liability. For several reasons, however, we attach no importance to this agreement or “contract,” between the city and the defendant, so strenuously contended for and much argued upon by counsel for defendant. Clearly, under Northern Pacific Railway v. Duluth, 208 U. S. 583, the city could not bind itself by a contract that it would not require the defendant railroad company to maintain a viaduct in a street, and approaches to such viaduct, across the defendant’s railroad tracks. So far as can be seen from the correspondence in the record, contended to constitute the contract, neither party had in contemplation during the correspondence more than the construction of the viaduct. The repair or maintenanee of the viaduct or approaches was in nowise in the minds of the parties, as is plainly deducible. Waiver and surrender by a municipality of substantial rights is not to be lightly or readily inferred. No principle of the doctrine of estoppel in pais, upon which doctrine defendant would have to rely in this regard, sustains the defendant in its contention. The city officials, the commissioner of public works and city engineers, who acted in this matter, are not in such positions that they.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 Ill. App. 403, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-v-pittsburg-cincinnati-chicago-st-louis-railroad-illappct-1909.