City of Chicago v. Rogers Park Water Co.

73 N.E. 375, 214 Ill. 212
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 73 N.E. 375 (City of Chicago v. Rogers Park Water 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. Rogers Park Water Co., 73 N.E. 375, 214 Ill. 212 (Ill. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Ricks

delivered the opinion of the court:

In 1888 the village of Rogers Park contracted with one H. E. Keeler, his successors and assigns, for the establishment of a water-works plant in that village. Appellee, a corporation organized under the laws of this State, as the assign of Keeler, built and constructed a plant and system of waterworks. At that time Rogers Park was a small village containing some two hundred or three hundred houses. The contract between Keeler and the village was in the form of an ordinance, the provisions of which were accepted, and required that the plant should have a capacity, at the outset, of 1,500,000 gallons every twenty-four hours; that mains should be laid in the street, with proper hydrants for fire protection, and that the village would pay $575 annually for each mile of main up to the first five miles and $400 annually for each additional mile, which payment by the village included all the water rentals for water rights that were accorded to it. The plan and system for the water-works were prescribed by the village, and it was required that the pumping system should be such and the works so constructed that when completed the direct pressure should be sixty pounds at the distributing mains, and should be used and maintained with sufficient force to throw water ninety feet above the level through one hundred feet of two and one-half inch hose with an inch nozzle, from six different hydrants located on different mains. The water was'to be taken from Lake Michigan, was to be pure and wholesome and to be filtered, and the grantee was to make extensions of mains whenever called upon by the village to do so, in not less than 500-foot lengths. For the rental above named the village was to have all necessary water for fire purposes, for flushing sewers and gutters, for two public drinking' fountains for the use of man and beast, drinking water for each public school in the village, water for the use of the fire department and of the engine house, and steam for the operation of two air compressers of not to exceed ten horse power. The ordinance provided also that the village might, at the expiration of ten years, and at the end of any five years thereafter until the expiration of the privilege, elect to buy the plant, and provision was made by which a valuation should be fixed. The ordinance also contained a schedule of rates to be paid by private consumers. Appellee constructed and established a system and plant according to the provisions of the ordinance, and the same was put in operation in August, 1889. In 1893 the village of Rogers Park was annexed to and became a part of the city of Chicago. Up to the time that the matters arose which are involved in this suit, appellee had laid over twenty-two miles of mains in said village, and had complied with all the provisions of the ordinance relating to the construction and operation of the plant.

In 1891 an act was passed by the legislature, and approved and in force July 1, 1891, which provides: “That the corporate authorities of any city, town or village, now or hereafter incorporated under any general or special law of this State, in which any individual, company or corporation has been, or hereafter may be, authorized by such city, town or village to supply water to such city, town or village and the inhabitants thereof, be and are hereby empowered to prescribe by ordinance maximum rates and charges for the supply of water furnished by such individual, company or corporation to such city, town or village and the inhabitants thereof, such rates and charges to be just and reasonable. And in case the corporate authorities of any such city, town or village shall fix unjust and unreasonable rates and charges, the same may be reviewed and determined by the circuit court of the county in which such city, town or village may be.” (Laws of 1891, p. 85.)

In 1899 the city council of Chicago voted to purchase the water-works under the provisions of the ordinance under which they were constructed, and so notified appellee, but for reasons undisclosed by the record failed to proceed or to consummate the purchase.

In 1897 the city council of Chicago passed an ordinance regulating the rates to be charged by appellee, and John B. Fergus, a private citizen of Rogers Park, refused to pay water service or rates except according to the provisions of that ordinance, and brought mandamus to compel appellee to accept rates according to the ordinance. In that suit the validity of the act of the legislature conferring the power upon cities and villages to prescribe, by ordinance, the maximum rate was questioned, and it was contended by appellee that the ordinance passed by the village at the time the franchise or privilege was granted for the construction of the water-works system, in which the rates that should be .charged by appellee .were fixed, was a contract which should continue for the period of thirty years, and that if the act in question was valid it could have no application to appellee. That case came before this court for consideration, and the contention of appellee was denied and the act held applicable to appellee. (Rogers Park Water Co. v. Fergus, 178 Ill. 571.) From this court an appeal was prosecuted to the United States Supreme Court and the judgment of this court was affirmed. (180 U. S. 624.)

In 1902 the city council of the city of Chicago passed an ordinance which purported to be an amendment to the ordinance of 1897 but which is a complete ordinance in itself, in which it is provided “that the maxium rates and charges for the supply of water furnished by. the Rogers Park Water Company to the inhabitants of that part of the city of Chicago in which said company has been or may be authorized to lay water mains and supply-pipes are hereby established and fixed so as to be uniform and equal, in every particular, with those charged by the city of Chicago for water supplied from the city water-works,” and it imposed a penalty of $100 for each violation of the ordinance. Appellee then filed its bill in the circuit court of Cook county, in which it alleged that the rates fixed by the above ordinance were unjust and unreasonable rates, and asked that the city be enjoined from the enforcement of the ordinance.

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Bluebook (online)
73 N.E. 375, 214 Ill. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-v-rogers-park-water-co-ill-1905.