City of Chicago v. Rumsey

87 Ill. 348
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 87 Ill. 348 (City of Chicago v. Rumsey) 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. Rumsey, 87 Ill. 348 (Ill. 1877).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is an action on the case, by Julian S. Rumsey against the City of Chicago, for damages alleged to have been sustained to real estate in consequence of the construction of a tunnel under the Chicago river, in La Salle street.

The city was empowered, by legislative authority, to construct the tunnel. An ordinance directing its construction was duly adopted by the common council, and the work was done by a contractor, pursuant to plans, profiles and specifications of the city, and under the direction and supervision of its engineer, with all reasonable dispatch, skill and care. Mo claim is made that Rumsey was injured by the manner in which the work was done, or that his property sustained any direct physical injury by reason of the construction. The right to recover is based solely upon a claimed reduction of the market value of his property, and loss of rents, because of the obstruction to the adjacent street, by the mere act of constructing the tunnel therein.

Before the construction of the tunnel, La Salle street was eighty feet in width, of which, sixteen feet in width, adjoining to Rumsey’s property, was devoted to a sidewalk. In constructing the tunnel, this sidewalk was narrowed to eight feet in width. About twenty feet of the central part of the street is occupied by the tunnel, leaving upon each side of it about sixteen feet in width of the street, in addition to the sidewalks, unaffected, and used for street purposes, the same as before the construction of the tunnel. Opposite this property, the tunnel is from twelve to 'fifteen feet in depth, but is- guarded by parapet walls, rising to a sufficient heighth for that purpose above the grade of the street.

The tunnel is for the accommodation of all travel to which an ordinary street is appropriate, and supplies the place of a bridge for passage from one side of the river to the other. There is no claim that it is improperly constructed, as respects engineering or workmanship, nor that the street has not been kept in a proper state of repair, as improved by the tunnel, nor that it has been or is the cause of any direct physical injury to Rumsey’s property. ‘ Access 'is still afforded the property, on the side adjacent to LaSalle street, by the eight feet sidewalk and the sixteen feet of street unaffected by the tunnel, but it is impossible to pass from it directly across the street, in consequence of the tunnel and its protecting parapet walls. Rumsey had judgment for $19,000, and the record is brought here by the appeal of the city.

We shall endeavor to limit what we may say to the case actually presented by the record; and, in the view that we take of it, it will, therefore, be necessary to determine, first, in whom was the fee of the street, at the point affected by the controversy; and, secondly, is the damage complained of to be regarded as caused by the city before or subsequent to the adoption of the present constitution.

1st. Rumsey holds possession of the property under a deed executed on the 25th of February, 1854, conveying it to him by this description: “ Beginning at a point on the east line of lot one, in block thirty-three, original town of Chicago, one hundred and forty feet from the north-east corner of said lot, running thence south along the line of said lot to the alley, thence west seventy-two feet, thence north forty feet, more or less, to a point, and west of the point of beginning, thence east to the place of beginning.”

It would, therefore, seem that he could have had no reversionary right in the soil of the street, for an injury for which he might recover, whether the fee in the street was in the city or in some other party; for, notwithstanding the general presumption that a conveyance bounded on a street or highway carries the fee in the street or highway to the center, the owner may convey the adjoining land without the soil under the street or highway, or the soil under the street or highway without the adjoining land. “ If the soil under the street or highway passes by a deed of the adjoining land, it passes as parcel of the land, and not as an appurtenant.” Here the boundary is fixed by such express terms as necessarily exclude any presumption that it was intended to pass any interest in the soil under the street. 3 Kent’s Com. (8 ed.) 534; Gebhardt v. Reeves, 75 Ill. 307; Helm v. Webster, 85 id. 116.

But it is unnecessary to lay much stress upon this view. We are satisfied that the fee of LaSalle street, adjacent to Rumsey’s property, is either in the State or the city of Chicago, for the use of the public, and, therefore, Rumsey can have no legal interest in it, except in common with the public.

The portion of the city of Chicago in which Rumsey’s property is located was laid out by Wm. F. Thornton, W. B. Archer and G. S. Hubbard, commissioners of the Illinois and Michigan Canal; and the first sale of lots commenced on the 20th day of June, 1836. The land was donated to the State by act of Congress approved March 2, 1827, subject to the disposal of the legislature, to aid “in opening a canal to unite the waters of the Illinois river with those of Lake Michigan; ” and power was given the State to sell and convey the whole or any part of the lands so donated, and to give titles in fee simple therefor. There can be no question but that this donation, when accepted, vested the State with all the title the general government had to these lands'; in other words, invested it with the highest title Known to our law—an absolute fee simple title.

By the 22d section of an act of the General Assembly, approved January 9, 1836, entitled “An act for the construction of the Illinois and Michigan Canal,” it was made the duty of the board of commissioners of the Illinois and Michigan Canal to “ examine the whole canal route, and select such places thereon as may be eligible for town sites, and cause the same to be laid off into town lots; ” and they were directed to cause the canal lands in or near Chicago, suitable therefor, to be laid off into town lots. The 23d section contains this language: “And the said board of canal commissioners shall, on the 20th day of June next, proceed to sell the lots in the town of Chicago, * * * * as. also fractional. section 15, adjoining the toAvn of Chicago, it being first laid off and subdivided into town lots, streets and alleys, as, in their best judgment, will best promote the interests of said canal fund.”

Title to the purchaser at such sale, it is provided by the 27th section, shall be conveyed by patent, signed by the Governor and countersigned by the Secretary of State, with the seal of the State annexed.

The 13th section of an act to amend the act last referred to, approved March 2, 1837, requires the commissioners elected under that act to cause the plats of the towns of Chicago and Ottawa, by which they were governed in selling lots in said towns, to be recorded, with the certificates of the late canal commissioners endorsed thereon as to the identity of the plats; and provides that “ the plats of said towns, or certified copies thereof, shall be admitted as evidence in all courts or places whatsoever.”

. The plat of the town of Chicago, of which a copy is in evidence, is certified by “ Wm. F. Thornton, W. B. Archer and G. S.

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Bluebook (online)
87 Ill. 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-v-rumsey-ill-1877.