City of Chicago v. Sawyer

46 N.E. 759, 166 Ill. 290
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 46 N.E. 759 (City of Chicago v. Sawyer) 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. Sawyer, 46 N.E. 759, 166 Ill. 290 (Ill. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

On May 10, 1890, appellant, the city of Chicago, by one of its contractors, entered upon an alley in that city and began plowing, preparatory to filling, grading and paving it as a public alley. Appellee notified the contractor and city officers that she claimed the east half of the north two hundred feet of the alley as her private property. Work was stopped, and the sidewalk, which had been taken up, was replaced. Appellee then put a fence across the north end of the alley, which was removed, and when she attempted to replace it she was prevented by the police. Thereupon, on May 13, 1890, she filed the bill in this case, praying that she should be decreed to be the owner of the strip, and that the city and the contractor should be enjoined from interfering with her possession. A temporary injunction was ordered and issued. The answer of appellant admitted complainant’s ownership to the center of the alley, and set up an uninterrupted user of the strip as an alley for more than twenty years by the public for foot passengers and vehicles. It also alleged that complainant had built three buildings abutting on the alley with reference to it as an alley, and had dedicated it as such, and claimed that the. strip so opened and used as an alley was subject to the public easement for an alley. Testimony was taken before a master, who reported in favor of complainant, and there was a final hearing on exceptions to the report. They were overruled, and decree was entered in accordance with the prayer of the bill.

The alley ran north and south through a block which was bounded on the north by Twenty-second street, east by Indiana avenue, south by Twenty-third street and west by Michigan avenue. The alley was about eighteen feet wide and about six hundred feet long. Its character as a public alley has not been questioned except as to the strip claimed by complainant and the north one hundred feet of the west half, which is claimed by the adjoining proprietor on the west side of the alley. This other proprietor also had a suit against the city concerning that part of the north end of the alley on his side which he claimed, and all testimony relating to either suit about either strip of land was taken together before the master and is brought up here in the record. The cases were not consolidated and the facts are not alike. The master reported the facts in the two cases together, giving the history of what was done by complainant’s neighbor affecting the other suit and on his premises. He mentions in his report the testimoiry of several witnesses tending to show acts of obstruction affecting the running of the Statute of Limitations, which were wholly upon the adjoining premises, to which complainant never had or claimed any title. Complainant had nothing to do with these alleged obstructions, and the greater part of the evidence is entirely foreign to this suit. By this means we have been compelled to examine at length the whole evidence for the purpose of extracting those portions which relate to complainant’s rights and separating them from the evidence for another party in another suit. That work shows the following results as to this case:

On February 23, 1858, complainant obtained title to the premises fronting on Twenty-second street and Indiana avenue, extending to the center of the block and embracing this strip. At that time the block was all prairie, but it was afterwards gradually occupied and built up. The alley was left open, and was in public use as early as 1861. About May 29, 1865, a written instrument was executed by owners of property in the block, dedicating the alley to the public, and this dedication was recorded; but complainant did not sign it, so that it was not operative as to her property. About that time the lines of the alley became distinct and well-defined throughout its length, and they so remained afterward. A building was erected on complainant’s property in that year fronting north, on Twenty-second street, and extending south along the line of the alley ninety feet, and was called the “Metz building.” There were two carpenter shops on complainant’s property facing on the alley, occupied by tenants, and there was a sidewalk two feet wide-along the side of the Metz building, running back toward the carpenter shops. The strip claimed by complainant remained open as a part of the alley in the condition described, and in constant, general public use, from the time it first began to be used, as early as 1861, until the filing of this bill, in 1890, unless there was some obstruction of it in 1871. It is claimed that there was at that time an interruption of the public use. The evidence of it rests only upon the testimony of Charles Reinheimer. He testified that he built an addition to a building for the adjoining proprietor on the west side of the alley in the year 1871; that while he was building this addition he piled the lumber which he used, on this part of the alley claimed by complainant; that there was a gate at that time across the north end of the alley at Twenty-second street, on this strip, with a padlock and chain on the gate; that the lumber was there five or six months while he was building the addition, and that after he finished it the gate was still maintained.. There was no other evidence of any obstruction, and complainant was not examined to show that she had any gate there or had interfered with the public use. The alleged lumber pile, if there at all, was not put there by complainant. It was not an obstruction created or authorized by her. It did not stop travel through the alley, and such places are frequently used for such purposes for the convenience of adjoining proprietors. Such uses are not intended or regarded as inconsistent or an interference with the public easement. But Reinheimer was certainly mistaken as to the obstructions. There were about forty-eight witnesses examined in all, and not one of them knew of such a circumstance as the lumber or gate being there, aside from him. His testimony was not in harmony with that of the other witnesses for complainant, and he was flatly contradicted by more than twenty-five witnesses, all of whom were apparently as credible as he. More than half of these witnesses derived their knowledge from constant use of the alley, and had fully as good opportunities for knowing the facts as he. There is but one possible conclusion—that is, that he was mistaken. Whether his memory was at fault or whether he got the alley confused with some other, is, of course, uncertain. There was a narrow alley running from this one east to Indiana avenue, on complainant’s land, from the rear of the ninety-foot building abutting on the alley. It does not appear whether there was any gate at that alley. But whatever the correct explanation of his error may be, it is incredible that all the other witnesses should be mistaken and he be right.

The entire testimony considered, there cannot be a serious doubt that this strip of land was open and used as a part of that alley from 1861 until complainant fenced it up, in May, 1890, when the fence was at once torn down. There was nothing to show that it was left open for private use, or that it differed in any particular from the rest of the alley south of it, which was unquestionably a public alley. The use was actual, open and uninterrupted for more than twenty years, and every one who saw fit exercised the right. The use was by the public at large,—by milk wagons, butchers’ wagons, and by every variety of travel with vehicles and on foot.

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.E. 759, 166 Ill. 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-v-sawyer-ill-1897.