City of Chicago v. Singer

66 N.E. 874, 202 Ill. 75
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 66 N.E. 874 (City of Chicago v. Singer) 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. Singer, 66 N.E. 874, 202 Ill. 75 (Ill. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a petition to the county court of Cook county for a judgment confirming a special assessment levied under an ordinance of the city of Chicago, to defray the cost of curbing, grading, and paving with vitrified brick, a system of streets on the north-westerly side of the city of Chicago, known as the “Spaulding avenue system.” The appellees severally filed numerous “legal objections” to the confirmation of the assessment. The court sustained the objection that the ordinance was indefinite and uncertain and dismissed the petition, and in the judgment set forth a certain provision of the ordinance that “all brick used must be equal, in every respect, to the specimen submitted by the bidders to the board of local improvements for test,” wherein, as the judgment recited, the uncertainty and indefiniteness consisted. The city has brought the record here by appeal.

The appellee Singer entered his motion in this court to dismiss the appeal as to'him for three reasons, viz.: First, that no final or appealable judgment or ordér was entered-in the cause; second, that no appeal is allowed to the city, under the Local Improvement act, from an order sustaining “legal objections” to the petition; third, that the particular ground of objection that the ordinance was uncertain and indefinite, upon which the court acted and entered its judgment, as appears from the judgment, was not preferred as an objection by the said appellee Singer, and that the only error assigned in this court is that the trial court erroneously sustained such particular objection. The first and second of these grounds urged for the dismissal of the appeal may be conveniently considered together.

Under section 48 of the Local Improvement act, being the act under which this proceeding was prosecuted, (4 Starr & Cur. Stat. p. 180,) the only objections to be considered and determined by the court are such as do not bear upon the questions whether the property of the objector will be benefited to the amount assessed against it, or that such property is assessed more than its proportionate share of the cost of the improvement. The section provides that objections such as are not to be considered by the court are to be set down for hearing at a future time to be fixed by the court, at which time such, objections shall be triéd by a jury, unless a jury shall be waived. All other objections are, however, according to the provisions of said section 48, to be determined by the court. . If determined adversely to the objector by the court, by an express provision of the section the order or judgment is not a final or appealable order unless the objector shall waive the other objections which, as we have seen, are triable by a jury. If the objections triable by the court without a jury are overruled, the objector, if he is not willing to waive further controversy as to the objections which are triable by a jury, must proceed to the hearing of such other objections before a jury, and upon a final disposition of all the issues in the case may bring the entire proceeding into review by an appeal perfected in compliance with other provisions -of the statute. The provision of said section 48 that the order entered by the court on the hearing of objections triable by the court “shall not be deemed a final disposition of any such questions for the purpose of appeal, unless objectors shall waive further controversy as to the remaining question upon the record,” has. no application to the right of the city to prosecute an. appeal from an order sustaining such objections and adjudging that the petition of the city for a judgment of confirmation be dismissed. The right of the city to prosecute an appeal from a judgment dismissing its petition is given by paragraph 213 of the act relating to courts, (Hurd’s Stat. 1899, p. 546,) as we expressly decided in City of Bloomington v. Reeves, 177 Ill. 161.

Nor is the third ground of the motion to dismiss the appeal maintainable. We find the appellee Singer filed thirty objections to the petition', among them being the objections that “the ordinance authorizing said-improvement does not specify the nature, character, locality and description of the proposed improvement,” and “said ordinance is void for uncertainty, insufficiency and informality.” These objections are broad enough to include the objection upon which the trial court acted and upon which error is assigned'in this court, viz., that the ordinance is indefinite and uncertain as to the description of the brick to be used in the improvement. The city might have applied to the court for an order requiring the objection to be made more specific, but in the absence of such application the objection must be regarded as sufficiently definite. (Davidson v. City of Chicago, 178 Ill. 582; Mead v. City of Chicago, 186 id. 54.) The motion to dismiss must be and is overruled.

We think the court erred in sustaining the objection that the ordinance was indefinite and uncertain and for that reason void. We do not think the ordinance was indefinite or uncertain as to the character of the brick to be,used in making the improvement. The ordinance, so far as necessary to be considered in order to determine as to the sufficiency of the objection, is as follows:

“The brick to be used shall be of the best quality of vitrified paving brick.
“The dimensions of the brick used shall be the same throughout the entire work in any particular case, and shall be not less than eight (8) inches in'length, four (4) inches in depth, and two and one-half (2$) inches in thickness, with rounded edges to a radius of one-quarter (j) of an inch.
“Said brick shall be of a kind known as re-pressed vitrified paving brick, and shall be re-pressed to the extent that the maximum amount of material is forced into them. They shall be free from lime and other impurities; shall be as nearly uniform, in every respect, as possible; shall be burned so as to secure the maximum hardness; so annealed as to reach the ultimate degree of toughness, and thoroughly vitrified, so as to make a homogeneous mass.
“The bricks shall be free from all laminations caused by the process of manufacture, and free from fire-cracks or checks of more than superficial character or extent.
“Any firm, person or corporation bidding for the work to be done shall furnish specimen brick, which shall be submitted to a ‘water absorption’ test, and if such brick show a water absorption exceeding three (3) per cent of their weight when dry, the bid of the person, firm or corporation so furnishing the same shall be rejected. Such ‘water absorption’ test shall be made by the board of local improvements of the city of Chicago in the following manner, to-wit: Not less than three (3) bricks shall be broken across, thoroughly dried and then immersed in water for seventy-two (72) hours. The absorption shall then be determined by the difference between the weight dry and the weight at the expiration of said seventy-two (72) hours.
“Twenty or more specimen brick shall also be furnished by each bidder for submission to the ‘abrasion’ test by the board of local improvements.

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Bluebook (online)
66 N.E. 874, 202 Ill. 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-v-singer-ill-1903.