City of Evanston v. Clark

77 Ill. App. 234, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 395
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 13, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 77 Ill. App. 234 (City of Evanston v. Clark) 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 Evanston v. Clark, 77 Ill. App. 234, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 395 (Ill. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Mr..Presiding Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment against appellant and in favor of appellee for the sum of $4,696.25. The declara!tion consists of two counts; the first is trespass qucere clausum fregit, and the second is in case and sets forth in substance the passage of an ordinance by the village of South Evanston for the widening of Custer avenue in said village, condemnation proceedings for that purpose, the condemnation of certain premises of the appellee, a verdict and judgment awarding compensation therefor, the confirmation of an assessment to pay the cost of the improvement, the annexation of the village of South Evanston to the city of Evanston, the taking possession of the condemned premises by appellant, and neglect of duty on the part of appellant to collect the assessment, or pay to appellee the amount awarded to him as compensation, etc.

Appellant pleaded the general issue and specially that the ordinance ordering the improvement had been repealed, and the condemnation proceedings dismissed; that appellant had been in possession of the premises more than twenty years, and that the action was barred by the statute of limitations.

The village of South Evanston, by its board of trustees, passed an ordinance July 13, 1891, for the widening of Custer avenue, formerly First street, as alleged in the declaration, and November 27, 1891, the village filed a petition in the County Court, describing the property to be condemned for the proposed improvement, and praying that the just compensation to be paid therefor should be ascertained by a jury. The appellee is named in the petition as the owner of the lands herein described and sought to be condemned. Such proceedings were had in the matter of the petition that December 16, 1891, the jury returned a verdict fixing the total compensation to be paid for the premises at the sum of $4,075; January 5, 1892, the court, on motion of the village, by its attorney, entered judgment on the verdict, the judgment being in the usual form in such cases. January 11, 1892, the village filed in the County Court a supplemental petition setting forth the former proceedings, and praying the court to cause an assessment to be made to pay the compensation awarded, as above stated, and costs; that the costs should be ascertained and commissioners to make the assessment appointed, etc. The court, on the same day, appointed commissioners to make the assessment. The commissioners made- an assessment and filed the assessment roll in court, and February 5, 1892, an order was entered, on motion of the village attorney, that all persons objecting to confirmation of the assessment should file their objections on or before February 10th then-next. February 10, 1892, on motion of the village attorney,judgment by default was entered, and the assessment confirmed as to all premises in respect to which no objection had been filed. The only premises in respect to which objections were filed is described as “A strip of land almost 125 feet, including certain laid off lots extending on each side of the C. & FT. W. By. tracks, and embracing the same, lying between south line of Lincoln avenue and west line of Madison street in section 19, 44, 14.”

This piece of property is described in the assessment roll as being a part of the right of way of the C. & FT. W. By., and is assessed $1,950. The assessment against that portion of the premises claimed by appellee which was not condemned is $1,308. The total of all assessments is $4,486.70.

The village of South Evanston, prior to November 8, 1893, was annexed to and became a part of the city of Evanston and, at the last date, the city of Evanston passed an ordinance purporting to repeal the ordinance of November 16, 1891, ordering the widening of Ouster avenue. November 23, 1893, the County Court, on motion of the city attorney, entered an order dismissing the proceedings for widening Custer avenue.

July 24,1894, the city passed an ordinance for the paving of Custer avenue, which required the paving of a strip of the condemned premises of appellee fifteen feet in width and about 278 feet in length, and in the spring or early summer of 1895 the city paved said strip. The foregoing facts are uncontroverted.

Appellant’s counsel claim that appellee has failed to prove title to the premises in question. A link in the chain of title proved by appellee was a deed from one James F. Keeney to Joseph B. Leake, the latter being appellee’s immediate grantor. Appellant called Leake as a witness, who testified that he did not remember that the deed to him from Keeney was ever delivered to him, but the same witness, while admitting that the deed from himself to appellee was his deed, said he had no recollection of executing it. Leake, by executing a warranty deed to appellee, affirmed, as we think, the execution of the Keeney deed to him. It is not deemed necessary in ejectment, to prove the actual delivery of each deed in the chain of title. If it were, very few, if any, titles would be susceptible of proof. The village of South Evanston recognized appellee as owner of the premises prior to the condemnation proceedings, by negotiating with him for the purchase from him of the premises for a street, and in the petition for condemnation, and also in the verdict of the jury, he is named as owner. This is an admission by appellant that he is owner. Ry. Co. v. Teters, 68 Ill. 144.

Appellant claims that the improvement was abandoned by the ordinance of November 8, 1893, purporting to repeal the ordinance ordering it, and by the dismissal of the proceedings by the court November 23, 1893. While a municipal corporation may, after judgment in condemnation proceedings, abandon the improvement, such abandonment must be in good faith. C., R. I. & Pac. Ry. Co. v. Chicago, 143 Ill. 643; McChesney v. Chicago, 161 Ill. 110; I. C. Ry. Co. v. City of Champaign, 163 Ib. 524.

Appellant, July 24, 1894, after the alleged repeal of the ordinance and dismissal of the condemnation proceedings, passed an ordinance ordering the improvement of Custer avenue with a macadam roadway from the north curb line of Washington street to the north line of Oalcton avenue, the width of the improvement between the north curb line of Washington street and the north line of Oalcton avenue to be thirty feet in width, to wit, fifteen feet on each side of the center line of Custer avenue. The center line of Custer avenue, as the avenue had been used, was the half-section line, and the half-section line is the west line of appellee’s premises, so that the ordinance ordered the macadamizing of a strip of appellee’s premises fifteen feet in width and about 278 feet in length, which strip is a part and nearly half of the premises of appellee involved in the condemnation proceedings, and for which he was, in said proceedings, awarded compensation. The trial commenced December 30, 1896, and on the trial John H. Moore, assistant engineer in appellant’s department of public works, having been called as a witness by appellant, testified: “ The present condition of Custer avenue as to pavement, beginning at Madison street and extending as far north as the north line of Washington street, is that a fifteen-foot strip tying just immediately east of the half-section line is occupied by the city, by a pavement.”

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Bluebook (online)
77 Ill. App. 234, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-evanston-v-clark-illappct-1898.