Crystal Lake Park District v. Consumers Co.

313 Ill. 395
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1924
DocketNo. 14954
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 313 Ill. 395 (Crystal Lake Park District v. Consumers 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
Crystal Lake Park District v. Consumers Co., 313 Ill. 395 (Ill. 1924).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

Appellee, the Crystal Lake Park District, filed in the McHenry county court its petition praying that just compe.nsation to be paid for 26.85 acres of land to be acquired for a park for the use and benefit of the public should be ascertained. The appellants, the Consumers Company, as owner of the fee, and trustees under trust deeds securing incumbrances upon the property, were made defendants, together with the city of Crystal Lake and Michael Fitzgerald, tenant of a portion of the property. There was a preliminary hearing before the court of issues raised as to the legal existence of the park district, its power to condemn and the ownership of the land, which were decided in favor of the petitioner. Following the preliminary hearing there was a trial by jury and a verdict fixing the compensation in several amounts for different tracts, aggregating $19,250, and no damage to other lands of the appellants. The court overruled a motion of the appellants, the Consumers Company and the trustees, for a new trial and entered judgment on the verdict, from which this appeal was prosecuted.

At the preliminary hearing the petitioner offered in evidence proceedings in the county court of McHenry county for the organization of the Crystal Lake Park District and the passage of an ordinance by the park board to acquire the land in question for park purposes, and the objection of the appellants that the petitioner had no authority to maintain the proceeding was overruled. There wras a statute authorizing the creation of park districts and a proceeding under that statute for the organization of the petitioner as such a district. It thereby became a corporation de facto and entitled to exercise all the powers of a park district as against the appellants and all the world except the people of the State, and then only by a direct proceeding in quo warranto, in which those assuming to exercise the franchise emanating from the sovereign could be called upon to show their authority. Even when so called upon after user and under circumstances which would render it unjust the corporate existence could not be questioned. The proceeding to acquire land for park uses was collateral to any question as to the existence of the district, and such a proceeding cannot be defeated by an attempt to show that the park district was not legally organized. (Renwick v. Hall, 84 Ill. 162; Osborn v. People, 103 id. 224; Blake v. People, 109 id. 504; Lees v. Drainage Comrs. 125 id. 47; Brown v. Calumet River Railway Co. id. 600; Morrison v. Forman, 177 id. 427; Eddleman v. Union County Traction Co. 217 id. 409; Chicago and Western Indiana Railroad Co. v. Heidenreich, 254 id. 231.) The court did not err m overruling that objection.

The appellants moved the court to find and determine the titles of the defendants in all the property described in the petition, and the court heard the evidence respecting such titles. Included in the property was a tract called the “half-moon,” embracing the beach or frontage on Crystal lake, and as to that tract the city of Crystal Lake answered, asserting an interest in it by dedication, prescription and adverse possession as grounds for the inhabitants of the city and the general public for playgrounds, public entertainment, use and enjoyment. The court found that the Consumers Company was the owner in fee of all the lands sought to be condemned except the half-moon, and as to that tract it was stipulated that there was a suit pending in the circuit court of McHenry county in chancery, instituted by the city of Crystal Lake against the Consumers Company, in which the city claimed such dedication. The circuit court having acquired jurisdiction in the chancery suit to determine the question whether the city of Crystal Lake had an easement in the half-moon, the county court declined to decide that question and ordered the compensation for the half-moon to be paid to the county treasurer to abide the result of the chancery suit. The petitioner could not be postponed in acquiring all titles to the half-moon for a public use until the final determination of the chancery suit as to the respective interests, where the award would be disposed of in place of the property. It was not the province of the county court to pass upon the question of conflicting titles, which was already in the hands of a court of competent jurisdiction. The jurisdiction was to cause the compensation for the property to be ascertained and provide for the preservation of the compensation money as a substitute for the property. Chicago and Northwestern Railway Co. v. Miller, 251 Ill. 58; Eddleman v. Union County Traction Co. supra.

The city of Crystal Lake in its answer, besides claiming an easement in the half-moon, denied that the petitioner had any right to condemn that tract because it was already devoted to a public use for park purposes, and appellants say that the decision of the court was wrong, because property already devoted to a public use cannot be again taken for the same use. The city of Crystal Lake, which set up that claim, did not appeal but was content with the judgment. The appellants by their answer in the chancery suit and their answer and cross-petitions in this proceeding denied that the city had any interest in the premises, and they do not represent the city or any right or interest it may have. They are not entitled to raise the question.

It is alleged as error that the court admitted in evidence the files in the chancery suit, which were admitted to show the jurisdiction of the chancery court, but whether they were competent is of no importance, because the facts concerning the chancery suit had been stipulated.

The appellants, by their answer and cross-petitions of the Consumers Company and the trustees, alleged that they were the owners of 1140 acres constituting a large tract of land and including the property to be condemned, which was taken out of the center, with a frontage of 1452 feet along Crystal lake, and the remaining land not taken would be damaged and depreciated in value. The cause came on for trial on the petition and cross-petitions, and after the jury was empaneled it was stipulated that the property should be divided, for the purposes of the trial, into four tracts, to be known as tracts 1, 2, 3 and 4, and that the other lands described in the appellants’ cross-petitions should be known and referred to as tract 5. The half-moon was tract 3. Tracts 1 and 2 were slough and swamp land, where water stood and was stagnant in warm weather. At least 20 acres of the land was swamp and slough, and there were a great many muskrat houses on it, particularly on tract 2. The witnesses for the petitioner gave opinions as to the fair cash market value of the several tracts at the time the petition was filed and in its existing condition. The position of the appellants was that the swamp and morass could be filled at no very great expense and would then be suitable for subdivision and homes, and that this fact very greatly increased the market value. The evidence for the appellants was devoted to proving market values in view of the adaptation of the property to subdivision.

It is insisted that the court erred in permitting witnesses for the petitioner not qualified to give their opinions as to the market value of the property. Seventeen witnesses testified to such values and showed themselves to be qualified under the rules declared by this court in Illinois and Wisconsin Railroad Co. v. VonHorn, 18 Ill. 257, Keithsburg and Eastern Railroad Co. v. Henry, 79 id. 290, Johnson v. Freeport and Mississippi River Railway Co. 111 id.

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Bluebook (online)
313 Ill. 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crystal-lake-park-district-v-consumers-co-ill-1924.