Decatur Park District v. Becker

14 N.E.2d 490, 368 Ill. 442
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1938
DocketNo. 24476. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 14 N.E.2d 490 (Decatur Park District v. Becker) 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
Decatur Park District v. Becker, 14 N.E.2d 490, 368 Ill. 442 (Ill. 1938).

Opinion

Mr. Chibe Justice Farthing

delivered the opinion of the court:

The Decatur Park District filed its petition in the county court of Macon county to condemn for park purposes two tracts of land belonging to appellants, Clara M. and Ida M. Becker. Motions by appellants to dismiss were overruled. A jury viewed the premises and at the close of the trial returned a verdict for $7300, on which the judgment was entered. The landowners have appealed.

Appellee’s petition recited that the district was organized under “An act to provide for the organization of park districts and the transfer of submerged lands to those bordering on navigable bodies of water,” approved June 24, 1895, in force July 1, 1895. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1937, p. 2241.) It stated that the land was to be condemned for “park and playground purposes.” Appellants contend that appellee had no power to condemn land for playground purposes. There is no substance to this contention. The powers of the district as set forth in the foregoing act show clearly that the establishment of playgrounds is a park purpose. The words “and playground purposes” were not necessary, and may be treated as surplusage.

Appellants next insist that the allegations of the petition as to the necessity for condemnation, and the proof in support of such allegations, are insufficient. It was alleged that the lands were necessary for the use of the people for the purpose of parks and playgrounds, and the ordinance which directed that the land be acquired also recited that appellee’s board of commissioners had found that it was necessary to take such land for park purposes. At the hearing on legal objections appellee offered the ordinance in evidence and rested. Appellants moved to dismiss the petition on the ground no evidence of necessity had been offered, and their motion was overruled. They offered no evidence to support their claim that there was no necessity for condemning their land. The same situation was presented in Forest Preserve District v. Kean, 298 Ill. 37, where we said, at page 46: “Preliminary to the hearing on the question of value appellee introduced in evidence the ordinance directing that the property be acquired. Over the objections of appellant the court held the proof sufficient to require the parties to proceed to a trial on the question of compensation. Prom the averments of the petition and the terms of the ordinance it appears the land was sought to be acquired for public use and for no other purpose, and that it was of the character of land appellee was authorized to acquire for such use. Where the question of the necessity for taking the property is raised the petitioner is ordinarily required to make a prima facie showing that it has not abused its power in determining it was necessary to acquire the property.” We held that the introduction of the ordinance in evidence was sufficient to make a prima facie case.

In County of Fayette v. Whitford, 365 Ill. 229, at page 230, we said: “On a preliminary hearing such as this, the rule is that where the use to which the property is to be put is a public one the courts will not inquire into the question of its necessity, unless there is an apparent abuse of petitioner’s discretion.”

The legislature delegated to appellee the authority to exercise the power of eminent domain, and it had the right to determine whether there was a necessity for exercising that right. Its decision is conclusive unless a clear abuse of the right is shown. (Forest Preserve District v. Chicago Title and Trust Co. 351 Ill. 48, 51.) Our decision in City of Mound City v. Mason, 262 Ill. 392, is inconsistent with our later holdings as to the requirements of a petition for condemnation and has not been adhered to. See, also, South Park Comrs. v. Livingston, 344 Ill. 368, 371, and Village of Depue v. Banschbach, 273 id. 574, 579. The case of City of Chicago v. Lehman, 262 Ill. 468, holds that the burden of proving, “prima facie, at least” is upon the petitioner, but in that case the petitioner rested after introducing in evidence a report of a committee of the board of education showing that it had been unable to agree with the defendant on the compensation, and a recommendation that the title be acquired under the Eminent Domain law, and evidence showing that the report and recommendation had been adopted by the board of education. We held this was not a sufficient prima facie showing of necessity. That case is distinguishable from the present, for here the ordinance showed that the appellee had exercised its discretion and determined that a necessity existed. Appellants offered no evidence tending to overcome the prima facie case or to show that the appellee had abused its discretion. The court properly refused to dismiss the petition on this ground.

Appellants complain that the enabling ordinance was insufficient. They insist that the ordinance should have stated that the lands sought to be taken are suitable for park and playground purposes, and that a park had been created and established to be composed of the lands in question. They rely on Village of Depue v. Banschbach, supra, where the ordinance involved was held to be sufficient. The ordinance here is entitled, “An ordinance providing for the condemnation of certain lands in the city of Decatur, Illinois, for park and playground purposes.” Section 1 states that the board of commissioners found it necessary to take, for park and playground purposes, the lands described, belonging to appellants. Section 2 directed the attorney for the park district to make an offer to the appellants to purchase the lands for $5000. If the offers were not accepted, he was directed, by section 3, to institute this suit. The ordinance was sufficient. If the lands were unsuitable for park purposes, or if they were located outside the district, appellants could have made that appear at the trial.

Appellants, individually and as taxpayers, urge that the property proposed to be taken was not properly described in the enabling ordinance, because it failed to except a thirty-foot strip, on the north side of tract one, which is the south half of Grand avenue. The description in the ordinance and petition referred to a plat and was the same description by which appellants acquired title to and mortgaged the property. It is conceded that the quarter-section line is along the center line of Grand avenue, but appellee contends that the land proposed to be taken adjoins the south line of Grand avenue, instead of extending to the center line. Appellants contend that this thirty-foot strip of land lying in Grand avenue is part of the land described and proposed to be taken. To prove their claim they called S. D Ferris, a surveyor. He testified that the plat did not show any monuments, and it was his conclusion that the north line of the lots coincided with the quarter-section line; but he stated that if he had begun his survey by measuring from the south line of the half-section and proceeding north, he would have established the line of the land in question to be at the south line of Grand avenue, as contended by appellee. He thus assumed the very question in issue,— i. e., that the north line of the lots was in the center of Grand avenue. It was stipulated that petitioner’s exhibit 12, a blueprint, was the correct survey or map of the lands in question, and that it contained 6.63 acres. This blueprint shows the north line of the land to be taken was the south line of Grand avenue.

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.E.2d 490, 368 Ill. 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/decatur-park-district-v-becker-ill-1938.