Dehm v. City of Havana

28 Ill. App. 520, 1887 Ill. App. LEXIS 349
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 25, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Ill. App. 520 (Dehm v. City of Havana) 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
Dehm v. City of Havana, 28 Ill. App. 520, 1887 Ill. App. LEXIS 349 (Ill. Ct. App. 1888).

Opinion

Wall, J.

By resolution adopted March 5, 1887, the city of Havana (incorporated under the general law) authorized its iK>mmittce on cemetery to purchase from Eeuben A. Henninger a tract of land lying near the city for cemetery purposes, for the sum of §2,000, and by another resolution adopted March 8th, the mayor and clerk were authorized to issue four city bonds of §500 each, bearing seven per cent, interest, etc., and deliver the same to said Henninger in payment for said land. It was also resolved that the ground should be surveyed and platted.

On the 15th of April, 1887, the appellant filed his bill in chancery against the appellees setting up the facts of said transaction and alleging that the deed had been received by the city and the bonds exchanged for the same.

The bill sought to enjoin the payment of the bonds and to cancel the purchase. A temporary injunction was obtained and duly served, preventing all steps toward the payment of the bonds or the improvement of the land. It was charged in the bill that the land, containing sixty acres, was largely in excess of any present or prospective need for cemetery purposes, and by reason of its location and quality was unsuitable; but, as seems to be conceded, the real objection was, that at no time before the purchase or the issuance of the bonds, had the city provided for the payment of a direct annual tax to meet the interest and principal of the debt thus incurred, in pursuance of the provisions of the act in force regulating such municipal corporations. Clause 5, Sec. 62, Chap. 24, B. S. It is not disputed that for the reason last stated said resolutions and bonds were void.

The city being advised of the illegality of its action, passed another resolution on the 30th of April, for the purchase of the land on the same terms, and for the issuance of the bonds as before, with a provision for an annual tax to pay. the same, which was designed to be in conformity with said statutory requirements.

On the 20th of May the appellant filed an amendment to the original bill for the purpose of preventing the payment of certain bills to one James Boggs and one John P. Faulkner, for work done by them in surveying said grounds, and a bill to one Benton, who was a member of the city council, for similar work on the premises, charging that there had been no previous order or appropriation for the services rendered by the said persons. On the 9th of May the appellant filed a bill in the nature of a supplemental bill to enjoin the payment of the bonds issued under the resolution of April 3Cth.

The city being advised that the action taken on the last named date should have been by ordinance rather than by resolution, abandoned the proceedings under said resolution and on the 4tli of June, passed an ordinance, No. 36, in supposed compliance with the statute, and also on the same day passed the regular annual appropriation ordinance, which contained provisions for the payment of the interest on the bonds for the first year. The mayor vetoed ordinance No. 36, but on the 2d of July it was duly passed over his veto by a vote of two-thirds of the council, and was then duly published, and was in force on the 18th of July, as was also the appropriation ordinance. On the 19th of July appellant filed his second supplemental bill to enjoin the delivery and payment of the bonds provided for by ordinance No. 36, but obtained no injunction thereon, and on the 20th of July Henninger again conveyed the land to the city and received the bonds provided for in ordinance No. 36.

On the 1st of August appellant filed his third supplemental bill praying that the deeds and bonds should be declared void, and that the city should be enjoined from levying taxes in payment of the bonds.

At the August term the whole controversy was submitted to the Circuit Court and was disposed of in one general order. The appellees had, on the 9tli of May, answered the original j bill, and had, on the 14th of May, filed a motion before one of ' the judges of the circuit, in chambers, to dissolve the injunction previously issued, which motion was overruled, and they had demurred to the second and third supplemental bills. The Circuit Court, by this order, sustained the demurrer to said second and third supplemental bills, (the first supplemental bill of May 9tli was abandoned by the appellant,) and as to the original bill and the amendment thereto, which the court considered, upon the answer and certain oral evidence, there was a decree that the complainant should take nothing except as to the Benton account, as to which the injunction was made perpetual. Errors are now assigned which question the propriety of the conclusions thus reached by the Circuit Court.

So far as the original bill and its amendment are concerned, there is no controversy that the relief prayed should have been granted to the extent of canceling the bonds issued under the resolution of March 8tli, but it is insisted by counsel for appellee that it is apparent from the record that those bonds had been returned to the city in exchange for bonds issued under ordinance No. 36, and hence there is no occasion to make perpetual the injunction issued as to them.

We are referred to the statement contained in the motion to dissolve the injunction on the 14th of May, to the effect that Ilenninger had the bonds first issued ready “ to be delivered back to the city ” whenever the bonds provided for by the resolution of April 30th should be executed and delivered to him. We are unable to find, anywhere in the record, that, as a matter of fact, or even as a matter of reasonable inference, those confessedly illegal bonds were ever surrendered, and, so far as shown by the record, they are yet outstanding. It was, therefore, but right and proper that the injunction should be made perpetual as to them, and no doubt the omission to do so was through a misconception as to the true state of the record.

This inadvertence is not surprising in view of the confusion occasioned by the frequent change of position, and the consequent change of the pleadings, as above set forth. It is urged that the court erred in not holding invalid the claims of Boggs and Faulkner, for surveying and platting the cemetery grounds, before the city obtained a title. When this work was done the city had a deed from Henninger, and it was by virtue of the resolution of March 8th, that the committee employed these claimants.

The justification for the payment of these bills now suggested is that there was an item in the annual appropriation bill, of the previous fiscal year, for “contingent fund,” under which there was a large unexpended sum in the treasury that had been provided for and collected under said appropriation bill and the tax levy ordinance of the same year, and which must he devoted to such expenditures as these.

Whether the provision thus made for a “contingent fund” was as definite and specific as the law requires, we shall not undertake to determine. We think it is sufficient to say that the fund having been provided for by the city and collected from the taxpayer without protest or objection, it is too late now to urge the point for this purpose, nor do we think that the fact that the city had a deed to the property which would, perhaps, or probably, be set aside, is a sufficient reason for refusing payment of these accounts.

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28 Ill. App. 520, 1887 Ill. App. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dehm-v-city-of-havana-illappct-1888.