Donahue v. Village of LaGrange

263 Ill. 607
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 263 Ill. 607 (Donahue v. Village of LaGrange) 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
Donahue v. Village of LaGrange, 263 Ill. 607 (Ill. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was an action of assumpsit in the circuit court of Cook county by plaintiff in error, for the use of Hárry E. Weese, against defendant in error, to recover a balance due on eleven special assessment bonds issued by the village of LaGrange, Illinois, November 18, 1895, to Michael Donahue, in payment for the construction of a system of sewers and drains in that village. A jury was waived and the cause tried before the court on a stipulation as to the facts. Judgment was entered in the trial court in favor of plaintiff in error, for the use of Harry E. Weese, for the sum of $2275.26. Defendant in error prosecuted an appeal from that judgment to the Appellate Court, for the First District, where the judgment of the circuit court was reversed and a judgment entered in that court in favor of plaintiff in error for $307.10, and the case is now in this court on a writ of certiorari to review the judgment of the Appellate Court.

From the stipulation of facts it appears that on June 24, 1895, an ordinance was duly passed- for the construction of a system of sewers and drains in the village, to be paid for by special assessment; that a petition was duly filed in and confirmed by the county court of Cook county for a special assessment amounting to $20,510, payable in ten installments, the first installment for $3500 and the remaining nine installments for $1890 each; that a contract was thereafter let to Michael Donahue at a price not stated in the stipulation, the work completed in accordance with the ordinance and contract and accepted by the village authorities. The contract provided for the issuance of bonds to the contractor in accordance with the law then in force, which should state the improvement and “the installments for which they are issued,' and shall be made payable in the order and manner that the said installments are payable,” and that all money payable under the contract should be payable out of the proceeds of the special assessment levied, and that no claim would be made against the village, in any event, until the special assessment made or to be made was collected, and that a purchase by the village of any special assessment certificates at any sale for delinquent special assessment, in default of bidders, should not be deemed a collection of such special assessment until the money due thereon was actually paid into the village treasury. Upon the completion of the work vouchers were issued to the contractor for $1567.21, payable out of the first installment of $3500, and bonds for $7200, drawing six per cent interest, payable out of the second and subsequent installments. Each of these bonds contained the following provision: “This bond is issued to anticipate the collection of a part of the installment [giving the number of the installment] of special assessment No. 99, levied for the purpose of improving Shawmut Avenue addition to LaGrange with sewers, which said installment bears interest from the 18th day of August, A.' D. 1895, and this bond and the interest thereon are payable solely out of said installment when collected.” The bonds payable out of the first four installInents were paid as the bonds matured, and plaintiff in error now holds eleven of the bonds payable out of the fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth and tenth installments, respectively, aggregating $3100. There is also another bond outstanding in the hands of an unknown owner for $600, payable out of the eighth installment. After paying the initial costs of the proceedings and vouchers to the contractor for $1567.21, there remained in the treasury such a balance from the first installment of the assessment that the village authorities passed a resolution allowing a rebate of forty per cent on the assessment to all those who had . paid, and ordered a credit of that amount to be given on the other uncollected installments of the assessment as they came due, the same to be credited on each installment of the assessment at the tiihe it was extended. This, however, only applied to the second, third and fourth installments, as before the fifth installment was extended the resolution was repealed, so that when the fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth and tenth installments were extended they were each extended for the full amount of their respective installments. Only a small portion of the fifth installment was collected and the same was returned delinquent and the property against which it was levied ordered sold, and for want of bidders was struck off and sold to the village and certificates of purchase issued to it, upon which a tax deed was afterwards obtained. The sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth and tenth installments were each extended in their turn, returned delinquent and the property against which they were levied ordered sold, and for want of bidders struck off to the village and certificates of purchase issued to it. No money, however, was paid or received by the village on account of any of these sales. The face value of all the property sold under the several installments of this assessment was $12,000, and the village tendered to plaintiff in error tax deeds and certificates of purchase for property having a face value of $5000 and a balance on' hand it had from the assessment, of $43.90, which plaintiff in error refused to accept. The total amount due plaintiff in error on his bonds, including interest to December 23, 1910, is $4642.13. It is conceded that all the money collected upon the installments named in plaintiff in error’s bonds has been properly expended except the sum of $202.09.

The trial court held plaintiff in error was entitled to have any surplus remaining from the prior installments applied on his bonds, and found that the sum of $1583.93, including the $202.09 above mentioned, had been realized from the assessment and illegally expended for rebates and in other ways, which, with the interest thereon at five per cent, would amount to $2231.36, to which should be added the $43.90 on hand, making a total of $2275.26, for which amount it rendered judgment against the village. On appeal to the Appellate Court that court held that plaintiff in error had no right to any part of the funds realized on the prior installment and limited his right of recovery to the amount realized on the respective installments out of which his bonds were made payable, of which it found $202.09 had been collected, which; together with the interest admitted to be due thereon, made the total amount due $307.10, and entered judgment in that court for that amount. The main question presented for our determination is whether or not plaintiff in error is entitled to have any of the surplus realized from the other installments of the assessment applied in payment on his bonds.

The provisions of the statute relating to the making of local improvements of this character, in force at the time this contract was let and the bonds issued, are found in sections 49, 63 and 64 of the Local Improvement act of 1887 as amended in 1891, (Hurd’s Stat. 1895, chap. 24, pars. 163, i68i, 168/,) and in sections 1 and 2 of the act of 1893. (Pars. 1680, i68/>.) The substance of said provisions is as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
263 Ill. 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donahue-v-village-of-lagrange-ill-1914.