Field v. City of Chicago

198 Ill. 224
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 198 Ill. 224 (Field v. City of Chicago) 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
Field v. City of Chicago, 198 Ill. 224 (Ill. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from an order of the county court of Cook county confirming a special assessment against the appellants’ property to improve Woodlawn avenue by grading and macadamizing the street and putting in curbing and granite concrete gutter-flags. On April 25, 1900, the board of local improvements originated a scheme for a public improvement and passed a resolution describing the improvement, and fixing on Friday, May 11, 1900, at three o’clock P. M., as the time for the public consideration of the matter. Notices for the public hearing were posted up and mailed on May 5, — six days before the hearing. The board met on May 11 at the time and place fixed and postponed the public hearing until June 6, when it again met and adhered to its former resolution, except that a concrete combined curb' and gutter was substituted for sandstone curbing.

At the confirmation it was objected by appellants that ten days’ notice should have been given of the public hearing, and that a notice of six days was not a compliance with the statute, and Perry v. People, 155 Ill. 307, is cited as sustaining the objection. This question was considered in Gage v. City of Chicago, 196 Ill. 512, and it was there held that the statute did not contemplate a ten days’ notice, but a reasonable notice. The notice in this case was reasonable and sufficient.

The next objection is, that the notices were not, as required by the statute, (Hurd’s Stat. 1899, chap. 24, sec. 7, p. 363,) mailed “to the person who paid the general taxes for the last preceding year on each parcel fronting on the improvement proposed,” which, it is said, was in this case the person who paid the taxes for 1899, and not the person who paid them for 1898. The notices in this case were mailed May 6,1900, and to the person who paid the general taxes in 1899 for the year 1898. The provision of the statute under consideration requires notices to be sent by mail, “directed to the person who paid the general taxes for the last preceding year.” The taxes for 1898 became a lien on the property to be assessed from April 1, 1898, but the earliest date fixed for the delivery of the tax books and warrant of collection to the various township collectors was December 21, 1898, ahd up to May 1, 1899, there was no penalty attached to non-payment of the taxes before that time. At the June term of the county court the collector is directed to apply to that court for an order of sale of lands for delinquent taxes, and the owner is permitted to pay his delinquent taxes up to the day of the sale under the judgment of the county court, which, as a matter of common knowledge, is often as late as July or August. While these are the taxes levied for the year 1898, a large part of them was not, in fact, paid till the summer of 1899, and the statute itself contemplates the payment of these taxes during a period continuing several months after the lien for the taxes of 1899 had attached but before such taxes of 1899 could be collected or paid. The legislature'must be deemed to have been familiar with the usual course pursued in these tax matters. On May 6, 1900, when these notices were mailed, the taxes for 1899 were still in process of collection. Such taxes were the taxes for the then still current tax year, overlapping the new tax year, which had its inception April 1,1900, but which could hardly be considered as the current tax year for the purpose of paying taxes until the tax books were in the hands of the collector, and therefore the “last preceding year” was, when these notices were given, the tax year 1898, within the meaning of the statute.

This view is strengthened by a consideration of other sections in the same act. In providing for condemnation proceedings in connection with a public improvement, in section 19 the superintendent of special assessments is directed to file an affidavit that he has carefully examined the records in the recorder’s office for the names of the owners of record of the several parcels of land affected by the improvement, and that he has diligently inquired as to the residence of these owners, and that he has correctly stated such names and residences in the report of the commissioners; and he is further required to swear “that in all cases where he has been unable to find the residence of the owner of such record title, he has examined the return of the collector’s warrant for taxes on real estate for the preceding year, and has set opposite each such parcel, [the residence of] whose owner has not been found, the name of the person who paid the tax on said parcel for the preceding year, together with his place of residence.” Section 21 provides that notices “shall be sent to the persons last paying taxes upon such premises.” These sections contemplate using “the return of the collector’s warrant for taxes on real estate for the preceding year.” As long as the taxes are still in process of collection there can be no return of the collector’s warrant, and the search must necessarily be made in the tax books for the last preceding year, the collection of the taxes of which has been finished and the tax books closed and returned. This notice is a notice of proceedings in court, and we see no reason to conclude that the legislature intended to require a stricter rule as to notice ■ of preliminary proceedings before the board of public improvements than in the proceedings required in court. The statute may not be as clear as it might have been made, but it should receive a reasonable construction and one that will render it operative, and such we have endeavored to give it.

It is also contended that there is a variance between the recommendations of the board and the ordinance on the one hand, and the amended resolution adopted by the board at the adjourned meeting, June 6,1900, on the other hand, in this: that said amended resolution substituted a combined concrete curb and gutter for sandstone curbing. The ordinance provides for sandstone curbing on one block only, between Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth streets, and the rest of the way provides for the combined curb and gutter. One block was already curbed with sandstone curbing, and provision was made only for re-setting it. It does not appear that the property owner was injured, and it not appearing that the variance was “willful or substantial,” we are of the opinion no error was committed in overruling this objection. The ninth section of the statute provides that “the recommendation by said board shall be prima facie evidence that all the preliminary requirements of the law have been complied with, and if a variance be shown on the proceedings in the court, it shall not affect the validity of the proceeding, unless the court shall deem the same willful or substantial.”

It is alleged that the assessment roll was defective because no improvement district was specified in it, as required by section 39, at the time the order appointing the commissioner was entered. After such commissioner had been appointed the legislature amended section 39 by limiting the necessity for improvement districts to sewer assessments.

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Bluebook (online)
198 Ill. 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/field-v-city-of-chicago-ill-1902.