Illinois Malleable Iron Co. v. Commissioners of Lincoln Park

263 Ill. 446
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 263 Ill. 446 (Illinois Malleable Iron Co. v. Commissioners of Lincoln Park) 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
Illinois Malleable Iron Co. v. Commissioners of Lincoln Park, 263 Ill. 446 (Ill. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a decree of the superior court of Cook county dismissing for want of equity an amended bill filed by the appellant, the Illinois Malleable Iron Company, to restrain the appellees from enforcing an ordinance prohibiting vehicles carrying goods, merchandise or wares upon Diversey parkway. The appellant claims that the enforcement of the ordinance constitutes a taking or damaging of its property for a public use without just compensation, in violation of section 13 of article 2 of the constitution. A demurrer was sustained to the amended bill, and an appeal was taken to this court on account of the constitutional question. 1

The amended bill alleges that in 1887, prior to the time the commissioners of Lincoln Park acquired jurisdiction over Diversey parkway, the appellant acquired a tract of land fronting upon Diversey parkway and established there its plant and place of business. The business consisted of the manufacture, sale and distribution of iron products, and in its usual course horses and wagons were kept upon the premises for use in delivering the products of the appellant to different customers in the city of Chicago and to' railway freight depots. The principal hauling was to the east, north-east and sbuth-east of the premises. As wagons are ordinarily loaded with products such as those of the appellant, paved streets are necessary for them to travel upon, and Diversey parkway, extending east and west, was a paved street its entire length. The north and south streets east of the appellant’s premises, which intersect Diversey parkway, in their order are Hemitage avenue, Paulina street and Marshfield avenue, the latter extending south to and beyond Wrightwood avenue, which is parallel to Diversey parkway. At the time of filing the amended bill, arid for many years before, all these streets were unpaved, muddy and almost uniformly unusable, so that appellant’s wagons used in hauling its products became stalled therein. The first north and south street east of appellant’s plant which is paved and usable by loaded wagons is Ashland avenue, which is the next street east of Marshfield avenue. On October 21,. 1891, the commissioners of Lincoln Park established, and have since maintained, Diversey parkway as a boulevard within their jurisdiction, and on July 23, 1902, passed the following ordinance :

“No omnibus, wagon, cart, dray, truck or other vehicle for carrying goods, merchandise or wares or other articles, ■except such as are engaged in repairing or constructing said parks, boulevards, parkways, streets or driveways, shall be allowed thereon: Provided, hoivever, that wagons or other vehicles carrying goods, merchandise or other articles to or from any house or premises abutting upon such boulevards, parkways or streets shall be permitted to' enter thereon at the cross-street nearest said house or premises in the direction in which the same are moving and deliver or receive such goods, merchandise or other articles, but shall not proceed thereon further than the nearest cross-street thereafter: And provided further, that at any time before the' hour of two o’clock in the afternoon of each day, delivery wagons having wheels with tires of not less than three and one-half inches in width, drawn by one horse, only, shall be allowed to proceed on and along said boulevards, parkways and streets. But this provision shall not apply to1 any.of the driveways within the limits of the parks. Any person violating any clause, section or provision of this chapter shall be fined in a sum not exceeding $100 for each offense,”

By reason of the impassable condition of the three cross-streets intersecting Diversey parkway next east of the appellant’s premises the appellant has attempted to use Diversey parkway with its teams and wagons to Ashland avenue, which is the first and only available route to and from places east, north-east and south-east of appellant’s premises with which the appellant transacts business, but these efforts have been frustrated by the appellees in the enforcement of the ordinance mentioned; the commissioners have terminated the license granted to the appellant for a term to use the boulevard, and have warned it that on account of the provisions of the ordinance it would not be allowed to use the boulevard; the appellant’s drivers and teamsters have been arrested and fined, and appellees have threatened to arrest and prosecute such drivers and teamsters whenever they attempt to use the boulevard in violation of the terms of the ordinance. The prayer is that the ordinance be declared unconstitutional and void and not applicable to the appellant, and that the appellees be enjoined from interfering with the use by the appellant of the boulevard.

The appellant contends that the ordinance, while it permits strangers to drive to and from the appellant’s plant provided they enter upon and depart from Diversey parkway by the cross-street nearest the plant, forbids the appellant from driving its wagons from its plant upon Diversey parkway. Literally, the proviso permits wagons carrying goods to or from premises abutting on the boulevard to enter the boulevard only at the nearest cross-street, and therefore a wagon which had departed from the boulevard and entered upon abutting premises could never get back without violating the ordinance, for it could enter upon the boulevard only from the premises and not from the nearest cross-street. For the same reason the appellant’s wagons, when they had once arrived upon the premises, could not leave them without violating the ordinance. We cannot give the ordinance so narrow a construction as to produce such an absurd result. While in accordance with the letter of the ordinance, such a construction would be contrary to its spirit, which is, that wagons carrying goods to or from premises abutting on the boulevard may use the boulevard for that purpose, but only between the cross-streets nearest, in either direction, to the premises.

The appellant’s principal contention, however, is, that as an abutting property owner it has a special right in the highway as a means of access to its property and of enjoyment of the free and convenient use thereof. The appellant does not question the jurisdiction of the commissioners of Lincoln Park over the Street or their right to establish and maintain a boulevard. What it complains of is the restriction upon appellant’s right to use the boulevard after it has been established, which amounts, as it claims, to a deprivation of its property without compensation. The power of the legislature over public streets, so far as the public interest is concerned, is absolute, and it may change their control at its pleasure, giving jurisdiction over them to the city, to park commissioners or such other authority as it may see fit. (McCormick v. South Park Comrs. 150 Ill. 516.) So long as private rights are not invaded, the legislative authority may vacate streets, may limit their use, and may permit their use for any purpose not incompatible with the object for which they were established. (West Chicago Park Comrs. v. McMullen, 134 Ill. 170; Barrows v. City of Sycamore, 150 id. 588.) Traffic teams may be excluded from a pleasure driveway. (Cicero Lumber Co. v. Town of Cicero, 176 Ill. 9.) The ordinance, so’ far as the public is concerned, was clearly a valid exercise of power by the commissioners, and the appellant does not claim that it was not.

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263 Ill. 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-malleable-iron-co-v-commissioners-of-lincoln-park-ill-1914.