Jones v. Town of Lake View

38 N.E. 688, 151 Ill. 663
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 38 N.E. 688 (Jones v. Town of Lake View) 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
Jones v. Town of Lake View, 38 N.E. 688, 151 Ill. 663 (Ill. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shope

delivered the opinion of the Court:

It is insisted that the act of the legislature, in force July 1, 1889, under which this proceeding was had, is unconstitutional, for the reason that it contravenes section 13, article 4, of the Constitution, providing: “No act hereafter passed shall embrace more than one subject, and that shall be expressed in the title.” And, second, that it is void, because the act of 1874, creating section 20, of which the later act is amendatory, was void under the foregoing provision of the Constitution, for the reason that an entirely new and independent subject, not embraced in the original act, was introduced by section 20; that said section, providing for the establishing, opening, and constructing a drive-way from the park by special assessment, introduced a new substantive matter, not pertinent to that contained in the original act or embraced within its title, and that the amendment of 1889, of the void section, was, therefore, itself void.

The title of the act of 1874 is: “An act to amend sections 6, 7 and 9, of an act entitled, ‘An act in regard to the completion of public parks and the management thereof,’ approved June 16, 1871, and to add two (2) sections thereto.” The two sections added were 19 and 20. By reference to the original act of 1871, it will be found (sec. 3) that the supervisor and assessor, “corporate authorities of any town in which any such park may be situated,” are authorized to institute proceedings to condemn lands for park purposes. The following sections provide the course of proceeding: Section 6 provides for a special assessment, by the supervisor and assessor, “upon the lands and lots within the corporate limits of the town benefited,” to pay the probable damages for taking the land, and costs, etc. The act of 1874, after amending sections 6, 7 and 9, adds sections 19 and 20. Section 19 is restrictive of the power of the supervisor and assessor. Section 20 authorized the commissioners of parks, desiring to open, establish and construct any drive-way from the park under their control, to make application to the board of trustees of the town in which it was proposed to make the same, if there was such board, or, if not, then to the supervisor and assessor of the town, for leave to open, establish and construct such driveway. And providing, that upon approval of the application, etc., by the supervisor and assessor, they should give authority in writing, for opening, establishing and constructing the same, in accordance with Art. 9 of the general law for the incorporation of cities and villages. The supervisor and assessor are “declared corporate authorities for the purposes of this section;” and it is expressly provided, that: “When any such drive-way shall be established, it shall form a part of such park, and be managed and governed as part thereof.” The title of the act of 1871 is, “An act in regard to the completion of public parks, and the management thereof.” The amendment of an act ex vi termini implies a change of its provisions upon the same subject-matter to which the original relates. It can not be seriously questioned, that the subject-matter of section 20 falls within the general purposes expressed in the title of the act of 1871. The original act, as we have seen, relates to the acquiring of land for park purposes, and the method of its acquisition; section 20 relates to identically the same thing, the acquisition of land for park purposes, through the same instrumentalities, adding only the right to improve the same as parts of the park. Under the park acts, as under this act, the boulevards and drive-ways leading to and from the public parks of the State are parts of the park system, and necessary to carry into effect the purposes for which the parks were designed. The act declares that the drive-way, when established, shall form a part of the park, and be governed and managed as part thereof, and it can not be said that any new substantive matter, not germane to that contained in the original act, is introduced by the amendment. The act of 1874 was not independent legislation upon a matter not embraced within the prior statute.

The title of the act of 1889 is: ‘ ‘An act to amend section 20, of an act entitled, ‘An act in regard to the completion of public parks, and the management thereof,’ approved June 16, 1871, and amendments thereto, approved February 18, 1874, and May 28, 1881.” The most casual examination shows that the amendments of 1874 and 1881, to the original act of June 16, 1871, as we have seen, relate to the same subject-matter, and are germane to the purposes and objects of the original act. The title of the act of 1889 shows an intention to amend the act of 1871, as amended in 1874, by the addition of section 20. Not only is reference made to the former act by its title, but it is to be amended as amended by the subsequent statutes named. Not only is the subject of the amendment embraced within the general words of the title, but by reference to the section sought to be amended the specific purpose was pointed out. The title of the act is sufficiently comprehensive, within itself, to reasonably indicate the objects which it assumes to affect, and this is all that is required by the constitutional provision invoked. People ex rel. v. Hazelwood, 116 Ill. 327, and cases cited. What is here said disposes of the contention of counsel that the act of 1889 was void, because purporting to amend section 20, of the act of 1871, when there was no such section. The act of 1871, as amended by the act of 1874, and by the act of 1881, contained section 20, and this is the section to be amended, specifically pointed out by the title of the act of 1889.

By the statute, the application of the park commissioners for leave to open, establish and construct the drive-way from the park, is required to be made to the board of trustees of the town, if there be a board of trustees, and if there is no such board, then to the supervisor and assessor of the town, who are required to act. There is no evidence in this record that there ivas not such a board of trustees, and as the town was incorporated under the act of 1865, entitled, “An act to incorporate a board of trustees for the town of Lake View, in Cook county,” it is insisted that it must be presumed that such incorporation continues. Here, the officers acting are those elected by the people in towns organized under the general township .organization law. And the court is, therefore, required to take judicial notice of the powers of such officers, when thus acting, and that the town is within a county under township organization. County of Rock Island v. Steele, 31 Ill. 543; People v. Suppiger, 103 id. 434; Doyle v. Village of Bradford, 90 id. 416. In like manner the court is required to take judicial notice of the change of organization of any town or city from its original organization to organization under the general incorporation act for the incorporation of cities and villages, and the court will, in all such matters, advise itself as it shall deem requisite, and determine accordingly. Rock Island v. Cuinely, 126 Ill. 415; Doyle v. Village of Bradford, supra. We are, therefore, required to take judicial notice that the town of Lake View, as incorporated under the act of 1865, ceased to exist, and has become a city under the Cities and Villages act, and that, therefore, the application was properly made to the supervisor and assessor of said town.

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.E. 688, 151 Ill. 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-town-of-lake-view-ill-1894.