Kimball v. City of Chicago

97 N.E. 257, 253 Ill. 105
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 97 N.E. 257 (Kimball 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
Kimball v. City of Chicago, 97 N.E. 257, 253 Ill. 105 (Ill. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hand

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a bill in chancery filed by appellants to restrain the city of Chicago, the appellee, from taking possession of or from in any way interfering with the possession, use, enjoyment and control by the appellants of a strip of land sixteen feet wide lying between the south line of the right of way of the Chicago and Great Western Railroad Company and the north line of blocks i and 6 in D. S. Place’s addition to the city of Chicago, being a subdivision of the east half of the south-west quarter of section 15, township 39, north, range 13, east of the third principal meridian, lying south of the right of way of the Chicago and Great Western railroad, except the west thirty-three feet thereof. An answer and replication were filed and a decree was entered dismissing the bill for want of equity, and an appeal has been prosecuted to this court.

The following sketch taken from the plat shows the locus in quo:

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It appears from the record that on March 28, 1890, George P. Stodder executed a plat of said premises, which were described as D. S. Place’s third addition to Chicago; that on the same day Sylvester N. Howard, a surveyor, certified that he had surveyed said premises and had subdivided the same into lots, blocks, streets and alleys, all of which were correctly represented upon the plat, to which his certificate was attached; that on the same day the Greeley-Carlson Company, by Gustaf H. Carlson, certified that it had platted said subdivision in accordance with said survey ; that on the 29th day of March, Hiram Holbrook Rose, trustee, attached his approval to said plat; that on the 5th day of April George P. Stodder personally appeared before Prank R. Rindop, a notary public, and certified tnat he was the owner on that day of said land and acknowledged the plat; that on April 9 the plat was examined by the city examiner of subdivisions and approved, and on the nth day of April, 1890, the plat was filed for record and recorded in the recorder’s office of Cook county.

The question to be determined upon this record is, was the strip of land situated between the south line of the right of way of the Chicago and Great Western Railroad Company and the north line of blocks 1 and 6 of said subdivision dedicated as a public alley on said plat of said subdivision, and if it was so dedicated was such offer of dedication accepted by the city? In other words, is said strip one of the public alleys of the city of Chicago and under the control of the city, or is it 'the private property of the owners of the lots in blocks 1 and 6 of said subdivision?

It further appears from the record that on April 3, 1890, George F. Stodder and wife executed a deed to Samuel Kerr of all their interest in that part of the east half of the south-west quarter of section 15, aforesaid, lying south of the right of way of the Chicago and Great Western Railroad Company, except the west thirty-three feet thereof; that said deed was acknowledged by the grantors on April 4 and was recorded on June 21, 1890; that on August 4, 1890, Samuel Kerr conveyed all the lots in blocks 1 and 6 in said subdivision to John C. Schumacher, and that the present owners of the lots in blocks 1 and 6 hold their title through mesne conveyances from said John C. Schumacher; that on May 1, 1910, Samuel Kerr quit-claimed said strip between the right of way of the Chicago and Great Western Railroad Company and the north line of blocks 1 and 6 to William C. Coburn, the attorney for the appellants and the adjoining lot owners, and he on the same day quit-claimed the strip to his clients, who owned lots adjoining said strip, and that the strip was immediately enclosed by fences by the respective lot owners with their lots, and this bill was then filed.

The first contention of the appellants is, that George F. Stodder was not the owner of the east half of the southwest quarter of section 15, aforesaid, at the time D. S. Place’s Third addition to Chicago was platted, and did not, therefore, have the right to subdivide said land, as on the third day of April he had conveyed the same to Samuel Kerr and the plat was not completed and recorded until April 11. The deed to Kerr bore date of April 3, was acknowledged April 4 and recorded June 21, and the presumption is that the deed was delivered on its date. That presumption is one of fact, however, and is rebuttable, and we think the presumption of delivery on the date of the deed is rebutted by reason of the fact that after the date of the deed, but before it was recorded, George F. Stodder certified before an official authorized to take his acknowledgment, that on the 5th day of April, and subsequent to the date of the deed to Kerr, he was the owner of the said premises. If, however, the presumption of delivery was not rebutted by that fact and Stodder was not the owner of said premises at the time he caused the land to be subdivided, that fact would only go to the question whether the plat filed by him was a statutory plat and conveyed the fee of the streets and alleys to the city of Chicago, or a common law plat; and from the view we take of this case it is immaterial whether said plat is to be treated as a statutory or common law plat, as Kerr immediately recognized the said plat by making conveyances with reference thereto, and he and his grantees are estopped to deny that said plat is at least a good common law plat of said subdivision, and if said strip was offered by said plat to be dedicated as a public alley, and it was accepted by the city as a public alley before the offer of dedication was withdrawn, this bill cannot be maintained.

It is next contended that said plat did not constitute an offer by Stodder to dedicate said strip to the city as a public alley, as said strip was not marked or designated upon the plat as an alley. It is, we think, clear from the plat that said strip, although not marked as such on the plat by the word “alley,” was intended by the plattor to be dedicated to the city as an alley. The width of the alley at each street intersection is marked with the figures “16,” which figures, we think, were placed upon said plat to designate the width of said strip to be sixteen feet, and the street lines where they intersect said strip north o.f blocks I and 6 do not cross said strip, as they would had it not been the intention of the plattor to dedicate said strip to the public as an alley,,—that is, the strip at each street intersection is left open and connects directly with the street, so that travel can pass from either of the three streets of said subdivision along blocks i and 6 upon said strip without crossing any line or lines upon said plat, which would indicate an intention on the part of the plattor, we think, to connect said strip at each street intersection in said subdivision, and to indicate that said strip had been left open as an alley, as plainly as though the strip had been marked with the word “alley” upon the plat. We therefore conclude that the strip in question was designated upon the face of the plat as an alley. We take it there is no difference between the rule applicable to the dedication of an alley and that applicable to the dedication of a street, and it was so held in VanWitsen v. Gutman, 79 Md. 405, where, at page 405 of the opinion, the court said: “It is thought that no one will suppose that there can be any difference between the modes of dedicating a public alley and a public street.”

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Bluebook (online)
97 N.E. 257, 253 Ill. 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimball-v-city-of-chicago-ill-1911.