Langlois v. Cameron

66 N.E. 332, 201 Ill. 301
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 66 N.E. 332 (Langlois v. Cameron) 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
Langlois v. Cameron, 66 N.E. 332, 201 Ill. 301 (Ill. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Peoria county setting aside a deed held by appellant, upon the bill of appellees.

The facts disclosed by the bill, so far as they are important for the purposes of this decision, are as follows': Illinois avenue, in the city of Peoria, runs east and west. Knoxville avenue crosses it, running north and south, and some distance west thereof Buckner avenue also crosses it. Lot 3, block 7, in Smith Frye’s addition to the city of Peoria, according to the plat of that addition, fronted fifty feet on Illinois avenue and extended south one hundred and fifty feet along the east line of Knoxville avenue. Immediately east of lot 3 lies lot 4, and still east of that, lot 5, each originally fronting fifty feet on Illinois avenue and extending south one hundred and fifty feet, as did lot 3. Twenty-five or thirty years ago these lots were divided, by conveyances, into the north half and the south half, each half fronting on Knoxville avenue seventy-five feet and extending east one hundred and fifty feet. Complainants have owned the south half of these lots since January 2, 1886, and have occupied the same since that time as their homestead, and paid all taxes legally assessed thereon. On February 2,1892, the city council of the city of Peoria passed an ordinance for the improvement of said Illinois avenue between Knoxville and Buckner avenues, to be paid for by special tax to be “levied and assessed, severally, upon the real estate, lots, blocks and parcels of land contiguous to said improvement, according to the frontage of said several lots, blocks and parcels, in accordance with the provision of section 9,” etc. By proceedings had in pursuance of that ordinance, commissioners appointed to levy the tax made and returned an assessment roll showing an assessment on said three lots, giving the frontage of each as fifty feet on Illinois avenue but not stating how far south they extended, and fixing the amount of each of five several installments on each lot at $42.05. That assessment was confirmed by the county court of said county. The bill alleges that no part of the south half of said lots abuts or fronts on said Illinois avenue, or-did at the time of the passage of said ordinance and the levy of said assessment; that complainants were not notified of such tax or the apportionment or assessment of the same, nor of the term of court at which a final hearing thereon would be had; that no such notice was mailed to them and that no proof of mailing of such notice appears in said proceedings; that the names of complainants do not appear in said assessment.roll as owners .of any of the property assessed or taxed in said proceeding, nor were either of them made parties defendant to the said proceeding; also, that on June 15, 1894, parts of said south half of. lots 3, 4 and 5 were sold for said special tax, in pursuance of which the defendant, Walter Langlois, obtained a deed, which was placed on record February 19, 1897; that they had no notice of any of the proceedings, the tax sale or the making and delivery of said deed until after the expiration of the two years' allowed for redemption, and that upon obtaining knowledge thereof complainant James A. Cameron explained, by letter to the defendant, the facts and circumstances of the case and forbade his attempting to take out a deed, and demanded that he cancel and return said certificate of purchase to the complainants so as to remove the cloud upon their title, which he refused to do. The prayer is that the deed be set aside as a cloud upon the complainants’ title.

The defendant answered, denying the allegation of ownership in the complainants; admitting the proceedings by the city of Peoria to levy said special tax; denying the allegations of the bill as fb want of notice; alleging the validity of his tax deed, and averring that complainants ought not to have the relief prayed in their bill for want of an offer to do equity by paying the defendant the amount he had bid for the lots, and also the sum of §134.07, special assessment for a sidewalk, which he alleged he had paid to protect his purchase. Replication being filed to the answer, the cause was referred to the master to take the evidence and report his conclusions. After taking the evidence he made his report, finding the facts substantially as alleged in the bill and recommending- a decree in favor of the complainants. Objections were filed to his findings, and overruled, and the same were renewed before the court by way of exception but again overruled, and a decree was entered setting aside and declaring null and void said tax deed, as against the complainants, as a cloud upon their title, and ordering the defendant, within five days from the date of the entry of the decree, to “execute and acknowledge and deliver a good and sufficient deed of conveyance, conveying the said real estate, and any interest by him acquired by virtue of said tax deed therein, to said complainants, and that in default of such conveyance John M. Niehaus, the master in chancery of this court, is hereby appointed special commissioner to execute such deed and make said conveyance, and he is hereby ordered to make such conveyance.” It was also decreed that the defendant pay the costs, and that in default of his so doing execution should issue therefor.

The record of the tax sales in the office of the county clerk relating to the sale of land in Smith Frye’s addition to the city of Peoria for the year 1894, introduced in evidence, as shown by the abstract, is as follows: “Report by county collector of revenue for the year 1898 of Peoria county upon which he has been unable to collect taxes due, and now, on the 22d day of May, 1894, files with the county clerk his petition for judgment and order of sale for such property, etc. On line 7, in column ‘To whom assessed,’ is the name of Julius S. Starr, part of lot south half, int. lot 3, block 7. Column ‘Special assessment’ shows two installments, one for §21.03 and the other §21.02, and §2.15 interest, then 19c. costs, total §44.39. Under column ‘Sale,’30c. Column ‘By whom purchased,’D. M. Combs. ‘Part sold,’ pt. ‘Date of Sale,’ June 15,1894. ‘Amount of sale,’§44.69. ‘Advertising fee,’ §1. Under column ‘To whom deed given,’ deed to Walter Langlois, February 15,1897.” Similar entries appear on the same record as to each of the other lots, 4 and 5. A part of the record of the delinquent list relating to lots 3, 4 and 5, upon which said gale was made, was also introduced in evidence, and the same, as shown by the abstract, is as follows: “Page 17, entitled ‘Warrant No, 4, ’ dated the 28th day of November, 1892, and being for the first and second installments of special tax for improvement of Illinois avenue from Knoxville avenue to Buckner avenue, with interest at six per cent per annum from October 1, 1892, on second installment. Then follows a list showing assessment on lot 3, block 7, first installment §42.05, second installment §42.05, and showing payment on north half on June 5, 1894, by John Waggeman of §42.05, §2.15 interest and 19c. costs, and showing sale on June 15, 1894, to D. M. Combs,” etc., who, having, assigned his certificate of purchase to the defendant, as shown by the record of sale, took a deed therefor.

It is clear that under the ordinance authorizing the improvement, only such property as abutted on Illinois avenue could be legally assessed. The word “contiguous,” as used in the statute and the foregoing ordinance, means “in actual or close contact,” “touching,” “adjacent” or “near.” (County of Adams v.

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Bluebook (online)
66 N.E. 332, 201 Ill. 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langlois-v-cameron-ill-1903.