McKechney v. City of Chicago

160 Ill. App. 544
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 7, 1911
DocketGen. No. 15,360
StatusPublished

This text of 160 Ill. App. 544 (McKechney v. City of Chicago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKechney v. City of Chicago, 160 Ill. App. 544 (Ill. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

This writ of error brings before this court for review a judgment of the Circuit Court of Cook county in favor of the defendant in error in the above mentioned cases, which were consolidated in the Circuit Court and tried together. Suits were brought by the plaintiffs in error to recover in the aggregate sums approximating one million dollars under certain contracts for the construction of what is known as the Northwest Land Tunnel, in the city of Chicago, for labor performed and material furnished, not included in the contract under which the work was done, and for the value of construction plants seized by the city and never returned to the plaintiffs in error. The defendant pleaded the general issue and filed pleas of set-off, claiming over five hundred thousand dollars for alleged unlawful payments made by the city to plaintiffs below, and for a penalty or liquidated damages of two hundred dollars per day for delay in completing the tunnel and for other things. The trial below resulted in a verdict in favor of the defendant for one dollar on its plea of set-off.

In plaintiffs in error’s brief it is said:

“As the question of the verdict being against the evidence is not being argued, the abstract lias not been made as full as it would have been were it intended to argue that point, but it is sufficiently full to show the errors relied on.
“The errors relied on by plaintiffs are errors in instructions, errors in rulings upon the admission of evidence, and misconduct of a juror.”

This litigation is not unfamiliar to the courts of this county and the Supreme Court. The litigation in one form or another has been before the Supreme Court of this state on two different occasions, namely, in the case of City of Chicago v. Weir et al., 165 Ill. 582, and City of Chicago v. McKechney et al., 205 Ill. 372. In the latter case appears a statement of the pleadings under which the trial before us was had, and also a statement of the substantial and controlling facts involved in the proceedings at bar, so far as those facts had developed at the time of the trial then under review, and it would serve no useful purpose to restate them here.

Although the plaintiffs in error have not furnished the court with a full abstract of the record in this ease, which occupies about 7,500 pages, the defendant in error has filed a supplemental or additional abstract which brings before us some of the additional facts shown by the record, bearing upon the general merits of the controversy. The evidence abstracted in the additional abstract of record, as well as that contained in the original abstract of record, and to some extent the record itself has been duly considered by us, in passing upon the instructions which it is claimed by the plaintiff in error are erroneous, and upon the errors claimed to exist in the instructions the plaintiffs in error chiefly rely to secure a reversal of the judgment below.

Although the authority of the opinion in City of Chicago v. McKechney, siopra, has been questioned in argument, we regard the decision of the Supreme Court as determining the controlling and decisive questions raised before us.

It is contended that instruction number 5 was misleading in that it gave the jury to understand that the Commissioner of Public Works could not make the contract of May 17, 1897, and it could not be ratified by the city. That instruction reads as follows:

“5. The Court instructs you that in the said contract of October 19,1895, it is provided that the plaintiffs shall perform all of said work under the immediate direction and superintendence of the Commissioner of Public Works of said City; but the Court instructs you that under such provision no power is therein given to the Commissioner to consent or direct that the work under said contract should be done contrary to its terms, for the only power which the said Commissioner possessed in this respect under said contract was to1 enforce its execution according to its terms, and to direct only such incidental changes as might be necessary in the prosecution of the work, and which tended3 rather to the complete fulfillment of its terms than to their substantial violation, and the jury will so consider the extent of such powers in arriving at your verdict.”

Plaintiffs in error contend that the above instruction is both misleading and positively erroneous. It is urged that the jury might well understand from this instruction that the Commissioner of Public Works had no power to make the alleged agreement of May 17, and having no such power, that it was void and could not be ratified by the city. We think the jury might so understand the instruction, and if they did so understand it, the instruction fulfilled its purpose, in stating correctly the law with reference to the alleged contract of May 17, 1897. In our opinion what is called in this case and in argument the contract of May 17, 1897, was not a contract at all. Upon the proof in the record it was never signed by any officer of the city, and it was never ratified by the city, and it was never intended by the city to express a definite contract with reference to the subject-matter of the writing called the contract of May 17,1897. We think this so-called contract was declared not to be a contract in the opinion of the court in City of Chicago v. McKechney, supra, at pages 432 to 452, inclusive of the opinion. Further than that, and as stated in that opinion, the statute specifically provides the method for making municipal contracts involving an expenditure of more than five hundred dollars. The city ordinance also covered the same subject. The power to make contracts without advertising for bids, and without a vote of two-thirds of all the aldermen was not conferred upon the Commissioner of Public Works when the alleged contract of May 17, 1897, was signed by Weir, McKechney & Co. and presented to the Commissioner of Public Works. It is admitted that it was never executed by any city official, and any remarks made by the Commissioner of Public Works could in no wise constitute an acquiescence in or ratification or execution of the paper on the part of that official. It purported to be a special contract that could only be made in the special manner provided by the statute, and no inference could be drawn in favor of its execution from any acts done by any officials of the city, with reference to it, shown by the record. The mere fact that the paper was put in the book of contracts kept in the office of the Commissioner of Public Works would have no significance under the law.

The legal effect of the action of the city council with reference to this alleged contract is fully discussed in the opinion last referred to at page 436. The recital in the contract of October 8, 1898, of the alleged contract of May 17,1897, has no possible bearing upon its validity as a contract, and could not have in law. Further, the context of the alleged contract of October 8, 1898, shows very clearly that whatever arrangement was contemplated was to be without prejudice to the questions at issue between the parties, all of which questions were left to the decision of the court.

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Related

Beard v. Maxwell
1 N.E. 824 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1885)
City of Chicago v. Weir
46 N.E. 725 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1897)
City of Chicago v. McKechney
205 Ill. 372 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1903)

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Bluebook (online)
160 Ill. App. 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckechney-v-city-of-chicago-illappct-1911.