Middaugh v. City of Chicago

58 N.E. 459, 187 Ill. 230
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 58 N.E. 459 (Middaugh 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
Middaugh v. City of Chicago, 58 N.E. 459, 187 Ill. 230 (Ill. 1900).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal by certain property owners from a judgment of confirmation of a special assessment levied to pay the cost of grading, curbing, and paving with granite blocks, a designated part of Clinton street, in Chicago.

The first objection urged here is, that the ordinance did not originate with the board of local improvements. The record shows that a petition by the property owners owning the greater proportion of the property abutting upon the proposed improvement was presented to the board of local improvements early in 1898, asking that the street be paved with cedar blocks. Afterward, on April 20, 1898, the board passed a resolution to comply with the petition, and a public hearing was had before the board early in May following, and a resolution was then passed adhering" to the former resolution. An ordinance was prepared by the board and submitted to the city council with its recommendation and the estimate of the cost of the improvement, as required by the act concerning local improvements in force July 1, 1897. (Laws of 1897, p. 101.) It does not appear from the record that this ordinance was passed by the city council, but evidence was given on the hearing of the objections tending to prove that at the instance or upon the advice of the council or of an alderman of the_ward, the board afterward, in May, 1899, passed a resolution to pave the street with granite blocks, and after a public hearing, pursuant to proper notice, adhered to such last named resolution, and prepared and submitted to the council another ordinance with its recommendation and estimate of the cost, in accordance with the statute, as a new scheme and without any reference to the. former one. The city council passed this ordinance, under which the petition was filed in the county court and the proceedings involved in this case were taken.

Appellants insist that while the board had the power, under section 7 of the statute, to originate a scheme for a local improvement in cities of this, class without a petition, yet, it having already acted iipon a petition of the property owners and decided upon and recommended the paving of the street with cedar blocks and prepared and submitted to the council an ordinance therefor with proper estimates, its power was exhausted and it could not then originate a different improvement. So far as the record shows, the board did all that was required of it by the statute in relation to the first scheme. ' It had no power over the ordinance after it was submitted to the council, and if that body failed or refused to adopt it, and no further steps were taken, the effect was an abandonment of the improvement which it had proposed. The board had the undoubted power to originate a scheme of improvement of the street, and, under the circumstances shown in this case, its act in doing so a year after the first ordinance was submitted to the council was an abandonment of the first scheme. Appellants and all others interested had an opportunity to be heard at the public hearing held to consider the proposed change in the character of the improvement. It is not, of course, meant to be said that the city council, or any member of it, has any power, under the statute, to direct the board as to the kind or character of local improvements which it will recommend; but we cannot hold, finder the evidence in this case, that the proposed improvement, and the ordinance therefor, did not originate with the board of local improvements, as contended by appellants.

The next objection urged is, that the ordinance is void because it provided the whole cost of the improvement and of levyin g and collecting the assessment sh all be paid for by special assessment. The whole provision of the ordinance on that question is contained in the following:

“Sec. 3. That said improvement shall be made and the whole cost thereof, including the sum of $2377.35 costs, (being the amount included in the estimate of the said engineer, hereto attached, as the cost of making and collecting the assessment herein,) be paid for by special assessment, in accordance with an act of the General Assembly of the State of Illinois entitled ‘An act concerning local improvements,’ approved June 14, A. D. 1897, and that said sum of $2377.35 costs shall be applied toward the costs of making and collecting such assessment.”

The objection is, that the whole cost is by the ordinance imposed upon private property without regard to benefits and without any prior ascertainment by the council that there was property which was specially benefited to an amount equal to the cost of the improvement, and counsel refer to the following cases to sustain their objection: St. John v. City of East St. Louis, 50 Ill. 92; Greeley v. People, 60 id. 19; Crawford v. People, 82 id. 557; Newman v. City of Chicago, 153 id. 469; Watson v. City of Chicago, 115 id. 78.

We have no doubt that the ordinance would be subject to the same infirmities held fatal in two or more of the cases cited, had the provision in question in section 3 ended at the words “special assessment.” But it must be observed that the ordinance provides that the improvement shall be made and the cost thereof paid for by special assessment, “in accordance with” the act (describing it) of 1897. In Newman v. People, 153 Ill. 469, we held that the statute, as it then was, authorized a local improvement to be made by special assessment alone, but that the assessment could not exceed the benefits, and that if the special benefits be less than the cost of the improvement the excess of such cost must be assessed against the city or village.' We there held, in considering the statute under which that case arose, that the power to make the improvement by,special assessment alone necessarily involves and includes the power, through the commissioners, to apportion a part of the cost, of benefit to the public, to the city or village. The ordinance in that case, as in this, referred in specific terms to the statute and provided that the assessment should be made in accordance with its provisions, and we held that by necessary implication the excess of the cbst over the special benefits was to be paid by general taxation, for the reason that whatever part of it is apportioned to the city can be paid in no other way.

An examination of the act of 1897 will show that it makes specific provision for the levying of special assessments according to' special benefits, and for the apportionment, in just and equitable proportions, between the city and the property benefited as well as between the pieces of property benefited. There would therefore seem to be no necessity for incorporating these provisions in the ordinance, where the ordinance provides that the improvement and the assessment shall be made in accordance with the provisions of the statute. It does not follow that the whole cost shall be assessed upon the property specially benefited because the ordinance so provides.

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Related

St. John v. City of East St. Louis
50 Ill. 92 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1869)
Newman v. City of Chicago
38 N.E. 1053 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1894)

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Bluebook (online)
58 N.E. 459, 187 Ill. 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/middaugh-v-city-of-chicago-ill-1900.