Nielsen v. City of Chicago

161 N.E. 768, 330 Ill. 301
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1928
DocketNo. 17892. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 161 N.E. 768 (Nielsen 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
Nielsen v. City of Chicago, 161 N.E. 768, 330 Ill. 301 (Ill. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DeYoung

delivered the opinion of the court:

Jens P. Nielsen filed a bill of complaint in the circuit court of Cook county against the city of Chicago; William E. Dever, mayor; Martin J. O’Brien, city comptroller; John A. Cervenka, city treasurer; A. A. Sprague, commissioner of public works; Joseph F. Haas, registrar of deeds; the Kingdel Realty and Building Corporation; Meyer W. Kippman and Eva Lippman, his wife; the Chicago Title and Trust Company, as trustee; Dwight S. Bobb, as trustee; the Chicago and Northwestern Railway Company; Maurice B. Lippman; and Holmes, Pyott & Co. The prayer of the bill as amended was that the court (1) find that the city council of the city of Chicago had no power to vacate public streets and alleys for a compensation to be paid to the city; that the vacation of portions of particular streets by a certain ordinance was made for a private purpose and the ordinance is therefore void, and that the act of the General Assembly passed June 30, 1923, by authority of which the city council passed the vacation ordinance, is unconstitutional and void; (2) order that the city and its officers return the money paid the city as compensation for the purported vacation made by the ordinance and that the registrar cancel the registration of a certified copy of the ordinance; and (3) that the defendants be enjoined from removing fire hydrants, water mains, sewers, sidewalks and other improvements from the vacated streets, from laying sidewalks and constructing curbs across the entrances to such streets, and from improving a street to be dedicated; that the Kingdel Realty and Building Corporation, Meyer W. Lippman and Eva Lippman, his wife, Maurice B. Lippman, Holmes, Pyott & Co. and the Chicago and Northwestern Railway Company be enjoined from excavating in the streets so vacated and laying tracks therein, or, if such excavations have been made or such tracks laid, that they be commanded to remove the tracks and restore the streets to their former condition, and that the railway company be enjoined from switching cars from its right of way to and upon the tracks laid upon the streets purported to be vacated. Dwight S. Bobb, trustee, filed a disclaimer. All the other defendants answered the bill. Replications were filed to the answers. The cause was referred to a master in chancery, who by his report recommended the dismissal of the bill for want of equity. Complainant’s objections and exceptions to the master’s report were overruled, the report was approved' and confirmed, and the bill was dismissed for want of equity at the complainant’s costs. From that decree the complainant prosecutes this appeal.

The ordinance of which Jens P. Nielsen, the appellant, complains, was passed by the city council of the city of Chicago on March 25, 1925, and was approved by the mayor on the same.day. By this ordinance North Kenton avenue, between the south line of West Division street and the north line of Augusta street, and approximately the west half of Haddon avenue, of Thomas street and of Cortez street between the west line of North Kilbourn avenue and the east line of North Kenton avenue, were vacated upon condition that within six months after the passage of the ordinance the Kingdel Realty and Building Corporation would (1) dedicate to the public and open for public use a new street 33 feet wide and with its center line about 285.5 feet east °f and parallel with the east line of North Kenton avenue; (2) pay to the city as compensation for the benefits which would accrue to the owner of the property abutting on the parts of the streets vacated, $14,936.96, which sum, in the judgment of the city council, equaled such benefits; (3) deposit in the city treasury a sum sufficient to defray the cost of laying a sidewalk and constructing a curb across the entrances to the parts of the streets A>-acated and of paving and constructing curbs at the entrances to the street to be dedicated, such cost to be ascertained by the commissioner of public works; and (4) file for record a certified copy of the ordinance, with a plat, properly executed, shoAving the vacations a.nd dedication for which provision was made by the ordinance. The vacated portions of North Kenton avenue, Haddon avenue, Thomas street and Cortez street, and the street to be dedicatecl, and their locations with reference to other streets and property in the vicinity, are shown by the following plat:

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The tracks of the Chicago and Northwestern railway are laid upon an embankment which rises about ten feet above the surface of adjoining property. North Kenton avenue, running north and south, lies immediately east of and adjoins the railroad right of way. This street is not open north of West Division street nor south of Augusta street. Haddon avenue, Thomas street and Cortez street, which run east and west and are parallel to each other, end at the railway embankment. The tract of land bounded on the north by West Division street, on the east by the street to be dedicated, on the south by Augusta street and on the west by the right of way of the railroad, includes all of the vacated streets. This tract is vacant and unimproved. It abounds in weeds, portions of it have been used as a dumping ground, and the streets shown within its boundaries are neither improved nor visible to the eye. Ashes and refuse have been dumped in North Kenton avenue to such an extent that at certain points its surface is from three to five feet above the level of the sidewalks on West Division and Augusta streets. These two streets and North Kilbourn avenue, the principal thoroughfares in the vicinity, are paved.

Traffic on West Division street passes through a subway under the tracks of the Chicago and Northwestern railway. If North Kenton avenue, which as laid out was 33 feet wide, were opened to public use, the embankment and retaining wall at the intersection of that street with West Division street would make it impossible for east-bound traffic on West Division street to observe the approach of north-bound traffic on North Kenton avenue until they came in contact with each other. A three-day test disclosed that an average of 185 street cars, 1417 trucks and 1621 other vehicles passed through the subway in both directions within eight hours of each day. Members of the city council who had investigated the matter testified that this point of danger could be eliminated by substituting for North Kenton avenue a new street about 300 feet east of the subway. By this change, they asserted, an approaching vehicle on one street could be observed by a driver on the other street.

Appellant owns lots 1 to 5, inclusive, lots 10 and 11, and lots 13 to 19, inclusive, in block 2, shown on the foregoing plat. Prior to the dedication of the new street, the alley-running east and west in this block ended at the west line of lots 9 and 10. By the dedication lot 10, which appellant owns, becomes a corner lot, and the alley connects with the new street. No part of appellant’s property abuts upon any of the vacated streets.

On July 1, 1922, the Kingdel Realty and Building Corporation, which was organized to acquire a parcel of land and to erect and operate a building thereon, acquired the title to the west half of blocks 2, 3, 6 and 7. There was no building on the real estate at the time and the corporation did not erect a building upon it. Subsequently, on April 15, 1925, after the vacation ordinance had been passed, the corporation, Henry J. Cohen and Lulu Cohen, his wife, and Maurice B.

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Bluebook (online)
161 N.E. 768, 330 Ill. 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nielsen-v-city-of-chicago-ill-1928.