Northwestern Elevated Railroad v. City of Chicago

1 Ill. Cir. Ct. 480
CourtIllinois Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1904
DocketGen. No. 244,799
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ill. Cir. Ct. 480 (Northwestern Elevated Railroad v. City of Chicago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northwestern Elevated Railroad v. City of Chicago, 1 Ill. Cir. Ct. 480 (Ill. Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

Tuley, J.:

This bill is brought to determine the right under three certain ordinances of the city of Chicago, to extend platforms in connection with the elevated roads erected under said ordinances, and to restrain the city of Chicago from interfering with their so doing, under a permit granted by the commissioner of public works.

The ordinances, upon which the right to extend such platforms is claimed, are:

First. That of the Northwestern Elevated Railroad Company, the complainant in this case. January 8, 1894, an ordinance was passed by the city council, granting to said railroad company the right to erect an elevated railroad in the north division of the city upon property acquired, or to be acquired, and to cross all intersecting streets; the main line of the road commencing at Monroe street, in the south division of the city, or at a street or point north of Monroe street, between Wabash avenue on the east and Market street on the west, thence crossing the Chicago river and extending in a north or northwesterly direction to the city limits. On the 24th of June, 1895, an amendment to said ordinance was procured from-the city council whereby said railroad company’s route was somewhat changed in the north division of the city, and it was permitted at the intersection of Michigan street and Wells street to proceed southerly in and along Wells street and over and across the Chicago river and across the Wells street bridge and thence continuing southerly in and along Fifth avenue to the north line of Harrison street in said city. But it was made a condition that the elevated railroad constructed in said Fifth avenue should be subject to the joint use of the said Northwestern Elevated Railroad Company, the Lake Street Elevated Railroad Company, the Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad Company, the Chicago and South Side Rapid Transit Company and the Union Elevated Railroad Company under all contracts then existing, or which might thereafter be entered into between said companies, or any of them, and upon the further condition that said Northwestern Elevated Railroad Company should, as to that portion of said elevated railroad in said Fifth avenue between Lake street and the southern terminus of the railroad in Fifth avenue, enter into a contract with the Union Elevated Bail-road Company to lease it the said elevated structure to be built in said Fifth avenue, and that the said Union Elevated Bailroad Company should construct and maintain the same.

The Lake Street Elevated Bailroad Company had been organized with the view of constructing an elevated railroad upon said Lake street mainly in the west division of the city of Chicago, with an eastern terminus at Market street in the south division.

The Metropolitan West Side Elevated Bailroad Company had been organized for the ■ construction of an elevated railroad in the west division of the city of Chicago with a terminus in the south division at a point on Franklin street between Jackson and Van Burén.

The Chicago and South Side Bapid Transit Company had been organized for the construction of an elevated railroad in the south division of the city with the northern terminus at Congress street.

Before the passage of said amendment to the ordinance of the Northwestern Elevated Company, the city council had passed an ordinance by which the Lake Street Elevated Bail-road Company was authorized to build its elevated structure from said Market street to Lake street and thence eastward upon Lake street to the east line of Wabash avenue in said ■city.

The Union Elevated Bailroad Company (referred to in the amendment to complainant’s ordinance), on the 14th of October, 1895, obtained authority of the city of Chicago by ordinance to construct and maintain an elevated railroad in Wabash avenue, from the north line of Lake street southerly, in and along Wabash avenue to the south line of Harrison street, with the right to make connection at Lake street with the Lake Street Elevated, and with the Chicago and South Side Bapid Transit Company’s railroad at any point north of the south line of Harrison street between Wabash avenue and Fifth avenue. This ordinance contained substantially similar provisions as to the use—of the tracks authorized to be laid—by the elevated railroad companies mentioned in the amendment to complainant’s ordinance.

In June of the next.year, being 1896, the last of the four ordinances running to elevated railroad companies (a part of each of which formed what is now known as the Union Loop) was passed. It was an ordinance running to the Union Consolidated Railroad Company, authorizing it to construct its elevated railroad in Van Buren street at its intersection with Wabash avenue, connecting with the tracks of the Union Elevated Railroad Company in Wabash avenue, then running westerly along Van Buren street across the bridge over the south branch of the Chicago river, to the tracks of the Metropolitan West Side Railroad Company in Van Burén street, at a point about two hundred feet east of Halsted street, and to make certain connections with said Metropolitan Railroad Company, and to connect the track authorized to be constructed in Van Buren street with the tracks of the Union Elevated Railroad Company in Fifth avenue (being the same which complainant was required by the amendment to its ordinance to lease to said Union Elevated Railroad Company), for the operation of the loop system.

This ordinance provided that the part of the elevated railroad structure authorized by the ordinance, between Wabash avenue and Fifth avenue, should be subject to the joint use of the Northwestern Elevated Railroad Company, the Lake Street Elevated Railroad Company, the Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad Company and the Chicago and South Side Rapid Transit Company, and the Union Elevated Railroad Company, upon such terms and conditions as had been agreed upon in all contracts now existing between such corporations mentioned or such contracts as might be entered into between the said companies or any of them, for the use and operation of the said railroad authorized by that ordinance. The ordinance does not define the route of the so-called union loop system.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ill. Cir. Ct. 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-elevated-railroad-v-city-of-chicago-illcirct-1904.