Pennsylvania Co. v. Bond

66 N.E. 941, 202 Ill. 95
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 66 N.E. 941 (Pennsylvania Co. v. Bond) 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
Pennsylvania Co. v. Bond, 66 N.E. 941, 202 Ill. 95 (Ill. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Ricks

delivered the opinion of the court.-.

Several errors are. assigned by appellant why the-decree below should be reversed, but as appellant discusses in its brief simply the "question of estoppel, we shall therefore consider all other points abandoned.

Appellant insists that by the entry of judgment in the’ condemnation suit brought by the city against appellee for his compensation and damages for the land taken. for widening Stewart avenue, which sum was agreed, upon by the parties; the payment and receipt by appellee of the money so paid; the payment of large sums of money by the railroad companies for land acquired and work performed, all being done with the knowledge of appellee and in pursuance of-the ordinance of July 21, 1887, giving appellant and its lessors the right to lay additional tracks on Stewart avenue and requiring them to lay out a new street and to build a fence on the east line of old Stewart avenue, the appellee is estopped, in equity, from enjoining appellant’s use of Stewart avenue in accordance with said ordinance. Appellee contends (a) that the question of estoppel is res judicata, as this case came before this court on appeal upon demurrer to the bill, which was sustained by the circuit court and reversed by this court, wherein we held the bill stated a good cause of action; (Bond v. Pennsylvania Co. 171 Ill. 508;) (b) upon the merits of the defense of estoppel the record shows nothing to sustain it; (c) nothing whatever was done by appellee or his agents, nor was anything omitted to be done by them, which could or did mislead the defendant in any way; (d) the use made of the bed of the old street by the railroad companies after this award was paid is not the use contemplated in the condemnation proceedings.

First — The contention of appellee that the question of estoppel is res judicata cannot be admitted. The bill, as originally framed, contained this averment: “Your orator shows that the said Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway Company has heretofore in part bought up and in part caused to be condemned for a street, (in the name of said city of Chicago and by the condemnation proceedings hereinbefore mentioned,) at its own expense, sufficient land adjoining the east side of said Stewart avenue between Bushnell street and Egan avenue, (formerly the southern boundary of said city of Chicago,) to widen said Stewart avenue from sixty-six feet to ninety-nine feet, all in accordance with the terms of section 2 of said pretended ordinance of July 21, 1887, and in execution of the contract which said ordinance purports to create.” But before the demurrer was interposed and the judgment of the circuit court had thereon, the bill was amended by striking out certain portions thereof, so that the clause read: “And your orator shows that the said city of Chicago, by the condemnation proceeding hereinbefore mentioned, has condemned sufficient land adjoining the east side of said Stewart avenue between Bushnell street and Egan avenue, (formerly the southern boundary of said city of Chicago,) to widen said Stewart avenue from sixty-six feet to ninety-nine feet,” etc., thereby eliminating from the bill the allegation that appellant or its lessor “bought up and in part caused to be condemned for a street, (in the name of said city of Chicago and by the condemnation proceedings hereinbefore mentioned) at its own expense.” The foreg'oing was the only clause of the bill that contained any averment that appellant or its lessor was in any way directly connected with the condemnation proceedings, either by the payment of money or the conduct of the suit. Manifestly, then, there was nothing before the court that could have raised the question of estoppel arising from the payment of the condemnation money and the expenses thereof by appellant, or the Pittsburgh, Port Wayne and Chicago Railway Company, to appellee or to the court, under the condemnation proceedings prosecuted in the name of the city, or for the supposed use of appellant. It was not until the cause was remanded to the circuit court and the answer of appellant filed set up the matters now relied upon as ground of estoppel that the same became a part of the record of this proceeding. This court, then, could not, on the appeal, have considered that question, and the rule that appellee invokes, that “the principle of res judicata on a second appeal of the same cause applies to all questions which might have been decided as materially involved in the cause," whether actually decided or not,” as laid down in 2 Encyclopedia of Pleading and Practice, 380, and Ogden v. Larrabee, 70 Ill. 510, and other cases mentioned in appellee’s brief, cannot apply.

Second — Upon the question of estoppel, in so far as relates to the knowledge of appellee that the appellant was in fact prosecuting the suit for condemnation in the name of the city for the use of appellant, but two witnesses testified, — Mr. William Ritchie on the part of appellee and Edwin A. Warfield on the part of appellant. Mr. Warfield testified that his information was that the strip of land known as the Bond property in fact belonged to the Equitable Trust Company of New London, Connecticut, but that the title was in appellee; that a Mr. Kendall, who had died before the hearing of this cause, was the western agent of the trust company, and witness was the real estate agent of the Pittsburgh, Port Wayne and Chicago Railway Company; that he began negotiations with Mr. Kendall for this strip of land sought to be taken by the condemnation proceeding for the widening of Stewart avenue, and that Mr. Kendall asked §40,000 for the strip, and stated in connection with that demand that the trust company owned to the center of old Stewart avenue; that the railroad was already in possession of a part of the trust company’s land, arid that in any settlement that should be made the railroad company would have, to pay a price which would settle that question, as well as the value of the strip which was sought to be purchased for the widening of the street; that after he had reached an agreement as to the amount that was to be paid he turned the matter over to Mr. P. S. Winston, who was the attorney for the railroad c.ompany and was conducting the condemnation proceedings in the name of the city by special appointment for that purpose. This witness further stated that he did not acquire the information, at any time before the money was paid, that Mr. Bond expected to assert his legal rights to keep the railroad company from erecting its fence and laying additional tracks on Stewart avenue.

Mr. Ritchie testified that he was the attorney for the Equitable Trust Company and for Mr. Bond prior to the condemnation proceeding; that he knew of the ordinance of 1887, and that in so far as related to the interests of Mr. Bond in the land in controversy Mr. Kendall had almost nothing to do; that when the condemnation proceedings were brought he represented Mr. Bond, and because of his non-residence procured the case to be certified to the Federal-court, before Judge Blodgett; that during the condemnation proceedings before Judge Blodgett, in open court, he made objection, in the presence of Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
66 N.E. 941, 202 Ill. 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-co-v-bond-ill-1903.