People ex rel. Tilden v. Massieon

116 N.E. 639, 279 Ill. 312
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1917
DocketNo. 11384
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 116 N.E. 639 (People ex rel. Tilden v. Massieon) 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
People ex rel. Tilden v. Massieon, 116 N.E. 639, 279 Ill. 312 (Ill. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

Nancy S. Tilden filed a petition in the circuit court of LaSalle county against the mayor and city council.of the city of Peru for a writ of mandamus requiring them to approve a plat of a subdivision of a tract of land within the corporate limits of the city which she had caused to be made, to be called Tilden’s addition to Peru. A demurrer to the petition having been overruled the respondents elected to stand by the demurrer, and a judgment was rendered against them awarding a peremptory writ of man-damns, from which they appealed to the Appellate Court, where the judgment was affirmed, and they were granted a certificate of importance and a further appeal to this court.

Chapter 109 of the Revised Statutes authorizes the owner of lands wishing to subdivide them for the purpose of making ati addition to a city, to cause them to be surveyed and a plat to be made of them, which, together with the certificate of the surveyor and the acknowledgment of the owner, shall be recorded in the recorder’s office of the-county in which the land is situated. The selling or offering for sale of any lot or block in any city without complying with these requirements is prohibited under penalty of a fine of $25 for each lot so sold or offered for sale, and by section 5 of the chapter it is .declared to be unlawful for the recorder to record any plat of land situated in any city until it shall have been approved by the legislative authority of the city in which the land is situated or by some city officer designated by resolution or ordinance. Section 5 of article 10 of the Cities and Villages act provides that the city council may by ordinance provide that any such plat shall be submitted to the city council or some officer designated by the council for approval, and in such case no such plat shall be entitled to record or have any validity until it shall have been so approved. The petition averred that the city council of the city of Peru had never passed any ordinance in accordance with the authority conferred by the statute; that the petitioner was the owner of certain described real estate which had been within the corporate limits of the city for many years; that she had caused it to be platted into lots, blocks, streets and alleys as an addition adjoining the platted part of the city, to be called Tilden’s addition to Peru; that on January 9, 1914, she presented the plat to the city council for approval but the council refused to approve the plat. A copy of the plat was attached to and filed with the petition for mandamus.

Where the provisions of the statutes and the ordinances of the city have been complied with in the' making of a plat for an addition to the city, the duty of the council to approve the plat is ministerial and may be enforced by mandamus. (26 Cyc. 250.) The right to subdivide real estate within a city and to dispose of it in lots, with reference to streets, alleys and other public grounds, affects the value of the property very materially. In the absence of any statute on the subject the owner of land might subdivide it in any way he saw fit, having regard only to his own wishes and without regard to public convenience. The legislature has seen fit to confer upon city councils the right to regulate the subdivisions of property within the corporate limits by requiring the approval of the plats of such subdivisions by the legislative authority of the municipality which has jurisdiction over the streets, alleys and public grounds. The city council may by ordinance require every such plat to be submitted to the council itself for approval or it may authorize the approval by some designated officer of the city. To this extent the right of the owner to have the plat of the subdivision of his land recorded and to sell his land with reference to such plat is limited, but no farther. There is no absolute discretion in the city council as to the approval of a plat. It may by ordinance, no doubt, regulate the direction and width of the streets and alleys and the location of public grounds and require conformity with existing subdivisions, streets and alleys, but such regulation must be by a general ordinance applying to all alike. The city council cannot, by failing to pass any ordinance, reserve to itself arbitrary discretion to approve plats or not to approve them. Where the city has not passed any ordinance on the subject, the only requirements to which the owner is obliged to conform are those of the statute. No discretion is vested in the city council to refuse approval of a plat which conforms to the statute and does not fail to conform to the provisions of any ordinance.

The statute provides that the acknowledgment and recording of the plat shall be held to be a conveyance, in fee simple, of such portions of the premises as are marked on the plat as donated or granted to the public or any person, religious society, corporation or body politic. It is argued that by compelling the approval of the plat the municipality would be compelled to accept the burden of maintaining the streets and alleys, and that the acceptance of streets and alleys proposed to be conveyed is discretionary with the municipal authorities. This argument assumes that the approval of the plat by the" city council would constitute an acceptance of it as a conveyance of the public grounds indicated on the plat. The making and recording of the plat is no more than an offer which is binding on the maker of the plat but not upon the municipal authorities until acceptance. The owner of property cannot, by making a plat of an addition to a city, impose upon the public authorities the burden of caring for the streets and alleys included in his subdivision of the property, (Littler v. City of Lincoln, 106 Ill. 353; Hamilton v. Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Co. 124 id. 235.) The approval of the plat by the city council is evidence that the plat complies with the statute and the ordinances of the city, but it is not an acceptance of the streets and passageways shown upon the plat. Notwithstanding such approval the city still has the right to elect what streets upon the plat shall become public highways and public charges upon the municipality for their maintenance. Russell v. Chicago and Milwaukee Electric Railway Co. 205 Ill. 155.

In 1915 section 62 of the Revenue act was amended by adding the proviso that no new subdivision of any tract of land should be approved by a city, incorporated town or village officer unless all redeemable sales for unpaid taxes or special assessments had been redeemed and all forfeited taxes or special assessments paid, and that before such approval a statement from the county clerk should be indorsed upon the plat to the effect that the county clerk “finds no reasonable [redeemable] tax sales or unpaid forfeited taxes against any of the real estate included in such plat.” (Laws of 1915, p. 575.) No such certificate was indorsed on the plat presented to the city council. This amendment went into force during the pendency of this suit and more than a year after the filing of the petition. It contained no saving clause as to pending suits or rights accrued. The appellants insist that the court.was without authority, after the passage of this amendment, to award a writ of mandamus requiring an approval of the plat without a compliance with the proviso.

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Bluebook (online)
116 N.E. 639, 279 Ill. 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-tilden-v-massieon-ill-1917.