People v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.

239 Ill. 42
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 239 Ill. 42 (People v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.) 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 v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co., 239 Ill. 42 (Ill. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the court:

In 1858 the canal trustees for a valuable consideration, said to have been $10,800, executed to Arnold and Prescott a deed for parcel “A.” The price was fixed by an appraisement pursuant to a statute then in force. Appellee claims under this deed through various mesne conveyances. On the trial appellant, .for the purpose of showing the deed to Arnold and Prescott to be void, offered evidence to show that at the time they bought this parcel from the canal trustees, Arnold, who was an attorney at law, was the general counsel and legal adviser of the canal trustees and was paid an annual salary by them for his services; that Prescott was at the same time the land agent of the canal trustees, received a yearly salary for his services, and had general charge of the canal lands and lots that were from time to time offered for sale by the canal trustees. To that evidence so offered an objection was sustained, and it is urged that the proof was admissible.

In 1836 the legislature passed an act providing for the construction of the Illinois and Michigan canal, (Laws of 1835-36, p. 145,) which repealed an eaflier act providing for the construction of the same canal. The act of 1836 provided for the appointment of a board of cañal commissioners, and provided that none of that board should be allowed to purchase any of the canal lands or lots, and that neither of them should be directly or indirectly concerned in any such purchase or have any manner of interest therein, and that all sales in which any commissioner should be in anywise interested should be null and void; that the purchase money should be forfeited and that the land should revert to the canal fund. The act of February 21, 1843, (Laws of 1843, P. 54;) was an act providing for the completion of the canal and for the payment of.the canal debt. That act provided for the selection of a board of trustees and vested in them the title of the State to the canal property, including the lands and lots unsold. Appellant sought, to show that it was by such trustees that Arnold and Prescott were appointed or employed. It is contended that the prohibition above referred to contained in the act of . 1836 applied to the trustees and to their attorney and land agent, and that for this reason the deed to Arnold and Prescott was null and void and the title to parcel “A” remained in the State. If it be conceded that the prohibition of the act of 1836 applied to the trustees who were to be appointed under the provision of the act of 1843, it is yet apparent from an inspection of the earlier enactment that the deed to Arnold and Prescott was not within its terms. The sales which were to be null and void were sales to the commissioners or to any one of them, or sales in 'which they or any one of them should be concerned, or in which they or any one of them should have any manner of interest. Appellant did not offer to show that either of the trustees was concerned or had any manner of interest in the sale to Prescott ánd Arnold. For that reason the proof offered would not have brought the sale to Prescott and Arnold within the statute relied upon. Whether the relation of Prescott and Arnold to the board of trustees was such that the deed was voidable and could have been set aside in equity is immaterial. Here the legal title must prevail. The. deed is effective in this suit as it was not made null and void by the statute. (People v. Force, 100 Ill. 549.) The offered evidence was properly excluded.

As to parcel “B,” the first question is whether, when the canal commissioners platted the town, it was by the plat dedicated to the public as a street. The appellee’s title rests upon the theory that it was so dedicated. It will be observed that the first street south of that tract running east and west was Carroll street; that the word “Carroll,” as indicating the name of that street, appears in the strip left for the street on the west side of the north branch, and that the abbreviation “St,” which accompanies the word “Carroll,” appears in the space left for the street on the east side of the north branch and between blocks 7 and 14. Continuing east there was a swale or depression which came from the north, passed across the central portion of block 6 (the block next east of block 7) and led into the main body of the Chicago river. A short distance east of that depression, on the plat appear the words “North Water,” and farther east ag'ain the abbreviation “St.,” which show that the strip of land immediately north of the main river was North Water street. The contention of appellant is that Carroll street and North Water street abutted upon each other at the swale in question and each ended there. Appellee agrees that Carroll street ended at the line mentioned, but contends that North Water street, when it reached that depression, turnéd to the south-west, and continued south and west, between the river and blocks 15 and 14, to the south-west corner of block 14, where it turned and ran north to Kinzie street and included parcel “B.” ICinzie was the north.boundary of the ground platted.

It is said by appellant that the commissioners intended to reserve parcel “B” from sale to be used as a part of the bed of the canal, for the reason that by an act passed in 1837 (Laws Extra Sess. 1837, p. 10,) the canal commissioners .were authorized to enlarge the natural basin at the confluence of the north and south branches of the Chicago river and this would make it necessary for the commissioners to use this tract. Section 13 of the act of March 2, 1837, (Laws of 1837, p. 39,) being an act amendatory of the act for the construction of the canal, provided that the canal commissioners should cause the plat of the town of Chicago, by which they were governed in selling lots therein, to be recorded, with the certificates of the “late canal commissioners” endorsed thereon as to the identity of said plat, and it is pursuant to that enactment that the plat now before us was certified and recorded. Whether or not the tract in question was dedicated by the commissioners as a street must be determinéd by what was done when, the plat of the town was made or adopted by them. The plat, so certified and recorded in 1837, bears thereon, among other things, these words: “A map of the town of Chicago, by James Thompson, August 4, 1830.” While this record does not show that Thompson made this map for or by direction of the commissioners, it does appear from the certificate of the commissioners endorsed on the map that if it was not made under their direction it was at least adopted by them as early as June, 1836, and it must now be regarded as evidencing their act in laying out the town. The purpose of creating a basin is first indicated by the act of 1837. There is nothing to show that the commissioners in 1836, or prior thereto, entertained any such scheme, or if they did, that the land on the east side of the north branch, including parcel “B,” would have been any more necessary thereto than would have been a part of the strip of land along the west side of the south branch and along the west side of the north branch, all of which was clearly included in West Water street.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

General Auto Service Station v. Maniatis
765 N.E.2d 1176 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2002)
Cheadle v. County Board of School Trustees
313 N.E.2d 196 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1974)
Cheadle v. CO. BD. OF SCHOOL TRUSTEES
313 N.E.2d 196 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1974)
La Salle Nat. Bk. v. Vil. of Harwood Heights
278 N.E.2d 114 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1971)
Woodward v. Schultz
155 N.E.2d 568 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1959)
Prall v. Burckhartt
132 N.E. 280 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1921)
Atlas Lumber Co. v. Quirk
135 N.W. 172 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1912)
People v. Artesian Stone & Lime Works Co.
150 Ill. App. 188 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 Ill. 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-chicago-northwestern-railway-co-ill-1909.