Robbins v. Commissioners of Lincoln Park

164 N.E. 10, 332 Ill. 571
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1928
DocketNo. 18557. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 164 N.E. 10 (Robbins v. Commissioners of Lincoln Park) 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
Robbins v. Commissioners of Lincoln Park, 164 N.E. 10, 332 Ill. 571 (Ill. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellants filed a bill in the circuit court of Cook county seeking to restrain the appellee, the Commissioners of Lincoln Park, in the city of Chicago, from erecting an embankment and boulevard across certain property acquired under an act entitled, “An act to enable park commissioners having control of any park bordering upon public waters in this State, to enlarge the same from time to time, and granting submerged lands for the purpose of such enlargements, and to defray the costs thereof,” in force July i, 1895. (Cahill’s Stat. 1927, chap. 105, par. 187.) Appellee demurred to the bill. Its demurrer was sustained and the bill dismissed for want of equity. Appellants bring the cause here for review.

The bill as amended alleges the organization of appellee as a municipal corporation and avers that section 1 of the act above mentioned provides the method to be used by the park commissioners to secure from the State title to submerged lands; that this method requires the commissioners to adopt a plan of enlargement which shall locate a boulevard or driveway connecting with an existing boulevard under the control of the park commissioners, which plan must provide for a breakwater, sea wall or other protection on the water line of such' boulevard or driveway; that said section provides that submerged lands between the shore line as it exists at the time such plan is prepared and adopted and the inner line of the proposed boulevard or driveway are to be held and used for the purposes of a public park, and such submerged lands are therefore vested by the State, under this act, in the park commissioners for park purposes; that in order to carry out such park purposes the park commissioners are required to secure the riparian rights appurtenant to the lands bordering on the water’s edge either by contract or condemnation; that section 2 of the act provides that such riparian rights may be acquired by contract with and deeds from the owners or by condemnation, and the boundary line between the property of such owners and the submerged lands acquired for park purposes may be fixed by a decree of the circuit court. The amended bill alleges that on November 25, 1895, the commissioners of Lincoln Park decided to make an enlargement of said park under the act of 1895 and adopted and filed a plan of such enlargement; that such plan located a boulevard or driveway over and upon the bed of Lake Michigan, the south terminus of which was on Sheridan road at Byron street, running thence northeast into the lake about 1000 feet, thence almost directly north, at a distance of approximately 1000 feet east of the shore line, about three miles, to a point opposite Devon avenue, thence westward to the shore, connecting with Devon avenue; that this was the only boulevard provided in the plan filed; that on July 5, 1906, Burr Robbins, who then owned the land now owned by the appellants, made a contract with the commissioners, reciting the plan so made and adopted by the board and stating that the commissioners propose to comply with that plan; that the land owners agree to deed to the commissioners the riparian rights to such land; that the parties desire to agree upon the shore line separating the property of Robbins and the submerged lands granted to the commissioners by the act; that Robbins agreed to institute a proceeding in the circuit court in accordance with the statute by Avhich the shore line would be established; that in accordance with this contract, and in consideration thereof, such proceedings were had, the boundary line was established and a deed was made by Robbins conveying his riparian rights for park purposes; that the commissioners have constructed a mound of earth for the purpose of building a boulevard on the reclaimed land east of appellants’ property and within 122 feet thereof instead of 1000 feet away, as prescribed in the plan filed; that such construction is in violation of the contract and deed conveying the riparian rights of Robbins and of the statute under which appellee acquired the land; that the boulevard being constructed is approximately 100 feet in width and in front of appellants’ property is of an elevation of 15 to 20 feet; that it is planned to make grade separations by means of viaducts extending over intersecting streets at approximately every half mile, and appellants are informed the elevation of the embankment, other than at viaduct approaches, will be four or five feet above the surrounding surface; that the commissioners are about to fill the submerged lands of Lake Michigan for a distance of about 3500 feet east of the boundary of appellants’ property, so that the shore line will be 3500 feet instead of 1000 feet east of appellants’ property, as provided in the original plan, in violation of the contract and agreement made with Robbins and in direct violation of the statute under which such contract was made; that appellants have a special property right and interest in that portion of the reclaimed land lying east of their property by the contract of Robbins with the commissioners ; that the conveyance by Robbins of his riparian rights created a specific trust under the terms of the statute herein referred to, and that by the unlawful erection of the embankment for boulevard or driveway purposes appellants suffer a special injury not common to the public or to those in that neighborhood; that the commissioners are attempting to use the submerged lands east of the appellants’ property for another and different purpose from that in the plan mentioned and for which they have no lawful right to use the same; that in so doing they deprive the appellants of their property without due process of law, in violation of the constitutions of the United States and of the State of Illinois, and impair the obligation of the contract made with Robbins, in violation of the constitutions of the United States and of the State of Illinois. The prayer of the bill is that an injunction issue restraining the commissioners from constructing or permitting to be constructed any boulevard or driveway on the submerged lands lying east of appellants’ property other than the boulevard or driveway shown on the plan adopted by the commissioners in November, 1895, and from using the submerged lands for any other purpose than for a park and the boulevard or driveway as shown on said plan, and for general relief.

Appellants contend (1) that the use of the park for the building of such boulevard is not a park purpose; (2) that they have such an interest in the enlargement of the park as entitles them in equity to insist on a substantial compliance with the original plan under which the park commissioners acquired from their predecessor in title the riparian rights owned by him, and that since the driveway being constructed by the commissioners is not the boulevard or driveway shown on the plan and is such that it cannot be used for park purposes, the building of such a boulevard is a violation of the trust committed to the commissioners; (3) that the commissioners have no title to any submerged lands lying east of the boulevard or driveway shown on the plan adopted in 1895, and for that reason, and because they acquired the riparian rights to appellants’ property in pursuance of such original plan, the commissioners have no right to fill in or reclaim any submerged lands beyond the boulevard or driveway shown on the original plan, since in so doing they remove the lake shore further from appellants’ property, and that by reason of the contract and the statute appellants have a vested interest so that the same cannot be taken from them by the commissioners.

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Bluebook (online)
164 N.E. 10, 332 Ill. 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robbins-v-commissioners-of-lincoln-park-ill-1928.