Rothschild & Co. v. City of Chicago

81 N.E. 407, 227 Ill. 205
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 81 N.E. 407 (Rothschild & Co. v. City of Chicago) 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
Rothschild & Co. v. City of Chicago, 81 N.E. 407, 227 Ill. 205 (Ill. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

The circuit court of Cook county granted the prayers of the bill of Rothschild & Co. and Edward Morris and the cross-bill of the Northwestern Elevated Railroad Company, and entered a decree enjoining the city of Chicago and its officers, the defendants in said bills, from tearing down, destroying or injuring the platform or passageway connecting the building occupied by Rothschild & Co., on the north-east comer of State and VanBuren streets, in said city, with the elevated railroad structure in VanBuren street, and from interfering with the maintenance and use thereof during such time as said railroad company or its successors or assigns shall have the right to maintain and operate said elevated railroad structure in said street, and shall have the right to use the interior of said building as a waiting room, and the aisles, stairways and passenger elevators and the entrances and exits of said building, for the accommodation and convenience of its passengers. The Appellate Court for the Eirst District reversed the decree and dismissed the bill and cross-bill for want of equity. From the judgment of the Appellate Court the complainants in the bill and cross-bill severally appealed to this court.

The facts are as follows: The Northwestern Elevated Railroad Company, complainant in the cross-bill, is organized under the general act for the incorporation of railroad companies, and is possessed of the powers and privileges of general commercial railroad companies organized under that act. It owns and operates an elevated railroad encircling the central business portion of the city of Chicago and known as “the loop.” The elevated railroad was constructed by the predecessor in right and title of said company under an ordinance of the city of Chicago granting a license to occupy for that purpose the streets in which it was built. The loop is for the use of said company and four other railroad companies, and the ordinances relating thereto were accepted by the respective corporations, bonds were filed, and the conditions of payment of compensation to the city, and all other conditions, have been complied with. The ordinances so passed and accepted form the contract which governs the rights of the parties. An ordinance passed June 29, 1896, granted to the predecessor of the Northwestern Elevated Railroad Company permission and authority to construct ,and maintain that part of the loop in VanBuren street, and to construct and maintain in the route thereby authorized “all necessary or proper stations, platforms and depot stations that connect the same by means of all necessary stairs, stairways, elevators, landing places and other constructions and appliances for ingress, egress and the accommodation of passengers, but such platforms, stations, stairs, stairways, elevators, landing places, etc., shall be so constructed and maintained as not to unnecessarily impair the usefulness of such avenue or any portion thereof.” The ordinance contained this further provision: “Nothing herein contained, however, shall prohibit said company from locating and maintaining its stations in buildings purchased, leased, or erected on ground purchased or acquired by condemnation or lease, or in buildings adjacent to said stations or platforms, where authority is given by owners or lessees of said buildings for above purposes, wherein it may, for the convenience and comfort of its patrons, place its ticket offices, waiting rooms, sanitary accommodations, stairways, elevators; and all requisite methods of ingress and egress, and the right to construct and maintain covered passageways, or connections between the interior of all such station buildings and the exterior platforms, is hereby expressly granted to said company.” The ordinance fixed the location of stations along the route, one of which was to be located at or near State and VanBuren streets. The station was located at that place and constructed with platforms and four stairways, one at each corner, leading up and down from the sidewalks. After that station had been completed the railroad company filed with the commissioner of public works plans for the passageway in question leading from the platform above the street into the second story of the building occupied by Rothschild & Co., in pursuance of a contract with Rothschild & Co. for the construction of the same. The building faces VanBuren street on the south and is adjacent to the station, so that the passageway leads directly into and through the building. It is occupied as a department store and is seven stories high, fronting eighty feet on VanBuren street and three hundred and sixty feet on State street. It has an entrance from VanBuren street and a number of entrances from State street. The commissioner of public works issued the permit asked for to locate and maintain the necessary connections between the elevated structure and the building,, on July 26, 1897. The railroad company contracted for the manufacture of the steel and iron and materials for the construction of the passageway and connection, and the same were manufactured and on hand, when in September, 1897, the permit was revoked and notice of the revocation was given to Rothschild & Co. Afterward, on December 13, 1897, the city passed an ordinance declaring the construction of passageways, bridges, platforms and structures, of any kind or nature whatsoever, connecting or joining the elevated roadway with adjacent buildings a public nuisance, a menace to health and contrary to law and to the rights of the public, and ordering the same torn down where already built and prohibiting any such structure. This suit followed for the purpose of restraining the city from enforcing that ordinance. A similar passageway had been built on the opposite side of VanBuren street from the station to the store of Siegel, Cooper & Co., and there was a passageway to the store of Schlesinger & Mayer on Wabash avenue, and another to the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern depot. The railroad company opened negotiations with the city respecting this passageway, and it was agreed by the city officials in charge of the matter that the city would grant the privilege for the passageways to the three stores for a yearly rental of $1500 each. Siegel, Cooper & Co. executed a lease prepared by the city and returned it with a check for $1500, but Schlesinger & Mayer and Rothschild & Co. declined to pay, and the check was sent back to Siegel, Cooper & Co. and the agreement was canceled as to all. The passageway in this case was then built under the protection of the injunction.

The passageway leads directly to the second floor of the building and into a waiting room provided with chairs and seats for the use of the passengers. From the waiting room there is a large main aisle running directly through the building from the south to the north, crossed by other aisles to seven different stairways and four sets of elevators affording passage through the store to the street, and there are six street entrances, on all of which are sign's as follows : “Entrance to all Elevated Railroads.” The store building is open for business from eight o’clock in the morning until six o’clock in the evening, and during that time the public have unrestricted ingress and egress through the building to the station and the use of the elevators, waiting room and sanitary appliances. Passengers coming into the store may take the passenger elevators and avoid climbing the stairways in the street, and there are ample sanitary appliances open to the use of the general public.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 N.E. 407, 227 Ill. 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rothschild-co-v-city-of-chicago-ill-1907.