Saunders v. City of Chicago

72 N.E. 13, 212 Ill. 206
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 72 N.E. 13 (Saunders 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
Saunders v. City of Chicago, 72 N.E. 13, 212 Ill. 206 (Ill. 1904).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a proceeding in the county court of Cook county to confirm a special assessment for paving Loomis street, from Garfield boulevard to Sixty-third street, in the city of Chicago. The appellant, whose land was sought to be assessed, appeared and filed objections to the confirmation of the assessment'. The objections were overruled, the assessment was confirmed, and appellant has prosecuted an appeal to this court.

On the 8th day of April, 1870, one Joshua Bell subdivided the west half of the south-west quarter of section 17, town 38, north, range 14, east, of which he was the owner, into lots, blocks, streets and alleys, and executed and acknowledged a plat thereof, and on May 2, 1870, caused the plat, with the certificate of the surveyor, to be recorded in the office of recorder of deeds in and for Cook county. On the 20th day of February, 1871, said Bell sold and conveyed blocks 1 and 10 of said subdivision or addition to the city of Chicago to one Henry Mueller. On March 5, 1871, Bell executed, acknowledged and filed for record an instrument purporting to vacate all that part of the plat north of Sixty-first street. On the 6th day of August, 1872, Bell executed a deed purporting to convey to one Henry Saunders the east half of the north-east quarter of the north-west quarter of the soiith-west quarter of section 17, being a part of that portion of the said subdivision described in the instrument which purported to be a deed of vacation of a portion of the plat. Said Henry Saunders, by his last will and testament, devised the same tract conveyed to him by said Bell, to the appellant. The following map shows the subdivision as originally platted, (except that the lots into which the blocks were subdivided are not shown,) the blocks (9 and 10) which were sold by Bell to Mueller, and the portion of the plat attempted to be vacated:

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The ordinance provided that the roadway of Loomis street should be paved with blast-furnace slag and crushed limestone and be curbed with sandstone curb-o stones, and that the cost of the improvement should be paid by special assessments on the property benefited by the improvement.

The premises, as described in the conveyance from Bell to Saunders and in the devise in the will of Saunders to the appellant, includes block No. 1 on the plat, that part of Loomis and Fifty-ninth streets on which block 1 abutted, and the east half of that part of Bishop street and the north half of that part of West Sixtieth street on which the block abutted. The appellant insisted the deed of vacation was effectual to divest all rights that had been created by the execution and recording of the plat, and that she was the owner of the territory alleged to constitute all that part of Loomis street from the northern limits of West Fifty-ninth street to the center line of West Sixtieth street, and that the city of Chicago had no power to improve this territory as one of the public streets of the city. It is conceded by the appellant that Loomis street, throughout its length and breadth, is one of the public streets of the city unless the instrument executed and filed for record by said Bell, the proprietor of the plat, had legal operation to divest the municipality of the right and title thereto, which had passed from him to it by the execution and recording of the plat.

Neither the whole nor any portion of a statutory plat can be vacated except in compliance with the provisions of the statute authorizing plats, or portions of plats, to be vacated. This plat was executed in 1870, and the instrument relied upon to vacate the portion of it which is here involved was executed and recorded in 1871. The right to vacate a plat, or a portion thereof, was then governed by the act of the General Assembly approved February 16, 1847, (Laws of 1847, pp. 166, 167,) which reads as follows:

“Sec. 1. That in all cases where persons have heretofore, or may hereafter, lay out towns, or additions to towns, or subdivisions of town lots," and the plats or maps thereof shall have been recorded, they, their heirs, assigns or grantees may, at any time before making sale of any single lot or lots, by executing a writing and causing the same to be recorded in the office in which the plat or map was recorded, declare such map or plat to be vacated; and the execution and recording of such writing shall operate to destroy the force and effect of the recording of the plat or map so vacated, and to divest all public rights in the streets, alleys, commons and public grounds laid down or described in such plat or map; and in cases where any single lot or lots have been sold, the plat or map may be vacated as herein provided, by all the owners of lots joining in the execution of the writing aforesaid: Provided, that no such writing shall be recorded until the execution thereof shall have been acknowledged or proved as is or may be required in respect to deeds.”

Section 2 has no relation to the question at issue in this cause.

“Sec. 3. Any part of a plat or map of a town, addition or subdivision may be vacated under the provisions and subject to the conditions herein contained.”

Section 1 applies, by its express terms, to the vacation of the entire plat, and grants to the proprietor of the plat absolute power to vacate the plat and divest all public rights in the streets or alleys at any time before any “single lot or lots” in the plat have been sold, and after a lot or lots have been sold, grants to the proprietor and the owners of such lots as have been sold the power to vacate the plat. The proprietor of a plat has, therefore, no sole power of vacation after he has invested others, as owners of lots, with an interest in the plat. Section 3 authorizes the vacation of a part or parts of a plat, and provides that a part of a plat may be vacated under the provisions of and subject to the conditions contained in section 1 of the act. The provisions and conditions of section 1 are, that a deed of vacation may be made by the proprietor alone when no lots have been sold in the plat, but if lots have been sold, the deed of vacation must be made by the proprietor and the owner or owners of such lot or lots as have been sold. Applying these provisions and conditions to the vacation of a portion of a plat, the proprietor of the plat possessed the power to vacate any portion of the plat at any time before he had invested others with an interest in a lot or lots shown on the plat, and after any lot or lots had been sold, then the power of vacation resided jointly in the proprietor and the owners of any lot or lots in the subdivision. This construction not only gives to the language employed its natural meaning, but is the only construction which can be given, in justice, to all the persons who are interested in the proposed vacation of parts of a plat. ~ •

It is contended that the enactment ■ should be construed to authorize the proprietor of a plat in which others were owners of lots, to vacate any part of the plat in which the proprietor remained the owner of all the lots.

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Bluebook (online)
72 N.E. 13, 212 Ill. 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saunders-v-city-of-chicago-ill-1904.