South Park Commissioners v. Ayer

92 N.E. 274, 245 Ill. 402
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 92 N.E. 274 (South Park Commissioners v. Ayer) 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
South Park Commissioners v. Ayer, 92 N.E. 274, 245 Ill. 402 (Ill. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hand

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a proceeding commenced in the circuit court of Cook county on the third day of July, 1907, by the appellee, the South Park Commissioners, against the appellants, the property owners, to condemn for park purposes the south two-thirds of the half block situated between Twenty-fifth and Twenty-sixth streets, in the city of Chicago, which property fronts west upon LaSalle street and abuts in the rear upon a ten-foot alley which adjoins the elevated right of way of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad Company and other railroad companies. The case has been tried twice. On the first trial the jury fixed the value of the land, exclusive of improvements, at $60,000, and judgment was rendered on that verdict, which judgment was reversed-by this court. (237 Ill. 211.) On the second trial the jury fixed the value of the land at $70,624.11, exclusive of improvements, upon which verdict the court rendered judgment, and the property owners have appealed.

The parties on the last trial each called three witnesses. The witnesses for the appellee fixed the value of the land, exclusive of improvements, Birkhoff at $60,000, Snow at $56,000 and Snelling at $52,250, or an average of $56,-083.33, and the witnesses for the appellants fixed the value of the land, exclusive of improvements, Oliver at $110,000, Getchell at $110,000 and Mills at $110,000, or an average of $110,000. The jury viewed the premises, and the law is well settled in this State that in a condemnation proceeding, where the jury have viewed the premises and where the evidence is conflicting, and where the amount is within the1 range of value as testified to on the trial and does not appear to have been the result of prejudice, passion, undue influence or other improper cause, the verdict will not be disturbed. (Rock Island and Peoria Railway Co. v. Leisy Brewing Co. 174 Ill. 547; Pullman Co. v. City of Chicago, 224 id. 248.) It is clear the amount fixed by the jury in this case was well within the range of the evidence, which was conflicting, and the verdict should not be set aside unless it appears it was brought about by some improper ruling of the court upon the trial.

The property sought to be taken abuts in the rear upon an alley which adjoins the elevated right of way of several railroad companies, and it has been the view of appellants from the commencement of this litigation that their property is so situated as to furnish an opportunity for a connection between their property and the lines of said railroad companies by platforms, switches or otherwise, which connection will furnish shipping facilities to their property, which greatly enhances its value for manufacturing, warehouse and other purposes.

It appeared from the evidence on the first trial, as well as from the evidence upon this trial, that while property owners whose properties are similarly situated to appellants’ with reference to the lines of said railroad companies have by contracts with the railroad companies and by the consent of the city been allowed connection and switching privileges with said railroad companies’ lines, the appellants have not secured for their property, either from the railroad companies or the city, such privileges; and upon the first trial it appears to have been the opinion of the trial court that the witnesses and the jury, in determining the value of appellants’ property, did not have the right to take into consideration the possibility that the appellants might, by contract with said railroad companies and with the consent of the city, secure for their property similar shipping facilities to those enjoyed by other properties adjoining the said railroad lines in the vicinity of appellants’ property,—that is, that the possibility that such facilities might be secured by the appellants for their property w^.s too remote to be taken into consideration by the witnesses in forming their judgments as to the value of appellants’ property w'hile testifying on the trial or by the jury in fixing its value in their verdict, and that element of value was eliminated by the court from the consideration of the jury upon the first trial. This court, upon the appeal from the first judgment, held that in that particular the trial court had fallen into error, as in the view of this court, as the record was then framed, the possibility that the appellants might secure from the city; by ordinance or otherwise, the right to cross the alley between their property and the railroad right of way, and might, by contract or otherwise with the railroad companies, make provision for a connection between their property and the railroad lines by platforms, switches or otherwise, w'hich would furnish shipping facilities in connection with said railroad lines, was an element not too remote to be taken into consideration in determining the value of appellants’ property, and the order of reversal of the judgment entered on the first trial directed that the case should be remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with the views expressed in the opinion of the court then filed. On the second trial the question of the value to appellants’ property because of the possibility of the connection or switching privileges which attached to the property by reason of its proximity to the said railroad lines was given considerable prominence, and it was contended by the appellants, and their contention is renewed here, that this court had held in its former opinion, as a question of fact, that the property of appellants was entitled to railroad connection and switching privileges with said railroad lines, and that the only question for the trial court and the jury to pass upon with reference to that question was the value of such privileges to appellants’ property.

This was an action at law, and upon the case being reinstated in the circuit court the parties were entitled to a re-trial of the case before a jury, and while the trial court would be governed by the legal principles announced by this court in the opinion filed on the first appeal in so far as those principles were applicable to the case made on the second trial, the parties would not be bound by what was said with reference to the facts in that opinion, for the reason that the reversal and remandment opened up the case for a new trial upon the facts, and to hold that this court by its opinion had concluded the parties to the litigation upon the facts would be to deprive the parties of their right to a jury trial. This court, in a chancery case, may determine the facts, and upon the remandment of the cause direct the trial court what decree it shall enter; but this is not true in cases where the parties, upon a remandment and re-trial, are entitled to have the facts submitted and passed upon by a jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 N.E. 274, 245 Ill. 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-park-commissioners-v-ayer-ill-1910.