Stewart v. Chicago General Street Railway Co.

58 Ill. App. 446, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 73
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 22, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 58 Ill. App. 446 (Stewart v. Chicago General Street Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Chicago General Street Railway Co., 58 Ill. App. 446, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 73 (Ill. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Me. Presiding Justice Waterman

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The first question for consideration upon this appeal is whether a court of equity will, in the case presented by appellant’s bill, interfere at the suit of an owner of abutting property to restrain the use, for public purposes, of a street by a private corporation.

The question really is, whether an abutting owner has such a private right—vested interest—in the use to which a public street may be put, that he is entitled to have such private right and interest respected and protected by the people’s writ of injunction.

It is manifest that if the abutting owner is entitled to enjoin the use of a public street, it is because of his private right; he can not assume to, because he does not represent the public. The attorney general is the only proper representative of the public, and in suitable cases bills may be by him maintained to protect the public interests. Kerfoot v. The People, 51 Ill. App. 409; Attorney General v. The Newberry Library, 51 Ill. App. 166; same v. same, 150 Ill. 229; Hunt v. Chicago Horse & Dummy Ry. Co., 121 Ill. 638.

If one abutting property owner may, for such an injury to the public, file a bill and obtain an injunction, then each of such owners may do likewise.

Hr. A, the owner of a lot, obtains upon his bill an injunction against the contemplated use. His bill is answered; testimony is taken; upon hearing, the evidence, being considered, is found not to sustain the allegations of the bill, whereupon it is dismissed. Hr. B immediately files his bill, the allegations being the same as those in that of Hr. A, with the necessary variation as to the description of the lot of which B is the owner. If the bill of A presented a case for an injunction, the bill of B does; it is no answer to say that the court has found the allegations in the bill of A to be untrue; Hr. B was not a party to that suit; he is not bound by the conclusions there reached; he is entitled to be heard upon the charge by him made; he well urges that it by no means follows that he may not establish the truth of allegations which A failed to prove; and that the rights of B can not be foreclosed by a suit brought and prosecuted by A.

The court can not be a respecter of persons, and to be consistent must give B an injunction and hear his cause. The second suit results like the first, whereupon C files his bill demanding an injunction and a hearing. How can he be denied ? In brief, if one abutting owner is entitled to, by injunction, maintain the public right, why is not each, successively %

If appellant may upon his bill obtain an injunction restraining the use of the street by appellee, why may not another abutting property owner, in another and proper proceeding, obtain an order compelling appellee to comply with its contract with the public, by placing rails upon and running cars for the carriage of passengers along the streets ? The difficulty with proceedings at the suit of individual owners of abutting property, to either restrain or compel the use of a public street for a particular purpose, is that such suit concludes no one but the parties to it. The very decree and restraining order appellant seeks, he might for a selfish and personal consideration release; he can establish only his property right, and that he may barter in any lawful way.

For these and other reasons it is well established that the attorney general is the proper party to represent the public, and a bill will not lie at the instance of an individual to restrain the doing of that from which the complainant will suffer no damage other than that which the public sustain.

The abutting property owners do not, in this as in some other States, own the fee of the street. The street is held by the public authorities in trust for the use of the public. The abutting owner has therefrom a right of access to his property, a right to the light and air that naturally come to his premises from the public way, but to the use of, or to control the use to which the street may be put, he has no more right than any of the other millions for whose convenience the highway exists. If, by reason of the taking of the street for a new public use, his property is specially damaged, he is entitled to recover such damage in an action at law. To one who desires at his home quiet and peace, it may be annoying that thousands should pass his door in noisy omnibuses or crowded cars. The right, however, to say who shall ride or walk past his door does not belong to him. The street is for the use of the public, of which he is but one.

Before the public authorities can give any one the right to lay railroad tracks past his property the consent of a majority of the owners of abutting property must be had, and with such consent, the right to put down such tracks can only be given for public purposes. The street is servient to the public, for its use, and neither by the authorities of the city or by the consent of the abutting owners, can the public be excluded therefrom.

In endeavoring to restrain the running of street cars for the accommodation of the public, appellant is asserting that he has a private right in the street superior to that of the public or that he is entitled to represent the public in his suit and conclude the millions by a decree rendered in litigation to which they are not parties.

In support of the position that in such a case as this a court of equity will, at the suit of an abutting property owner, restrain the running of cars upon the street, a large number of authorities have been cited, a few of which we have examined. Taking them in the order of citation the first to which our attention is called is that of Hickey v. The Chicago and Western Indiana Railway Co., 6 Ill. App. 172.

The opinion in this case was by the late J udge McAlister, and contains among othez things, upon pages 186 and 187, the following:

“ The bill in this case contains some eighty-two complainants. This multiplicity of plaintiffs, while it tends to obscure the merits and embarrass the remedy, was dictated doubtless by the fear of the suit being quietly disposed of by settlement with plaintiffs, if there were but few of them. As to thirty-five of these plaintiffs, the bill shows by its statements, their ownership, respectively, of real estate which the railroad company proposes under said ordinance to take and enter upon, or which is so located as to be specially injured by the construction of the railroad within the city under said ordinance. As to these, the bill shows a clear case for the interposition of equity by injunction, on the ground that the act threatened would be in excess of the power of the corporation; the entry upon plaintiff’s lands would not bé a mere trespass, but a continuing permanent injury to the owners of the. land to be taken, and those whose premises were so situated as that they would receive special injury from the construction of the railroad, are equally entitled to the relief sought. As to the other plaintiffs, in respect to whose property they “ would be more or less injured,” we do not think the bill shows any case. There must be some special inj ury. Milhan v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 Ill. App. 446, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-chicago-general-street-railway-co-illappct-1895.