Sullivan v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co.

95 N.E. 1081, 251 Ill. 108
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 95 N.E. 1081 (Sullivan v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co.) 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
Sullivan v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co., 95 N.E. 1081, 251 Ill. 108 (Ill. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Vickers

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a decree in the circuit court of Will county awarding a mandatory injunction against the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company and the Chicago and Alton Railroad Company commanding said companies within .ninety days to remove a concrete wall erected in that portion of VanBuren street which lies south of the west seventy-nine feet of lot 5, in block 14, in the city of Joliet. The bill was filed by the owners of the west seventy-nine feet of said lot 5. The cause was heard upon the amended bill, answer of the defendants, and evidence, both documentary and oral, submitted in open court, and a decree was rendered in accordance with the prayer of the bill, requiring the railroad companies to remove said concrete wall within ninety days, with a proviso in the decree that if said railroad companies shall commence proceedings to condemn the premises occupied by said wall within the ninety days, the time during which such condemnation proceedings are pending shall be excluded from the ninety days allowed for the removal of said wall. The railroad companies have perfected this appeal.

The evidence necessary to an understanding of the questions involved is as follows: Appellees are the owners in fee of the west seventy-nine feet of lot 5, in block 14, in the city of Joliet. VanBuren street runs east and west. The south line of appellees’ lot is the north line of VanBuren street. VanBuren street was opened as a highway pursuant to a common law dedication made by a plat which was not executed in accordance with the statute then in force, in the year 1835. In January, 1906, the city council passed an ordinance, known as ordinance No. 2219, requiring the railroads to elevate their tracks. By said track elevation ordinance that portion of VanBuren street occupied by the concrete wall in question was vacated and closed to public travel. Appellants claim that the erection of the wall in question was a necessary part of the work required by the track elevation scheme provided for by the ordinance. Appellees contend that upon the vacation of VanBuren street the title to that portion of the street adjoining their lot to the center of said street reverted to them by virtue of their ownership of said lot, and that the erection of said concrete wall by appellants was an unlawful invasion of appellees’ property rights.

The principles of law that govern this case are well settled by the previous decisions of this court. Upon the vacation of a street existing by virtue of a common law dedication, the title to the center of the street reverts to the adjacent lot owners freed from the encumbrance of the easement. (Gebhardt v. Reeves, 75 Ill. 301; Hamilton v. Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Co. 124 id. 235; Thomsen v. McCormick, 136 id. 135.) A conveyance of a lot adjoining a street or highway established by a common law dedication conveys the title to the middle of such highway, subject only to the public easement. When the easement is abandoned or otherwise terminated, the title, with all the incidents of ownership, becomes perfect in the adjacent lot owner. Even while the easement is in existence the abutting owner may make any use he sees fit of the premises to the-center of the street that does not interfere with the use of the easement by the public. (Sears v. City of Chicago, 247 Ill. 204.) The title of the adjacent lot owner is a vested interest, of which he cannot be deprived without due process of law, and any statute or ordinance that deprives one of his property rights thus vested would be unconstitutional and void. (McGee on Due Process of Law, p. 153; Scars v. City of Chicago, supra.) The track elevation ordinance vacated VanBuren street in front of appellees’ lot and in effect authorized its total and permanent abandonment as a street. If this is true, there is no escape from the conclusion that the title of the adjacent lot owners was united with the seizin in law, thus giving them the right to enter and enjoy the same according to the nature of the estate they owned in the abutting lot. If the street was legally vacated, in the usual and ordinary sense of those terms, appellants had no more right to erect a wall or other obstruction on the north half of said street in front of appellees’ lot than they would have had to build a like wall on any other portion of appellees’ premises.

Appellants "deny that the track elevation ordinance had the effect of vacating any portion of VanBuren street so as to destroy the public easement and cause a reversion to the adjacent lot owners, and in support of this contention they rely on Summerfield v. City of Chicago, 197 Ill. 270, Weage v. Chicago and Western Indiana Railroad Co. 227 id. 421, and People v. Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago Railway Co. 244 id. 166. Those cases are distinguishable from the case at bar. The Summerfield case was a condemnation proceeding, by which the city of Chicago sought to condemn private property for the purpose of widening' Stewart avenue so as to accommodate the public in reaching a subway constructed in Stewart avenue under a track elevation ordinance. It was contended that the city had no power to turn over the original street to a railroad company for the purpose of enabling it to elevate its tracks "and then condemn other property for the use of the public. It was held that the track elevation ordinance was a proper exercise of the powers vested in the city and that the use of the street for such purpose was not an unlawful diversion of the street to the use of the railroad company, and that such use of the streets was not a new servitude but only another mode of using the street so as to conserve the best interest of the public. There was no question in that case relating to a complete abandonment of the street or to the rights of abutting lot owners that would arise out of a situation of that character. As widened by the condemnation proceeding the street was left open for thuse of the public for ordinary travel and at the same time sufficient space was furnished for the structures made nec'essary by the track elevation ordinance.

The case of Weage v. Chicago and Western Indiana Railroad Co. was a bill filed by a number of lot owners whose lots were located on Wallace street, between Forty-ninth and Seventy-second streets, to enjoin the railroad company from elevating its tracks in said street, or, in the alternative, that damages be assessed to the several lot owners, on the theory that the track elevation ordinance vacated Wallace street and that the fee to the center of the street reverted to the owners of the adjoining lots. A demurrer was sustained to the bill and the bill dismissed for want of equity. That decree was affirmed by this court, the court holding that the track elevation ordinance, which allowed the use, for its full width, of a street by a railroad company which had a perpetual easement for its tracks therein, did not effect a vacation of the street, so as to cause a reversion of the fee to the abutting property owner. This court, in discussing the question presented, (p. 427) said: “The exclusion of the public from the use of the street and the continuation of its use by defendant in error did not have the effect of causing a reversion to the dedicators, as would have been the case had the street been vacated for the purpose of abandoning its use entirely as a street.” The decision in that case is based on the proposition that the use of a street longitudinally for elevated railroad tracks is simply a change in the method of using the street and not an abandonment of it as a public highway.

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Bluebook (online)
95 N.E. 1081, 251 Ill. 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-atchison-topeka-santa-fe-railway-co-ill-1911.