Town of Cicero v. People

105 Ill. App. 406, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 13
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 16, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 105 Ill. App. 406 (Town of Cicero v. People) 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
Town of Cicero v. People, 105 Ill. App. 406, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 13 (Ill. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burke

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant claims that the judgment in favor of petitioners was recovered on a contract for a local improvement payable out of special assessments; that there is no money in the special fund and that therefore mandamus will not lie. The record in this case shows that the judgment in question is a general judgment and does not appear to be a judgment payable out of a special fund.

If appellant’s claim is good, that the work done by petitioners should be paid out of a special fund, diligence on its part at the time final judgment was entered required that it should have moved the court to have incorporated in said order that said judgment be paid out of a special fund. If justice demanded, the court had power to have protected the interests of the town by the entry of a judgment, making the same payable out of a special fund. Where a contract makes a claim payable out of a special fund, the court has jurisdiction and authority to render a judgment directing that the same be paid out of moneys belonging to that particular fund. If the town had so elected and the facts justified, the court could have entered a judgment directing that the judgment of petitioners be paid out of the moneys collected from a special assessment. City of Peoria v. Fruin-Bambrick C. Co., 68 Ill. App. 277.

The following cases—Peake v. New Orleans, 139 U. S. 342, and Belford v. Woodward, 158 Ill. 122, hold that a judgment may specify the fund from which it is to be paid.

In the absence of such provision in the judgment order it may be fairly assumed that an absolute and general judgment was satisfactory to defendant. It can not be said, from anything appearing in the record and evidence before the Appellate Court, that ageneral j udgment was not entirely proper. We can not say that because the services recovered for, were for an improvement provided for by an ordinance of the town, that it may not have appeared perfectly proper to the court and satisfactory to the parties that a general judgment be entered, or it may have appeared to the court that the town preferred ageneral judgment to a special judgment, or it may have appeared to the court that the town through its negligence in collecting the moneys for said work had become liable therefor, or because of its willful or negligent action had prevented the possibility of the collection of the judgment from special assessment; and against some of these emergencies the contract protected petitioners. Maher v. Chicago, 38 Ill. 267.

But speculation can not be indulged in with respect to the reason or reasons moving the court to enter a general and absolute judgment instead of a judgment made payable out of a special fund. It is now too late in this form of action to inquire into the consideration and conditions that led up to the judgment.

In Allen v. Haley, 169 Ill. 532, it is said that “ the judgment in the original case is conclusive. The rule stated by Chief Justice De Grey, as to conclusiveness of judgments, is, that the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction directly upon the point is, as a plea, a bar, or as evidence conclusive between the same parties upon the same matter directly in question in another court.” This language, from being constantly quoted with approbation, has acquired almost the force of a statute, not only in reference to matters actually litigated, but as to all other matters properly involved, and which parties might have raised and had determined in the same cause. The following authorities sustain the same doctrine: Litch v. Clinch, 136 Ill. 410; Bailey v. Bailey, 115 Ill. 551; Harmon v. Auditor, 123 Ill. 122.

In support of his contention that the judgment can not in law be an absolute and general judgment because the services of petitioners were rendered under contract for a street improvement provided for by an ordinance, counsel for the town refers to the statute relating thereto, and also to certain decisions of the Supreme Court of this state.

If the action for recovery of judgment for such services were pending before us, the law and decisions referred to would be relevant; but no appeal or writ of error was prosecuted from that judgment and no collateral attack can be made upon it. In the case of People v. Village of Hyde Park, 117 Ill. 462, a petition for a writ of mandamus was filed, praying that the village be required, among other things, to levy a general tax to pay judgments recovered in condemnation proceedings.

In that case it appears that judgments had been obtained in condemnation proceedings, and subsequent thereto the proceedings had been abandoned by the village as to some of the property and a writ of mandamus prayed to enforce the collection of these judgments. The court refused on the grounds that these so-called judgments could only be paid out of a fund arising from special assessment. It will be observed that the judgment in condemnation proceedings is only a conditional judgment. The proceedings were simply for the purpose of ascertaining and fixing judicially an amount which the village should pay as just compensation in order to be entitled to take the property for public use as a street. The judgment in such case should simply be, and doubtless was, in substance, an adjudication that the amount was a just compensation to be paid by the city for the taking of the property sought to be condemned.

In City of Bloomington v. Miller, 84 Ill. 621, it is said :

“ A judgment in condemnation proceedings that the owner of the property shall unconditionally recover anv given amount of the city is wrong. The city has a right to abandon the improvement. This proceeding merely fixed the amount to be paid before the property can lawfully be taken.”

Hyde Park v. Nathan Corwith, 122 Ill. 441, is in all essential features the same case as the one last noticed, and the statement is made that the condemnation judgments can only be paid, if at all, by special assessment under the original ordinance, which is in force as to them. Such is the nature of the conditional order fixing compensation for taking property in condemnation proceedings, that the entire proceedings, including the ordinance, the source of power and authority for instituting the action, are a part of such order, and to these and all parts thereof must the property owners look for their compensation.

In the case of Hyde Park v. Thatcher, 13 Ill. App. 613, the court say that when it is sought to coerce a municipal corporation into the doing of an act, the party applying must show not only a clear legal right to have the thing done, but he must show affirmatively that the corporation has the power and that it is its duty to do the act in the same manner sought. Again it is to be stated that the court there refers to a conditional judgment in condemnation proceedings, and it was there sought to coerce the village into paying these conditional judgments out of funds other than those specified by the law. The law relating thereto is interwoven into, and a part of condemnation proceedings.

Dolese v. McDougall, 78 Ill. App.

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Related

Peake v. New Orleans
139 U.S. 342 (Supreme Court, 1891)
City of Bloomington v. Miller
84 Ill. 621 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1877)
Bailey v. Bailey
115 Ill. 551 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1886)
People ex rel. Thatcher v. Village of Hyde Park
6 N.E. 33 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1886)
Village of Hyde Park v. Corwith
12 N.E. 238 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1887)
Harmon v. Auditor of Public Accounts
13 N.E. 161 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1887)
Litch v. Clinch
26 N.E. 579 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1891)
People ex rel. Hambel v. McConnell
34 N.E. 945 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1893)
Belford v. Woodward
29 L.R.A. 593 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1895)
Swift v. Klein
45 N.E. 219 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1896)
Allen v. Haley
48 N.E. 478 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1897)
Town of Cicero v. Hill
61 N.E. 1020 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1901)
Village of Hyde Park v. Thatcher
13 Ill. App. 613 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1883)
City of Peoria v. Fruin-Bambrick Construction Co.
68 Ill. App. 277 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1896)
Dolese v. McDougall
78 Ill. App. 629 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1898)

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Bluebook (online)
105 Ill. App. 406, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-cicero-v-people-illappct-1903.