Union Building Ass'n v. City of Chicago

61 Ill. 439
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 61 Ill. 439 (Union Building Ass'n 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
Union Building Ass'n v. City of Chicago, 61 Ill. 439 (Ill. 1871).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McAllister

delivered the opinion of the Court:

It is very apparent, from the record in this case, that the proceedings relative to the original assessment Avere, from their first inception and through every stage, totally Amid. In 1858, the street in question Avas raised to grade, curb Avails built upon both sides thereof, filled, and paved Avith stone pavement, by special assessment upon real estate deemed specially benefited.

Being thus-situated, the original.ordinance Avas passed under the recommendation of the board of public Avorks, in the same form, ordering the curb Avails on Washington street, from the Avest line of State to the east line of Franklin street, to be rebuilt and repaired Avhere the same Avere not then in a suitable condition, and said street to be paved with Avooden blocks except such portions of the work as had already been done in a suitable manner, the work to be done under the superintendence of the board of public Avorks. The sum of $2887.40 was the basis of the assessment for the curb Avails, $24,790.79 for the paving, $276.78 for engineering and superintending, and $225 for the costs of the proceeding, making the total sum of $28,179.97

A similar ordinance has been held by this court to vest in the board an improper and illegal discretion, opening the door to fraud, and therefore void. Foss v. The City of Chicago, 56 Ill. 354.

Not only was the ordinance void for the reason assigned, but the subsequent proceedings, though strictly in conformity with it as to the parts which vitiate, were variant from it as to the description of the work. In the oath of the commissioners, certificate of the completion of the assessment, notice of application to the council for confirmation, and in the assessment roll itself as confirmed, the extent of the improvement was designated as being that portion of Washington street from the west line of State to the west line of Franklin street, thus extending the work across Franklin street without any ordinance directing it.

It appears that, at the time of the application for the new ordinance, the work was all completed, and so stated in the commissioners’ report, so that the actual cost of it was known to the board; that upwards of $14,000 had been voluntarily paid by the property owners upon the amount assessed upon real estate deemed specially benefited;' that the actual cost of the paving, ascertained from reliable data, viz: the contract under which it was done, and a careful measurement by a competent engineer, was only $15,202.00, being $9,585.79 less than the estimated cost which was made the basis of the original assessment, and which actual cost, when added to the $2887.40, the estimated cost of repairing the curb walls, shows the total actual cost—assuming that the item for curb Avails Avas actual—tó be $18,092.40. Then, if Ave deduct the $14,194.03 voluntarily paid by the property OAvners, Ave lurve $3898.37 as the whole amount necessary to pay for the entire work, allowing the sum of nearly $3000 under the provision for “rebuilding and repairing the curb walls where the same are not now in a suitable condition.”

The board of public works, from their position with relation to'the matters in question,‘must be held chargeable with knowledge of all material facts.

When they made application to the council for an ordinance authorizing a new assessment, they stated that the work had been done and fully completed. This made it apparent that they knew what had been the actual cost of it, but no allusion is made to that subject, and they simply state that there was the sum of §8339.15 which the city had failed to collect of the original assessment., and ask an ordinance authorizing them to levy that amount upon what they plcaSe to call the delinquent property of the real estate specially benefited.

The council, Avithout inquiry as to the actual cost, pass the ordinance. When the assessment roll is completed under this ordinance, the parcels of land included in it are assessed precisely as they were in the original. Appellant’s lands are assessed for §834.28, the exact amount in the original. The new assessment is necessarily upon the same basis as the former. It requires them to pay their proportional share for the paving at the sum of §24,790.19, the amount of the original estimate, instead of §15,205.00, the actual cost. It requires them to pay their proportional share of §225, the estimated costs of proceedings Avhich, as to them, are utterly void. And if the neAv assessment is to be held valid and the amount collected, then the city will haxre obtained, perhaps, by divesting the owners of their property after the completion of the work and the actual cost become knoAvn to a cent, a sum not far from §4440 above that Avhich is actually necessary to pay for the Avhole work at its actual cost. Upon what considerations of justice, reason or Iuav, can this be sustained? None haAre been suggested but the mere letter of the 36th section of chapter 7 of the city charter, (Gary’s Laws, 75.) Having departed from both the letter and spirit of the law in every step through the original proceedings, the city authorities have become rigid adherents to the very letter in-the supplementary ones. The counsel for the corporation insists that, under said section, the new assessment must be for the deficiency of the former one because the statute says so, and not for the actual cost of the work.

We have given that section much attention and viewed it in every light in which it has been presented by able counsel in the variety of cases before us. It is very peculiar in its provisions, and - seems to betray a design not exactly to take away the general jurisdiction of the courts, but to place these original assessments, in a measure, beyond the effects of their decrees and judgments. “If, from any cause,” it says, “the city shall fail to collect the whole or any portion of any special assessment which may be hereafter levied, and which, shall not be canceled, and set aside by the order of any court upon certiorari or appeal,” etc., “the common council may, at any time within five years after the confirmation of the original assessment, direct a new assessment to be made upon the delinquent property for the amount of such deficiency and interest thereon from the date of such original assessment, which assessment shall be made as near as may be in the same manner as is herein prescribed for the first assessment.” It then declares that, in cases where partial payments shall have been made on the former assessment, they shall be credited; that repeated new assessments may be made, provided they are commenced within said five years; that it shall constitute no legal objection that the property has changed hands meanwhile, and then employs these words : “It being the true intent and meaning of this section to make the cost and expense of all public improvements, to be paid for by special assessment, a charge upon the property assessed therefor for the full period of five years from the confirmation of the original assessment, and for such longer period as may be required to collect in due course of law any neAv assessment ordered by the common council Avithin that period.”

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Bluebook (online)
61 Ill. 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-building-assn-v-city-of-chicago-ill-1871.