Union Coal Co. v. City of LaSalle

136 Ill. 119
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 136 Ill. 119 (Union Coal Co. v. City of LaSalle) 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 Coal Co. v. City of LaSalle, 136 Ill. 119 (Ill. 1891).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Some controversy arises in this case as to the precise questions presented by the record to the trial court for its adjudication, and, consequently, as to the precise questions presented to this court for its decision. The issue made by the pleadings is that of a trespass committed by the defendant, by entering upon certain strata of coal underlying the public streets of the city of LaSalle and taking therefrom large quantities of coal and converting the same to its own use. This is the entire scope of the case made by the declaration and plea, and the only judgment which the trial court thereby obtained jurisdiction to pronounce was that of guilty or not guilty of the trespass thus alleged.

The stipulation of the parties as to the facts admits that the territory embraced within the city of LaSalle was formerly owned by the State, it being a portion of the lands donated by the United States to aid in the construction of the Illinois and Michigan Canal; that in 1838 the trustees of said canal, by virtue of the authority conferred upon them by law, platted and laid off said territory into lots, blocks, streets, alleys and public squares; that underlying said streets, alleys and public squares are several veins of coal, said coal being beneath strata' of solid rock several hundred feet in thickness, so that it can be mined without injury to said streets, and without impairing their usefulness as public highways; that said canal trustees conveyed to sundry persons all the lots and blocks so platted by them, and that the defendant owms, by purchase from the various owners, all the coal underlying the lots and blocks in the portion of said city in question in this suit, and is desirous, in connection therewith, of obtaining, by purchase or otherwise, the right to mine the coal underlying said streets and alleys; that said city is willing to sell said coal and the right to mine it at a certain price, but that a controversy exists as to the right of said city to sell and dispose of said coal; that the defendant has, without permission, mined and removed coal from beneath the streets of the said city to the amount, in value, of $1050; that the parties have agreed that in case the city has the right to sell said coal, the reasonable damage for the coal mined by the defendant is $50 per acre for the coal actually mined, and in case the city has the right to sell said coal, it is willing to sell.for a like sum per acre all the coal not mined underlying all the streets, alleys and public squares of said city west of Joliet street; that in case it shall be determined by the final adjudication of the courts of tin's State that said city has a legal right to sell and dispose of the coal underlying its streets, alleys and public squares, a judgment shall be rendered against the defendant for the value of the coal thus mined, computed at the rate aforesaid, but that if it shall be finally decided by said courts that said city has no right to sell and dispose of said coal, judgment shall be entered in this case in favor of the defendant, “the city not desiring but expressly waiving all right to recover merely nominal damages for the mining of said coal, or any damage whatever in case it has no legal right to sell said coal; ” that the question both parties desire to have determined is, as to the right of the city to sell and dispose of the coal aforesaid at its market value, it being conceded that no actual damage has been done to the surface of the streets or their use for public purposes, or will be occasioned to them by mining said coal.

The contention is, that, under this stipulation, a question not raised by the pleadings, and in respect to which there is no present controversy between the parties, viz, whether the city has the legal right or power to sell to the defendant the remaining coal underlying its streets, alleys and public squares and license the defendant to mine and remove the same, is presented for adjudication, and that the court, before it could properly render a judgment of guilty against the defendant for the alleged trespass, was obliged to pass upon that question and hold that- such right to sell and license existed. It is manifest that the question thus sought to be raised was purely speculative, the effort being to obtain in advance the opinion of the court as to the validity of a contemplated contract before it is entered into, or any rights in relation to it have accrued to either party, they thus seeking, in effect, to employ the court as their legal adviser in a matter about which they intend to negotiate. It is not the province of the courts to pronounce opinions or to give advice upon questions which are merely speculative. Judicial investigation, ordinarily at least, should be limited to rights which have actually accrued, and all attempts to obtain from the courts decisions in relation to rights which have not yet accrued, or to the validity of transactions which have not yet been entered into, ought to and usually do prove abortive.

Under the pleadings the right of the plaintiff to recover depended solely upon whether the evidence presented at the trial established the defendant’s guilt of the trespass alleged, and it was not within the power of the parties to so change the established order of legal proceedings, as to make such right depend upon the opinion the court might form as to the validity or invalidity of a contract in relation to another subject matter which the parties were seeking to negotiate. Nor does it seem to be material that some of the legal principles involved in such proposed contract may have had a collateral bearing upon the issue presented by the pleadings. It is sufficient to say, that the validity of such contract was not in issue, and was not and could not be submitted to the court for its decision in the manner here attempted. The court was therefore entirely at liberty to disregard the stipulation, so far as it attempted to obtain a decision of a matter not properly before it. If it had attempted to decide that question, there was no legal mode by which it could embody such decision in its judgment, and its opinion in relation to it, if it had seen proper to pronounce one, would have been a mere obiter dictum.

But if it should be conceded that the portion of the stipulation which calls for the decision of a question not at issue was in all respects valid, and binding both upon the parties and the court, it can not be doubted, we think, that it should receive a strict construction, or at least a construction which would confine its operation to the cases specifically provided for. Its terms are, that in case it is decided that the city has a legal right to sell and dispose of the coal underlying its streets, alleys and public squares, the judgment should be for the plaintiff for the value of the coal already mined, but that if the decision should be that the city has no such right, judgment should be entered for the defendant. There is no stipulation, however, as to what judgment should be entered in case the court declined to pass on that question at all. As to that possible, and indeed very probable outcome of the litigation, the stipulation was silent. There was no provision that in that event the suit should be dismissed, or that judgment should go for or against either party. It follows that the court, by declining to pass upon the question thus sought to be submitted, was left entirely at liberty to decide the issue presented by the pleadings upon the merits, wholly untrammelled by any of the requirements of the stipulation.

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Bluebook (online)
136 Ill. 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-coal-co-v-city-of-lasalle-ill-1891.