Village of Bradley v. New York Central Railroad

129 N.E. 744, 296 Ill. 383
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1921
DocketNo. 12972
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 129 N.E. 744 (Village of Bradley v. New York Central Railroad) 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
Village of Bradley v. New York Central Railroad, 129 N.E. 744, 296 Ill. 383 (Ill. 1921).

Opinion

Per Curiam :

In Village of Bradley v. New York Central Railroad Co. 277 Ill. 608, the judgment of the county court of Kankakee county dismissing the petition of the village to ascertain the compensation to be paid for property taken or damaged in the construction of a system of sewers under the Local Improvement act and to levy an assessment to pay for the cost of construction upon the property benefited by the improvement was reversed and the cause was remanded, with directions to overrule all the legal objections except objections ii and 18, and upon those objections to change the assessment, if necessary, so as to produce a just and equitable distribution of the cost of the improvement between the public and the property benefited. Upon the remandment of the cause the distribution of the cost was adjusted, the commissioners, pursuant to the direction of the court, filed a revised assessment roll, there was a trial by jury at the August term, 1917, on the objections of the railroad company, and a verdict was returned finding that the property of the railroad company was benefited and finding the amount of such benefit. The railroad company’s motion for a new trial was denied. It then moved in arrest of judgment, but the cause was continued without disposing of this motion until May 16, 1919, in the April term, 1919, of the county court, when it was denied and judgment of confirmation of the revised assessment roll was entered. The railroad company appealed from this judgment.- Time was extended for filing a bill of exceptions, and within the time extended the appellant filed a bill of exceptions, which contained, in addition to the proceedings at the April term, all the proceedings which occurred at the trial at the August term, 1917, though no extension of time had been granted at that time for filing a bill of exceptions.

The appellee moved in this court to expunge from the record all that part of the bill of exceptions relating to proceedings prior to the April term, 1919, of the county court, because those proceedings were not preserved by a bill of exceptions taken at the term of court at which they occurred or within any extension of time allowed by the said court at that term. In 1911 the Practice act was amended, so that section 81 now provides that any adverse ruling upon any question submitted by a party to the court in the progress of a trial shall be matter for review upon appeal or writ of error without formal exception, and that after judgment at the term at which judgment was'entered, or within such time thereafter as shall during such term be fixed by the court, any party may submit to the court a stenographic report of the trial containing the evidence and the rulings of the court upon all or any of the questions submitted to and ruled upon by the judge. The judge' is required to certify to the correctness of the report if it is correct, and upon being filed it becomes a part of the record as effectually as if it were a formal bill of exceptions. It is immaterial whether the method adopted to incorporate the proceedings in the record is by bill of exceptions, certificate of evidence or stenographic report of the trial. (Miller v. Anderson, 269 Ill. 608.) Whatever method may be adopted, any ruling of the court in the progress of a trial upon any question adverse to the party submitting the question is subject to review without formal exception, and may be included in the bill of exceptions, certificate of evidence or stenographic report of the trial made at the term when final judgment is entered or within such further time as the court during such term may fix. The motion of the appellee was therefore overruled. This rule does not apply to motions made during the progress of the case or other proceedings not occurring during the trial. Rulings in respect to such motions or proceedings must be preserved at the time or within such time after the term at which they occur as the court during such term may fix.

The first cause of complaint argued by appellant is that the court refused to permit it to prove damages which would be sustained by it in removing its tracks in Washington avenue between Grove and Lawn streets and in replacing them in their original position, damages for the interruption of traffic during the construction of the sewer, and the expense of maintaining the tracks over excavations to be made for the sewer.

The land upon which the village of Bradley is located originally belonged to J. Herman Hardebeck, who in 1891 laid out the village and platted the west side thereof, which is all that portion lying west of the Illinois Central right of way. The east side was platted by the same owner in 1892. In the acknowledgment and dedication upon the face of the plat the grantor, Hardebeck, reserved to himself the exclusive right to construct and maintain a railroad track or tracks over the streets of the village, or to permit the same to be done, except on a strip ten feet wide on Washington avenue on the west side of block 19, which was reserved for the exclusive use of the owners of the block for a side-track. In February, 1908, Hardebeck and wife quit-claimed to the Chicago, Indiana and Southern Railway Company, of which appellant is the successor, all the rights of Hardebeck to construct, maintain or operate a railroad track or tracks, or permit the same to be done, over and along Washington avenue aforesaid, except on a strip ten feet wide along the west side of block 19. This deed was duly acknowledged and recorded March 4, 1908. The railroad company paid Hardebeck for this property right the sum of $1250. In 1907 the railroad company and the village of Bradley made an agreement relative to Washington avenue, by which the village by ordinance granted to the railroad company, for a valuable consideration, the right to construct its track along the center line of Washington avenue and other streets. The consideration paid by the railroad company for this agreement was 1000 yards of crushed stone and the conveyance to the village of the right to use an eighteen-inch sewer running from the railroad company’s right of way to the Kankakee river. The railroad company afterwards constructed a substantial track, in the center of Washington avenue the entire length of that avenue and has maintained and operated the same since its construction. In the block between Lawn and Grove streets the railroad company also constructed three or four spur-tracks running from the main switch in the center of the street to various industries, and the village in laying out its sewer system located a fifteen-inch sewer directly under the center of said tracks between Lawn and Grove streets. The evidence shows that it will be necessary, in order to put in this sewer as provided by the plans, to remove the tracks of appellant from the center of the street to the side of the street until after the sewer is constructed and then replace them in their original position, and that there will be an extra expense to maintain the tracks so as not to damage the sewer. The appellant attempted to prove what work would be necessary to remove those tracks and replace them, and to show that during that time the traffic over those tracks would be interrupted to the damage of appellant, and to show the amount of its damage for those items and for maintaining the tracks. The court excluded all proof upon those subjects and excluded all evidence from the jury touching those questions of damages.

A dedication of a highway or street to the public may be made cum onere. (State v. Society, 44 N. J. L.

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Bluebook (online)
129 N.E. 744, 296 Ill. 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-bradley-v-new-york-central-railroad-ill-1921.