Village of Glencoe v. Uthe

97 N.E. 1057, 253 Ill. 518
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 97 N.E. 1057 (Village of Glencoe v. Uthe) 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 Glencoe v. Uthe, 97 N.E. 1057, 253 Ill. 518 (Ill. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

The county court of Cook county entered a judgment at the June term, 1911, overruling the legal objections to and confirming a special assessment against the property of appellants for the construction of a system of sidewalks in Uthe’s addition to the village of Glencoe. The proposed improvement was for the construction of a cement sidewalk five feet wide around blocks 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6, except on the north side of blocks 3 and 4, along which a sidewalk had been previously constructed. The proceedings were under the Focal Improvement act, the costs to be paid by special assessment upon the property benefited. Appellants have prosecuted an appeal to this court.

It is first contended that the ordinance is unreasonable in providing for a cement sidewalk when a cinder sidewalk at one-fourth the cost would bring the same benefits. Uthe’s addition is used for residence purposes, only. It consists of six blocks, lying south-west of the Chicago and Northwestern railroad. It is not thickly'populated, there being but nineteen houses on the six blocks, the most of them being small dwelling houses costing about $500. According to the testimony lots sell at $300, and the market value of an entire block is $4500. L. H. Lloyd, a witness for appellants, testified that the lots along which the walk was to be constructed in front, only, would be benefited from $15 to $20, or about the cost of a cinder walk, and that corner lots would be benefited about $50. He further testified that block 1 is all owned by one person and that its market value would not be increased by the improvement.' Other witnesses for appellants testified that the lots along which the walk had been already constructed would not be benefited. Witnesses for appellee fixed the amount of benefits at substantially the amount assessed. All the witnesses agree that the corner lots would be benefited more than the inside lots, most of them fixing the benefit at two or two and one-half times the benefit received by the inside lots. As is usually the case( in proceedings of this kind, the testimony is conflicting. Opposed to the testimony of L- H. Lloyd that the lots would not be benefited more than $15 or $'20 is the testimony of three witnesses for appellee that the lots would be benefited the amount assessed, one placing the benefits at much more than the assessment. Ill the face of this testimony we cannot say that the court erred in overruling the objections that the ordinance was unreasonable.

Appellants contend that the cóst of making the improvement was improperly and unequally distributed. According to location with reference to the proposed improvement and the amount assessed, the lots may be divided into four classes: (1) Inside lots fronting on the proposed sidewalk to have the walk built along the front, only, and which were each assessed $64.30; (2) corner lots to have the walk built along one side, only, and which were each assessed $81.10; (3) corner lots to have the walk built along one side and front, and which were each assessed $125.27; and (4) lots not abutting on the proposed improvement, along which walks had been previously constructed, and which were each assessed $16.60.

The assessment was spread on the theory that all the property benefited by the improvement should be assessed in proportion to the benefits received, in the same manner as street pavements and other improvements, without regard to frontage or whether or not walks had been previously constructed. It is contended by appellants that the assessment to build a sidewalk is not made on the same theory as in street paving; that the effect of the assessment as spread is -to assess the inside lots for a portion of the cost of constructing the walks along the corner lots and for the intersections; also that lots not abutting on the proposed improvement should not have been assessed.

The only difference in the application of the Local Improvement act to the construction of a sidewalk and to a street pavement, or other improvement is in the provision contained in section 34 of the said act which provides: “Whenever any ordinance shall provide only for the building or renewing of any sidewalk, the owner of any lot or piece of land fronting on such sidewalk shall be allowed forty (40) days after the time at which said ordinance shall take effect in which to build or renew such sidewalkopposite to his land, and thereby relieve the same from assessment.” This provision does not change the method of spreading the assessment provided in section 39 of said act, in which it is made the duty of the officer who spreads the assessment to estimate what proportion of the total cost will be of benefit to the public and the property and to apportion it accordingly, no property to be assessed a greater amount than it is benefited. In a special assessment proceeding the assessment must be made in proportion to the benefits received, without regard to the number of feet fronting on the improvement. This applies to the construction of a sidewalk as well as to street paving and other improvements. The effect of spreading the assessment in this manner may be to compel the inside lots to bear a part of the burden of building the walk along the corner lots, but that cannot be urged as an objection to the assessment on the inside lots so' long as they are not assessed more than they are benefited or more than their just proportion of benefits. The principle applied in Village of Downers Grove v. Findlay, 237 Ill. 368, that corner lots must be assessed in proportion to the benefits received, the same as inside lots, is applicable to this case. The testimony shows that the benefits were properly apportioned between the corner lots and inside lots in this case.

Along the front of lots 2 to 11, in blocks 3 and 4, a sidewalk was constructed previous to the commencement of this proceeding, and it is contended by appellants that since the owners of those lots cannot construct the sidewalks and relieve the lots from assessment they should not be assessed. The provision in section 34 applies only to lots “fronting on such sidewalk,” and as those lots do not front on the sidewalk proposed to be constructed it has no application to them. Although those lots may have been assessed at the time the sidewalk along them was constructed, that is no objection to an assessment for this improvement if they are benefited by it. Section 54 of the Local Improvement act provides: “It shall be no objection to the legality of any local improvement that a similar one shall have been previously made in the same locality, if the ordinance therefor be recommended by the board of local improvements, as above provided.” These lots were assessed at the time the walk was constructed, but if additional benefits are received by the connection of other walks to those already constructed an assessment may be made for those benefits.

The ordinance provides that the sidewalk should be five feet wide and the inside edge parallel with and two feet from the street or property line. A sub-foundation was required by cutting down or filling up the natural surface, so that when the sidewalk was finished its surface along the center line thereof should conform to the grade established. Upon the sub-foundation was to be placed a layer of cinders five and one-half inches deep along the center line and six and one-half inches deep at the edges, after having been thoroughly flooded with water and compacted.

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Bluebook (online)
97 N.E. 1057, 253 Ill. 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-glencoe-v-uthe-ill-1912.