Village of Washington Heights v. Moffatt

57 Ill. App. 269, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 273
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 10, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 57 Ill. App. 269 (Village of Washington Heights v. Moffatt) 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
Village of Washington Heights v. Moffatt, 57 Ill. App. 269, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 273 (Ill. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Me. Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion oe the Court.

This appeal is prosecuted from a judgment in favor of the appellees rendered in a suit to recover back $2,000 deposited by them with the appellant at the time they made a bid to furnish, material and do work for appellant, payment for which was to be made from, funds of a particular special assessment levied and payable in ten annual installments.

The correctness of the judgment depends upon the validity of an ordinance adopted by the board of trustees of the appellant village, on March 18, 1889, providing for the laying of certain water supply pipes, for the performance of which the bid referred to was made; and the validity of that ordinance depends, again, upon whether the act of March 14, 1874, providing for the laying of water supply pipes by bonds and special assessments payable in installments, was repealed by the act of April 29, 1887, amendatory of article IX of the act of 1872, relating to the incorporation of cities and villages.

The learned judge of the Circuit Court, by whom the cause was tried, discussed the question with so much clearness and force that we, agreeing with him, adopt his opinion for our own, as follows:

Adams, J.—“ The defendant, the village of Washington Heights, was incorporated under the general law of 1872, for the incorporation of cities and villages. v While so incorporated the board of trustees of the village passed, March 18, 1889, an ordinance providing for the laying of water supply pipes in a large number of streets of the village, the total estimated cost of the work being $60,504.70.

The ordinance provided that the cost of the work should be defrayed by a special assessment, payable in ten equal annual installments.

The act of March 14, 1874, entitled, ‘ An act to provide for the laying of water supply pipe by bonds and special assessment, payable in installments,’ 1 S. & C. Stat., 507, was the only act purporting to authorize such an assessment as was made.

The village advertised for bids for the doing of the work, and the plaintiffs, among others, bid, and their bid was accepted. Every person bidding was required to deposit with the village, at the time of sending in his bid or proposal, a sum equal to five per cent of the amount of his bid as security that he would enter into a formal contract with the village for the performance of the work in accordance with the ordinance and his bid, if accepted, which sum so deposited was to be forfeited to the village in the event that the bidder should fail or refuse to contract.

The plaintiffs made the required deposit, amounting to $2,000, and subsequently refused to enter into a formal contract with the village, or to perform the work. The plaintiffs brought this suit to recover the amount deposited by them with the village, claiming that, for several reasons, they were not bound to enter into a formal contract with the village or to perform the work.

The chief ground urged by the plaintiffs for a recovery, and the only one which will now be considered, is that the act of 1874, Avhich was, as before stated, the only act purporting to authorize such an assessment as was made, was not in force at the time of the passage of the ordinance; that it had been repealed by the act of April 29, 1887, entitled “ An act to amend article I of an act entitled ‘An act to provide for the incorporation of cities and villages,’ approved April 10, 1872, in force July 1, 1872.”

If this contention is correct, there was no valid ordinance providing for the Avork; the village could not legally contract for the doing of it; the plaintiffs were right in refusing to contract for or perform it, and in view of the evidence introduced on the trial, are entitled to recover the amount of their deposit.

The act of March 17, 1874, is by its terms applicable only to cities and villages organized under the general municipal incorporation act of 1872, or Avhich have adopted article IX of that act.

This is so manifest from section 1 of the act of 1874, that argument is unnecessary. Although the act of 1874 is perhaps not technically amendatory of the act of 1872, within the meaning of section 13, article IT, of the Constitution, yet it is practically amendatory of that act, in that it adds to the provisions of article IX of the act, and to the poAvers of cities and villages incorporated under it.

By article IX of the act of 1872, assessments for water supply pipes could not be made payable in annual installments, nor could a city or village under that article, issue bonds for its proportion of the cost of water supply pipes; but under the act of 1874, both these things could be done by cities or villages organized under the act of 1872, or which had adopted article IX of that act. By the act of 1874, a special assessment for water supply pipes might be made payable in annual installments not exceeding ten.

By the act of 1887 certain sections, numbered fifty-five to sixty-eight inclusive, were added to article IX of the act of 1872. The act of 1887, being amendatory of article IX of the act of 1872, applies to all cities and villages organized under the act of 1872, or which have adopted article IX of that act, and consequently applies to the defendant. The phrase, ‘ under the provisions of this act,’ is used in several sections of the act of 1887, and one of the counsel for the city assumed, in argument, that the words ‘this act’ in that phrase mean the act of 1887, and upon this assumption insisted that the inference was, that the legislature recognized that there was another act, viz., the act of 1874, by virtue of which a special assessment, payable in installments, might be made. But this assumption is manifestly erroneous. The object of the act of 1887, as expressed in its title, is to amend article IX of the act of 1872 by adding thereto the sections'contained in the act of 1887. These sections, therefore, are to be read as if following section 54 of article IX of the act of 1872, in their numerical order, and so reading them, the words ‘ this act,’ refer to and mean the act of 1872.

Was the act of 1874 repealed by the act of 1887? The act of 1874 applies only to special assessments for the laying of water supply pipes. The act of 1887 applies to special assessments for any local improvement whatever. The laying of water supply pipes in a city or village is a local improvement, so that there can be no doubt that a city or village incorporated under the act of 1872 could make an assessment under the act of 1887 to defray the cost of laying water supply pipes.

By the act of 1874 such an assessment might be made payable in ten annual installments, and it is not provided in the act that the installments shall be equal, or what the proportion of any installment to the total estimated cost of the improvement shall be. The language is: ‘Shall be payable in such annual installments, not exceeding ten in number, as may in such ordinance be prescribed; ’ so that the number of the installments, not exceeding ten, and the proportion which each installment shall bear to the total estimated cost of the improvement is left solely to the discretion of the municipal legislature.

The act of 1887 fixes the number of installments at five; there can be no more and no less.

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Bluebook (online)
57 Ill. App. 269, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-washington-heights-v-moffatt-illappct-1895.