Village of Winnetka v. Chicago & Milwaukee Electric Railway Co.

68 N.E. 407, 204 Ill. 297
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 68 N.E. 407 (Village of Winnetka v. Chicago & Milwaukee Electric Railway Co.) 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 Winnetka v. Chicago & Milwaukee Electric Railway Co., 68 N.E. 407, 204 Ill. 297 (Ill. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellee company is the successor and assignee of the Bluff City Electric Railway Company. In the year 1898 the former company entered upon the enterprise of building- an electric railway,- the line whereof passed through the limits of the appellant village. An ordi-' nance was adopted by the village council on the 24th day of May, 1898, authorizing the construction of the railway along Wilson street and across Willow, Maple, and Ash streets of the village, and also across other of its streets not necessary to be mentioned. Nor is it necessary the terms and conditions which were by the ordinance and an agreement of the company annexed to the grant, should be set forth in full. Of these conditions it is only necessary to mention that the ordinance permitted the use of the streets to the width of twenty-five feet by the railway company, and that the ordinance, and the agreement of the company which became a part thereof, required the railway company to purchase a strip of land, not less than forty-two feet in width, extending from Maple avenue to Willow street, and to dedicate said strip of land to the village for use as a public street, to be called Wilson street extended, and to macadamize the roadway of the street, put in the curbing and lay a sidewalk on the easterly side of the street, said street improvements to be made under the supervision of the village authorities. The ordinance and the agreement provided that said strip of land so to be dedicated and improved by the railway company and to constitute Wilson street extended, should be subject to the right of the railway company to use the west twenty-five feet thereof for its right of way for the period-of twenty-five years. The railway company procured the necessary. ground and entered upon the construction of the railway and the fulfillment of its obligations under the ordinance.

The ordinance authorized the construction of a line of street railway upon the surface of the ground. It was subsequently ascertained that the conformation of the surface at the crossing of Willow street and Wilson street, and for a short distance along Wilson street and the proposed Wilson street extended, was such that it would be impracticable for the company to lay the track of the road along the surface of the ground, and that the operation of the road along a track on the surface of the ground would be dangerous to the life and limb of passengers and of the public using the street. It was therefore deemed advisable the road should be carried over the depression on an elevated structure. Profiles of the viaduct which, in the opinion of the engineers of the railway company, should be constructed for that purpose were prepared and laid before the village council. In view of this situation "the council, on the seventh day of March, 1899, adopted an amendatory ordinance, the record whereof in the book of the record of the proceedings of the council reads as follows: “The council of the village of Winnetka do ordain that the ordinance heretofore granted on the 20th day of May, 1898, to the Bluff City Electric Street Railway Company, be and is hereby amended to give said company, its successors and assigns, the right and authority to construct a superstructure or trestle on the west twenty feet of the right of way heretofore granted, between the west line of Maple street and the south line of Willow street, and on Wilson avenue from the south line of Willow street to such point, as will make the grade on said trestle-work about one per cent. Said right and authority are given upon the express condition that said Bluff City Electric Street Railway Company, its successors or assigns, shall cause to be dedicated to the village of Winnetka, for street purposes, the east thirty-six feet of Wilson avenue, extending to the south corporate limits of said village.”

The railway company entered at once upon the construction of the viaduct. It was built of the width of about twenty-three feet. In the month of July, Í899, the viaduct was completed and the tracks of the railway laid thereon, and the company was ready to operate its cars along the track and over the viaduct. The company was then notified by the president of the village that the village claimed under the amendatory ordinance the company was only authorized to occupy twenty feet of the street, and that its viaduct exceeded that width and was to that extent unlawfully upon the street. The company contended that the amendatory ordinance as adopted by the council had not been properly recorded in the record book of the village, and that as adopted the width of the right of way theretofore granted by the former ordinance was not changed, but was expressly recognized and stated in the amendatory ordinance, as the same was adopted, to be twenty-five feet, and also contended that the provisions of the former ordinance and agreement permitting the company to occupy twenty-five feet of the street was not intended to be changed or affected by the amendatory ordinance, and that under a proper construction of the amendatory ordinance, even as it appeared upon the record, the width of the right of way of the company in the street as fixed by the former ordinance was in nowise reduced or affected. The amendatory ordinance which was introduced into the council and voted upon and adopted could not be found, but the railway company produced a copy thereof, duly certified under the hand and seal of the clerk of the village. This certified copy was made by the village clerk after the adoption and passage of the ordinance but before the same was copied at large in the book in which the ordinances of the village were recorded. The width of the right of way of the appellee company in the street referred to in the amendatory ordinance was shown by this certified copy to be twenty-five feet.

Acting upon the authority of a resolution of the village council, the proper official of the village notified the railway company that it was a trespasser upon the street to the extent of five feet beyond its right of way, and demanded that it should within ten days remove all portions of its viaduct from said five feet of the street. The appellee company thereupon filed its bill in chancery for a writ of injunction restraining-the village from in any way interfering with the viaduct, or its use of the same in the operation of its cars. A preliminary injunction was issued as prayed, and upon a final hearing a decree was rendered making the same perpetual. The village prosecuted an appeal to the Appellate Court for the First District, and the decree being affirmed by that court, has perfected this its further appeal to this court.

The master to whom the case was referred, upon consideration of all the evidence bearing upon the point, found that the original pencil draft of the amendatory ordinance “was, on its face, in terms a grant of the use of the entire twenty-five feet constituting the original right of way under the said ordinance of May 24,1898, and that said certified copy of said ordinance of March 7,1899, introduced in evidence as the complainant’s ‘Exhibit D,’ was prepared by said clerk of said village from said original pencil draft of such ordinance of March 7, 1899, so preserved in his said office, on or about the 13th day of May, A. D. 1899,” and this finding we think to be well supported by the proofs. The decree, however, was granted upon the theory the villag'e had become equitably estopped from demanding the superstructure beyond the width of twenty feet should be removed from the street.

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Bluebook (online)
68 N.E. 407, 204 Ill. 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-winnetka-v-chicago-milwaukee-electric-railway-co-ill-1903.