Walker v. City of Aurora

29 N.E. 741, 140 Ill. 402
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 29 N.E. 741 (Walker v. City of Aurora) 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
Walker v. City of Aurora, 29 N.E. 741, 140 Ill. 402 (Ill. 1892).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is an appeal from a judgment of confirmation rendered by the county court of Iiane county in the matter of a special assessment for the construction of a connected system of sewers in District No. 1, west, in the city of Aurora. At the time fixed for the filing of objections to said assessment, the appellants appeared, and interposed some forty-four objections, in writing, to the same. The court, at the hearing, overruled the objections and in all things confirmed the assessment, and thereupon this appeal was prosecuted.

It is claimed that notices of the assessments and application for judgment were not given as required by law, and that the trial court erred in permitting the certificate of publication to be amended. It is conceded that the affidavit of mailing notices is in literal compliance with the requirements of the statute, but the. contention is, that the evidence introduced on the trial shows the affidavit to be in substance false. Waiving the consideration of other answers that are made to this claim, it is sufficient to say that the record shows that the appellants appeared at the trial, and contested the assessments on their property upon the merits. This was a waiver of all irregularities and defects in respect to notice. Where the owners of premises specially assessed for a proposed public improvement appear and file objections to the confirmation of the assessment, they thereby waive any and all defects in the notice of application for judgment. (Murphy v. City of Peoria, 119 Ill. 509; Quick v. Village of River Forest, 130 id. 323.) This being so, it would seem to be immaterial, in respect to appellants, whether the certificate of publication was amended or not. But be this as it may, it was almost or quite evident from the certificate itself that there was a clerical error in its date, and the record shows that the court, having heard the evidence of Charles I. McNett, upon the motion to amend, allowed said certificate to be amended by changing its date from August 8, 1890, to September 8, 1890, “to correspond with the facts,” and as the testimony of McNett is not preserved in the record, it must be presumed that it was sufficient to justify the finding of the court that a clerical error had been committed, and that the certificate was in fact made on September 8.

The ordinance providing for the proposed improvement was annexed to the petition filed by the city, and was expressly made a part of said petition. It clearly appeared from section 6 of said ordinance that B. W. Gates, B. Burke and F. Fauth were appointed by the council as commissioners to make an estimate of the cost of the improvement. It is alleged in the petition, “that the commissioners appointed by said city council to make an estimate of the cost of the improvement contemplated by said ordinance, heretofore, to-wit, on the 21st day of July, 1890, made a report to said city council, •which was afterwards approved by said city council, estimating such cost at $95,000, a true copy of which report, marked ‘Exhibit B,’ is annexed hereto and made part hereof.” Said “Exhibit B” so annexed is signed by said Gates, Burke and. Fauth, as commissioners. The statute provides that the city ■council shall appoint three of its members, or any other three ■competent persons, to make an estimate of the cost of the improvement contemplated by the ordinance, etc.; and in respect to the petition to be filed in the county court, the statute merely provides that it “shall be in the name of the corporation, and shall recite the ordinance for the proposed improvement and the report of such commission, and shall pray that the cost of such improvement may be assessed in the manner prescribed by law.” The council are, at least primarily, the judges of the “competency” of the persons to be appointed by them, and in the absence of any allegation or proof to the ■contrary, it will be presumed that they performed their duty in that behalf, and that the three persons designated as commissioners were “competent persons.” The claims that the petition is fatally defective in that it does not allege in direct terms that Gates, Burke and Fauth were “competent persons,” and that it is void for uncertainty, in that it contains no direct allegation that said three persons were appointed commissioners, are not, in our opinion, well founded. The petition is in literal compliance with the statute, and contains all that the statute requires it to contain. The facts that Gates, Burke ■and Fauth were duly appointed commissioners, and made a report, as such commissioners, of the estimated cost of the improvement, sufficiently appear from the allegations of the petition which we have above quoted, and from “Exhibits A” and “B,” which are expressly made parts of the petition.

It is urged that the record does not show that the city council approved the report of the commissioners appointed to make an estimate of the cost of the improvement, that the-clerk in his certificate does not state that he is entrusted with the safe-keeping of said rejport, and that said certificate refers to an order of approval of the date of July 7, 1890, which is-not to be found in the record, and not to the order of approval of the date of July 21, 1890, which does appear therein. It is not material that the clerk does not certify that he is the custodian or keeper of the report of said commissioners and of the record which shows the order of approval, for the statute expressly provides that the city clerk shall keep the corporate seal and all papers belonging to the city, and shall keep a full record of the proceedings of the city council, and'that copies-of all papers duly filed in his office, and transcripts from the records and files of his office, certified by him under the corporate seal, shall be evidence in all courts in like manner as if the originals were produced. (1 Starr & Curtis’ Stat. chap. 24, sec. 82.) The authentication made by the clerk applies not only to the copy of the ordinance annexed, but also certifies to the “copy of estimate of cost, with order of approval.” No claim is made that the order of approval of the date of July 21, 1890, if properly certified, is not amply sufficient. The contention is, that the words “which was duly passed by the city, council of said city on the 7th day of July, A. D. 1890,”' have reference to the order of approval, and it must be conceded that the certificate is inartificially drawn and is somewhat ambiguous. But when the words above quoted, and the-further statement found in the certificate “that the ordinance was duly approved, and signed by the mayor of said city, on the 9th day of July, A. D. 1890,” are read in the light of the dates of the passage and approval of the ordinance and of the order, respectively, as they appear upon said- ordinance and said order as certified, it is manifest that the words “which,”' etc., above quoted, have reference only to the copy of the-ordinance, and have no reference whatever to the copy of the order of approval.

The discharge of the proposed system of sewerage is into Fox river, and it is objected that such discharge would contaminate the waters of the stream, and be a public nuisance, and in violation of paragraphs 2 and 3 of section 277 of the Criminal Code, (1 Starr & Curtis’ Stat. chap. 38, sec.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.E. 741, 140 Ill. 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-city-of-aurora-ill-1892.