Wells v. People ex rel. Raymond

66 N.E. 210, 201 Ill. 435
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 66 N.E. 210 (Wells v. People ex rel. Raymond) 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
Wells v. People ex rel. Raymond, 66 N.E. 210, 201 Ill. 435 (Ill. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Ricks

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the county court of Cook county from a judgment ordering the sale of property of appellants to pay the first installment levied for paving Clinton street from West Van Burén street to Lake street, in said city. Four grounds are urged by appellants for the reversal of the judgment.

The ordinance was for a granite-block pavement, to be placed upon a bed of concrete, and the ordinance provided that “the best quality of Portland cement” should be used. The objection urged is, that instead of using the best quality of Portland cement the contractor used Illinois Steel Portland cement. Under this objection appellants offered to .show that as the work progressed they objected to the use of the Illinois Steel Portland cement, on the ground that it was inferior in quality to and different from the cement provided for by the ordinance, and that it was cheaper in price and would not stand so well when exposed to the weather; and further, that they made complaint to the board of local improvements, and that pursuant to such complaint said board issued an order requiring the contractors to comply strictly with the contract and use only Portland cement, as provided in the ordinance; and offered to further show, that notwithstanding such order of the board of local improvements the contractors on this part of the work proceeded with the work and continued to disregard the ordinance, the contract and the order of the board of public improvements. This evidence the court refused to hear. We have uniformly held that such objections, urged at the application for judgment of sale, were collateral attacks, and could only be allowed to prevail when the evidence disclosed that the improvement as constructed was so different in character because of the material used or from the manner of construction, that we could say, from the record, that it was another and different improvement, or, in other words, was not the improvement provided for by the ordinance. (People v. Whidden, 191 Ill. 374; Church v. People, 174 id. 366.) In People v. Whidden, supra, this particular question was fully considered, and in that case we pointed out that the property owner, if apprised during the progress of the work that it was not being done in substantial conformity with the provisions of the ordinance, should bring his bill in equity to prevent such departure, and that the courts having jurisdiction of such bill would interfere and enforce the proper performance of the contract. In Church v. People, supra, in discussing the rights of property owners under such circumstances, we said (p. 370): “Nor does the law leave the property owner, in such cases, remediless. The city may be restrained, by injunction, from departing from the terms of the ordinance in any material respect, or the writ of mandamus may be invoked to compel the city to complete the improvement in compliance with the ordinance,”—citing with approval Callister v. Kochersperger, 168 Ill. 334, and Fisher v. People, 157 id. 85.

Taking all that the offer of appellants would show as granted, and it would then, appear that they had .notice of the alleged departure from the ordinance as the work progressed, and that the departure complained of was the substitution of one grade of cement for another' grade, and that appellants did nothing except to protest to the contractors and xto the board of local improvements. In the Whidden case, supra, we held that such departures from the ordinance and contract as involved only the use of an inferior g'rade of cement from that provided by the ordinance, and limestone screenings instead of sharp lake sand, .were not such variances from the provisions of the ordinance as we could say would constitute the improvement, when completed, a different or other improvement from the one called for by the ordinance, and that such a defense could not be made on the application for judgment of sale. We cannot see that it can make any difference that this objection is raised on application for judgment for the first installment. - The principle controlling the court must be the same whatever the number of the installment may be. If the departure from the ordinance was of such a character that the court could say that it was a different improvement from the one called for by the ordinance, then the 'objection could be raised and sustained upon the application for judgment upon any installment; and the reverse must likewise be true, that unless the departure is of that character it cannot be sustained upon application for judgment for the first any more than upon application for the last installment.

The second objection urged is, that the contract for the work provided that the contractor to whom the work should be awarded would be required to deposit with the city of Chicago the necessary money to do all the sewer work required on the street at the following rates, viz.: “New catch-basins, complete, §35; adjusting and repairing catch-basins, §10; adjusting and repairing man-holes, §3; new iron covers and plates, §7; for 9-inch pipe laid, . 50 per foot;” and further provided that “in consideration of such deposit the contractor will be issued a voucher payable from this warrant, when collected and in the hands of the city treasurer.” It is said, in this objection, that such provision prevented the work from being let to the lowest responsible bidder because of the requirement to make the deposit, and that the prices named for the work were those fixed by a certain labor union of said city, and were not the prices at which the work could be done for in case of free competition for letting to the lowest responsible bidder.

The ordinance in relation to the man-holes and sewer work provided that it should be done under the superintendence of the board of local improvements, but did not provide that any deposit should be made as provided for in the contract offered in evidence, nor did it fix the scale of prices as set out in said contract. The estimated cost of the sewer work, including the man-holes, was §1019. The total estimated cost of the improvement w7as something over §42,000. Appellants offered no evidence under this objection other than the contract and the ordinance. They did not offer to show that the amount of deposits or advancements -required by the contract to be made by the contractor for the respective classes of work, as set forth above, were unreasonable or in excess of the lowest bid that could have been obtained for such work; nor did they offer to prove that the scale of prices thereto attached was made in compliance with the requirements of some labor union, as alleged in the objection. The effect of this provision in the contract was that the contractor should advance to the city sufficient funds, at the rates mentioned in that provision, to pay for the various classes of work appertaining to the sewers and man-holes and their attachments, and should receive an order against the tax from the city for the same, and it is urged that because of the condition the appellants, as owners of property that was assessed to pay for the.improvement, were injured, in that bidders would look upon that provision as an extra hardship, and in fixing the amount of their bid increase the same accordingly. There is no evidence that such would have been the case, nor is there any offer of such evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
66 N.E. 210, 201 Ill. 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-people-ex-rel-raymond-ill-1903.