West Chicago Park Commissioners v. City of Chicago

38 N.E. 697, 152 Ill. 392, 1894 Ill. LEXIS 1460
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 38 N.E. 697 (West Chicago Park Commissioners v. City of Chicago) 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
West Chicago Park Commissioners v. City of Chicago, 38 N.E. 697, 152 Ill. 392, 1894 Ill. LEXIS 1460 (Ill. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailev

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal by the West Chicago Park Commissioners from a judgment of the county court of Cook county, confirming a special assessment upon the lands embraced in Douglas Park, one of the parks under the control of the appellants, to pay the cost of a street improvement, the improvement consisting of the erection of nineteen boulevard lamps on California avenue, between Twelfth street and Ogden avenue. The amount of the assessment in question is $128.50, and it was stipulated by the parties in the court below, that if the assessment should be held to be valid in law, that should be deemed the correct amount of benefits to be assessed upon the park property for the improvement, but it was further recited in the stipulation that the case was selected out of a large number of similar cases pending, for special assessments made by the city of Chicago upon the West Chicago parks, involving in all considerable amounts, for the purpose of getting a decision on the law questions involved. In this court it is admitted that the case is brought here as a test case, for the purpose of settling the question of the power of the city of Chicago to assess the lands embraced in the parks and boulevards under the control of the appellants, for the improvement of streets adjacent thereto or abutting thereon.

The appellants appeared 'before the county court and interposed a large number- of objections to the confirmation of the assessment, all of which were overruled, and all the questions of law which we shall find it necessary to discuss were thereby properly raised. 1

The West Chicago Park Commissioners hold their office and exist as a municipal corporation under the provisions of an act of the General Assembly, entitled “An act to amend the charter of the city of Chicago, to create a board of park commissioners, and authorize a tax in the town of West Chicago, and for other purposes,” approved and in force February 27, 1869, and of various other subsequent acts supplemental thereto or amendatory thereof. The act, after amending the charter of the city of Chicago, by providing for an enlargement of its boundaries by adding thereto a considerable amount of adjacent territory, including that which was afterward embraced in the West Chicago parks, provided, among other things, that seven persons, resident freeholders and qualified voters of the town of West Chicago, who should be designated by the Governor, should be, and they were thereby, constituted a board of public park commissioners for that town, to be known under" the name of the “West Chicago Park Commissioners,” their term of office to be seven years, and they were required to qualify by taking an official oath and by giving an official bond, and tó organize as a board by electing one of their number president, and by appointing a secretary and treasurer, and by adopting a common seal, and it was provided that “the said board of commissioners shall be a body politic and corporate, with perpetual succession, and power to sue and to be sued, plead and be impleaded, to have and use a common seal, and they shall have and enjoy all the powers necessary for the purposes of this act.”

^ Section 4 of the act was as follows : “The said board of commissioners shall have full and exclusive power to govern, manage and direct all parks, boulevards and ways authorized by this act, and by them purchased, made, laid out or established; to lay out, regulate, make and improve the same ; to pass ordinances, and issue and enforce orders for the regulation and government of the same; to levy special assessments on all property by them deemed benefited by the purchase, opening and improvement of such parks, boulevards and ways, as limited by this act; to appoint such engineers, surveyors, clerks and other officers, including a police force, as may be necessary; to define and prescribe their respective duties and authority and fix the amount of their compensation, and, generally, in regard to such parks, boulevards and ways, they shall possess all the power and authority now by law conferred upon or possessed by the common council of the city of Chicago in respect to the public squares, places and streets of the city; and it shall be lawful for them to commence the improvement of the same as soon as the funds requisite therefor, or any portion thereof, shall have been obtained. The expenditure for engineers,-clerks and officers, except the president, including the police force, shall not exceed §5000 per annum, without further authority from the General Assembly, but said board may accept of the services of such of the police force of the city of Chicago as may be placed at their disposal by the common council or police authorities of said city.”

By section 5 it was provided as follows: “The said board shall have power, and it is made their duty, and they are hereby authorized, to select and take possession of, and to acquire by condemnation, contract, donation or otherwise, title forever, in trust for the inhabitants of the town of West Chicago and of the West Division of Chicago, and for such parties or persons as may succeed to the rights of said inhabitants, and for the public, as public promenade and pleasure grounds and ways, but not without the consent of a majority, by frontage, of the owners of the property fronting the same, for any other use or purpose, and without the power to sell, alienate, mortgage or encumber the same,” the lands required for a certain boulevard, and for three parks on the line of the same. “Said lands, boulevards and parks, and the personal property of said board, shall be exempt from taxation.”

The act further conferred upon the park commissioners authority to establish building lines for all property fronting on their parks and boulevards; to control subdivisions of property within four hundred feet thereof; to condemn lands for parks and boulevards, and to levy and collect special assessments upon property deemed to be benefited by the establishment and improvement of the parks and boulevards, and, with the consent of the town of West Chicago, to levy and collect a tax upon the property of the town for park and boulevard purposes; to close up public streets passing through the park property, and to borrow money, not exceeding $50,000, to pay any deficiencies and necessary outlays arising or required in obtaining the necessary lands and in making the necessary improvements thereon, and to issue therefor the notes or obligations of the corporation ; and it was provided, that for the payment of such notes and obligations the town of West Chicago, and the boulevard and park tax above mentioned, should be irrevocably pledged. Provision was also made for the submission of the act, before it should take effect, to a vote of the legal voters of the town of West Chicago, and also of the legal voters of the territory thereby annexed to the city of Chicago and to the town of West Chicago, the adoption of the act to be taken to be a consent on the part of the town to the imposition of the boulevard and park tax. 1 Private Laws of 1869, p. 342.

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.E. 697, 152 Ill. 392, 1894 Ill. LEXIS 1460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-chicago-park-commissioners-v-city-of-chicago-ill-1894.