West Chicago Park Commissioners v. Farber

49 N.E. 427, 171 Ill. 146, 1897 Ill. LEXIS 1058
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 49 N.E. 427 (West Chicago Park Commissioners v. Farber) 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. Farber, 49 N.E. 427, 171 Ill. 146, 1897 Ill. LEXIS 1058 (Ill. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a special assessment proceeding, brought by the West Chicago Park Commissioners, to levy a new assessment for the cost of a boulevard improvement on Douglas Park boulevard, the original assessment having become inoperative in consequence of the decision of this court in Culver v. People, 161 Ill. 89. The petition was dismissed by the county court of Cook county on the hearing of the legal objections and motions to dismiss of a large number of the property owners interested, from which decision the^commissioners have appealed to this court.

The petition of the West Chicago Park Commissioners disclosed that they were corporate authorities for park purposes for the town of West Chicago, and that in pur-, suance of such authority they had located a boulevard or pleasure way in said town of West Chicago, known as “Douglas Boulevard” or “Douglas Park Boulevard;” that, desiring to improve such boulevard, they had prepared plans, specifications and estimates of the cost of such improvement, and presented them to the corporate authorities of such town, viz., the sujiervisor, assessor and clerk thereof, to make a special assessment for the purpose of paying the cost of such contemplated improvement; that the petitioners were duly requested and authorized to do so by a petition of the owners of the greater part of the land fronting on said proposed improvement; that the corporate authorities of such town, on March 28, 1893, passed a proper ordinance for such improvement, providing, among other things, that the expense of such improvement should be raised wholly by a special assessment upon the property, lots and lands fronting and abutting upon said Douglas boulevard; that a petition was filed by said town in the county court, and that an assessment roll was duly prepared and confirmed by the court on July 8,1893; that a portion of said assessment was paid, but that a larger portion remains uncollected on account of the failure and refusal of various lot owners to pay the same; that on obtaining judgment against such delinquents for the sale of their lands, they appealed to this court, and in Culver v. People, 161 Ill. 89, the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded, on the ground that the ordinance was void because it illegally provided for the division of the assessment into installments, and that in consequence thereof all attempts to collect such unpaid assessments had been abandoned; that the petitioners, on July 14,1896, passed an ordinance for the making, levying- and assessing of a new special assessment for the cost of the said improvement, and an estimate of the cost having been made and adopted they accordingly filed this petition in the county court. The petition sets out this last ordinance in full, which recites the foreg-oing facts, and that the said boulevard improvement had been theretofore made and completed, and that, as provided in the former ordinance, it included asphalt roadways, leveling, stone sidewalks, black earth filling, common filling, grass plats, sodding, lamp-posts, trees, catch-basins, sewers, and superintendence of work, and ordered “that a new special assessment on the property benefited by said improvement, to the amount that the same may be legally assessed therefor, be levied to pay the cost of said boulevard improvement above specified, and the remainder of such cost to be paid by general taxation.”

On the hearing of the legal objections and motions to dismiss in the county court, it was agreed by the parties that the former ordinance,—the one passed, by the West Chicago town board,—in the record is the same ordinance referred to in the Culver case. A very large number of objections were filed to this proceeding by a great number of objectors, and these objections are renewed in this court.

The first objection is, that the town board of West Chicag'o had no power to pass the original ordinance. It is conceded that this objection was not raised in the Culver case, and consequently was not passed upon by this court in that case. It is elementary that all power to pass ordinances for local improvements is derived from the legislature. The legislature has passed numerous acts in relation to parks, and1 it is necessary to scrutinize closely the objects of the respective acts in order to determine what powers were intended to be conferred by them. The original act creating the West Chicago Park Commissioners, approved and in force February 27, 1869, (1 Private Laws of 1869, p. 342,) in section 4 gives the commissioners power “to levy special assessments on all property by them deemed benefited by the purchase, opening and improvement of said parks, boulevards and ways, as limited by this act.” Section 14 of the same act provides: “No assessment for boulevard or park improvements shall be made until further authorized by the General Assembly.” Under this act the commissioners acquired the boulevard sought to be improved by the ordinance here in question, but did not improve the same. In section 5 the commissioners are given power, by condemnation or otherwise, to acquire lands and appurtenances “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 property fronting the same, for any other use or purpose, and without the power to sell, alienate, mortgage or encumber the same.” The “Act in regard to the completion, improvement and management of public parks and boulevards, and to provide a more efficient remedy for the collection of delinquent assessments,’’approved May 2,1873, in force July 1, 1873, (Laws of 1873, p. 129,) provided “that in any town which is now included within the limits of any city in this State in which a board of park commissioners shall now exist, having authority by law to acquire land and the appurten anees in trust for the inhabitants of such town and of a division or part of such city, and for such parties or persons as may succeed to the rights of such inhabitants, and for the public, as public promenade and pleasure grounds and ways, but not for any other use or purpose without the consent of a majority, by frontage, of the owners of the property fronting the same, and without the power to sell, alienate, mortgage or incumber the same.” (Sec. 1.) “In case such board of park commissioners shall desire to improve any boulevard or pleasure way under their control, or any part thereof, * * * they shall make plans and specifications for such contemplated improvement, * * * and transmit such plans, specifications and estimates to the corporate authorities of the town where such improvement will be situated. Such corporate authorities may * * * determine, by ordinance, * "x" * whether such improvement shall be made or not. If they shall determine to make the same, they shall also prescribe that the same shall be made by special assessment or special taxation of contiguous property.” (Sec. 3.) “That the town supervisor, clerk and assessor of such town be and they are hereby designated and constituted the corporate authorities of such town.” (Sec. 4.) That this act was intended to apply to the powers of the West Chicago Park Commissioners is obvious; whether to restrict or enlarge them, we shall not stop to consider.

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Bluebook (online)
49 N.E. 427, 171 Ill. 146, 1897 Ill. LEXIS 1058, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-chicago-park-commissioners-v-farber-ill-1897.