White v. City of Ottawa

149 N.E. 521, 318 Ill. 463
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1925
DocketNo. 15835. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 149 N.E. 521 (White v. City of Ottawa) 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
White v. City of Ottawa, 149 N.E. 521, 318 Ill. 463 (Ill. 1925).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

Lawrence E. White, James P. Catlin, Lorenzo Leland, Arthur Colwell, LaSalle County Fair Association and R. J. McDonald, appellants, filed their bill for mandatory injunction in the circuit court of LaSalle county against the city of Ottawa, the members of the council, the treasurer of the city, and V. C. McLain and A. G. Fletcher, partners, doing business as Midwest Engineering Company, appellees, to compel them to construct a local improvement and to enjoin the issuance and payment of any bonds or vouchers for work not done in conformity with the ordinance and contract. The court sustained a demurrer to the bill and dismissed it for want of equity. A writ of error was sued out of the Appellate Court for the Second District to review the record. The Appellate Court affirmed the decree and granted a certificate of importance and an appeal to this court.

The allegations of the bill are in substance the following: The city of Ottawa enacted an ordinance for the improvement of certain streets by grading, draining, curbing and paving, to be paid for by special assessment, to be divided into installments. A petition was filed in the county court to levy special assessments for the improvement, and the assessment roll was filed, and confirmed by the county court. A contract was entered into between the city council and the Midwest Engineering Company for the construction of the work, and the company executed its bond for the faithful performance of the work according to the provisions of the ordinance and contract. The contract and ordinance, each set out in hcec verba, required that the wearing surface of the pavement should be of the best quality of re-pressed vitrified brick of certain dimensions; that the concrete base be constructed of exact parts and kinds of cement, sand, limestone and gravel, four inches in thickness; that the curb and gutter should be constructed of the same kind of concrete, eighteen inches in width and six inches in thickness and varying in depth from ten to fifteen inches; and that the sub-grade of the pavement be eight inches below the surface of the finished pavement. The Midwest Engineering Company is engaged in the construction of the improvement and has constructed a large part of it, but has not constructed, and is not now constructing, the same in conformity with the requirements of the ordinance and contract. The company has not furnished any of the materials according to the contract and ordinance but has used inferior materials, and has not complied with the provisions of the ordinance as to the manner of the construction of the improvement. The bricks used and being used are not of the best quality of re-pressed vitrified brick but are wire cut and not re-pressed, and are irregular in shape and of less dimensions in length, width and thickness than required by the ordinance and of greater variance in dimensions than permitted by the ordinance. The bricks are seconds, do not have a bulge or bevel of three thirty-seconds of an inch on the ends, are flat, and when subjected to the rattler test lose more than twenty-three per cent of their weight. The concrete base is not being constructed in accordance with the contract and ordinance. In numerous instances and in large areas thereof it is materially less than four inches in thickness and made of a less proportion of cement than required. The combined curb and gutter is not of the required width and thickness and has been constructed materially different from and inferior to the requirements of the ordinance and contract. The work already performed is materially variant in character, kind and quality of materials used, and the manner and form of construction vary to such an extent that when completed the improvement will be of materially less value than contemplated by the ordínance and contract. The asphalt filler has not been heated to the required temperature and has not been used so that all joints between the bricks are completely filled. Appellants served notice in writing on the city of Ottawa and the Midwest -Engineering Company more than thirty days before filing the bill, notifying them that the work already done and being done did not conform to the requirements of the ordinance and contract and is materially variant and inferior, and demanding that the city compel the contractor to perform the contract according to its terms. Neither the city council nor the contractor gave any heed to this notice but insisted that the work was being done according to the contract, and the city council knowingly and willfully acquiesced in the violations of the contract and the city officials have acted willfully and wrongfully, with the deliberate intention of foisting upon the property owners an improvement materially less in value and of less durability than the one specified in the ordinance. The city has from time to time issued and delivered vouchers and bonds to the company for the work as it progressed, and will continue to do so unless enjoined from so doing, and appellants will suffer irreparable injury.

The material question presented for decision is whether a court of equity has jurisdiction to grant relief where the improvement is not being constructed in compliance with the contract and ordinance but is of materially less value and durability than the improvement required by the ordinance, which the contractor agreed to construct.

Prior to 1903 the acceptance and payment for a local improvement was governed by section 83 of the Local Improvement act. No hearing was provided for in the county court, but the acceptance of the improvement by the board was made conclusive on all persons and property assessed that the work had been performed substantially according to the requirements of the ordinance. If it was not so constructed and any property owner suffered pecuniary loss thereby he might recover the damages in an action on the case against the city, if such action was commenced within one year from the date of the acceptance of the work by the board of local improvements. As the statute then was, it was held that during the progress of the work of constructiñg a local improvement a court of equity would take jurisdiction to restrain any. substantial departure from, and compel the work to be done in accordance with, the requirements of the, ordinance. (Callister v. Kochersperger, 168 Ill. 334; People v. Whidden, 191 id. 374.) In 1903 the act was amended so that by section 84, within thirty days after the completion and acceptance of the work, the board of local improvements, in every assessment proceeding where the assessment is divided into installments, shall certify in writing to the court in which the assessment was confirmed, whether the improvement conforms substantially to the requirements of the ordinance, and make application to the court to consider and determine whether the facts stated in the certificate are true. It is made the duty of the court, upon the filing of the petition, to fix a time and place for hearing, not less than fifteen days after filing the petition, and give public notice of the time and place by posting and publishing in a newspaper not less than fifteen days before the time fixed for the hearing. The court is required to hear the application and any objections which may be filed thereto. Upon said hearing the certificate of the board of local improvements shall be prima facie evidence of the truth of the matters stated therein, but if they are controverted by objections filed, the court shall determine the same in a summary manner and enter an order according to the fact.

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Bluebook (online)
149 N.E. 521, 318 Ill. 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-city-of-ottawa-ill-1925.