Wilmette State Bank v. City of DesPlaines

181 N.E. 696, 349 Ill. 106
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1932
DocketNos. 20592, 20593. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 181 N.E. 696 (Wilmette State Bank v. City of DesPlaines) 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
Wilmette State Bank v. City of DesPlaines, 181 N.E. 696, 349 Ill. 106 (Ill. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Jones

delivered the opinion of the court:

The Wilmette State Bank has perfected two appeals to this court from separate orders of the county court of Cook county, entered, respectively, on September 5 and 18, 1930. The order of September 5 denied the prayer of a petition of the bank for leave to intervene upon the hearing on a final certificate of completion and acceptance of work in DesPlaines special assessment proceeding No. 100. The order of September 18 denied the petition of the bank to appear and move the court to vacate and set aside an order approving the final certificate of cost and completion, dismissing the proceedings as to certain objectors and rebating $87,796.06 to the property owners assessed.

The public improvement embraced the construction of a connected system of cast-iron water mains, fire hydrants and necessary appurtenances. A judgment of confirmation was entered and a special assessment for $230,029.62 was made against the property benefited, payable in ten installments, with six per cent interest. On August 10, 1925, a contract was let to the Michael McElligott Company. During the years 1925 and 1926 bonds in the sum of $138,000 were issued to the company in payment of labor and material furnished. During that period the Wilmette State Bank purchased $22,300 of the bonds, dated October 15, 1925. A certificate of cost and completion was filed by the board of local improvements in 1926, but upon a hearing of objections the court refused to confirm it and ordered the work to be completed in substantial compliance with the contract. Another certificate was filed on July 3, 1930. In the meantime installments had been collected when due. Interest had been paid on all of the bonds issued and those bonds which had matured were paid. When the last certificate was filed the bank was holding $19,100 of the bonds it had purchased.

The final certificate as filed July 3, 1930, showed that the total cost of labor and materials was $111,433.56. The cost of engineering, the expenses of making and collecting the assessments and the estimated amount required to pay accruing interest on bonds and vouchers was $30,800, making the aggregate cost of the improvement $142,233.56. This was $87,796.06 less than the original assessment, and the cost of labor and material furnished, as shown by the certificate, was $26,566.44 less than the amount of bonds issued and delivered for that purpose. Objections to the approval of the certificate were filed by Lawrence W. Washington, Agnes Burke and James P. Burke, represented by Daniel S. Wentworth and Deneen, Healy & Lee, their attorneys. The Wilmette State Bank, on behalf of itself and all other bondholders, filed its aforesaid petition for leave to intervene, which set forth the facts and events relative to the special assessment proceedings, construction of work, the issuance of the bonds, the purchase of some of them by the bank and its present ownership of a portion of them. It represented that the cost of labor and materials furnished was $138,000 and not $111,433.56, as shown by the final certificate, and that an approval of such certificate would destroy the value of the outstanding bonds, and prayed for leave to intervene for the purpose of showing that the actual cost of labor and materials furnished was, in fact, $138,000. The court denied the right of the bank to intervene. On the next day, the cause coming on for hearing upon the certificate of final completion, the city moved to vacate all orders theretofore entered as to the property for which objections had been filed by the above mentioned attorneys. The motion was allowed and all orders as to such property were set aside and the assessments against it were abated. The order recited that it had been made to appear to the court that the city had agreed to assume the assessments against the property and to refund to the persons entitled thereto any assessments which had already been paid on such property. The total amount of assessments against such property was $141.75. The order approved the final certificate and abated $87,796.06 of the original assessment.

Upon the entry of the last above mentioned order the Wilmette State Bank filed a petition in which it alleged many of the facts which were set forth in the intervening petition. It also alleged that the final certificate filed by the board of local improvements showed upon its face that it was untrue as to the cost of the improvement; that the court was without power to vacate the assessment against the objecting property owners; that the rights of the bank and other bondholders were by reason of the premises greatly impaired and the value of the bonds had been greatly depreciated without due process of law. The prayer of the petition was that leave be granted to the bank to appear in the proceeding, that the orders dismissing the intervening petition be vacated, that the dismissal of the property objected for be set aside, and that the order approving the final certificate and rebating the sum of $87,796.06 be also set aside. The court entered an order denying the right of the bank to file its petition and refusing to vacate the orders as prayed.

The grounds for refusing to permit the bank to intervene are, that special assessment proceedings are in rent; that the Local Improvement act does not require anybody to be made a party to a hearing on the certificate of final cost and completion, and that a bondholder not only does not have the right, but cannot be permitted in such proceeding, to aifirm or deny that the improvement conforms substantially to the requirements of the original ordinance for its construction, or that the facts stated in the certificate concerning the cost of labor and materials, or the amount estimated to pay interest to accrue on bonds, or the amount to be abated, are correct as therein stated.

The very purpose of invoking the judgment of the court at the hearing upon a certificate of final completion in local improvement cases is to 'protect, by judicial investigation and determination, the rights of holders of improvement bonds, the municipality, and property owners whose property is subject to the burden of the assessment. (Case v. City of Sullivan, 222 Ill. 56; People v. Brewer, 328 id. 472.) The salient facts which must be stated by the board of local improvements in its certificate are (1) the cost of the improvement; (2) an estimated amount required to pay accruing interest on bonds or vouchers; (3) that the improvement conforms substantially to the ordinance authorizing it; and (4) whether or not any of the assessment should be abated. It is as to the truth of these facts that the hearing is predicated and the jurisdiction of the court is invoked. It is clear that the mere power conferred by law upon the court to hear and determine these questions must give those who are interested in the court’s decision an opportunity to appear and be heard. Those who are interested in a determination of the salient facts set forth in the certificate are the property owners affected by the assessment, the contractor whose work is called in question and who may be the owner and holder of bonds and vouchers issued in payment of labor and materials furnished, and persons who have rights to be protected in the determination of the amount required for the payment of the work done under the contract. A judicial determination of the salient facts would be of no value whatever unless persons having such interests are permitted to be heard.

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Bluebook (online)
181 N.E. 696, 349 Ill. 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilmette-state-bank-v-city-of-desplaines-ill-1932.