delivered the opinion of the court:
This was an application by the county collector of Cook county for judgment against delinquent lands for a special assessment levied and assessed by the village of Grossdale for the construction of a connected system of drains and sewers in and along the streets and avenues of the village. The appellants, Henry Selling, James Kunst, James Lang, H. H. Walker and George H. Taylor, among others, appeared in the county court and filed objections to judgment against certain lots owned by them. On the hearing the objections were overruled, and they appealed.
It is first contended by the appellants that the ordinance is invalid for the reason it provides for a double improvement. The ordinance providing for the improvement is as follows:
“An ordinance to establish, determine and define the nature, character, locality and description of a connected system of drains and sewers in and along the streets and avenues of the village of Grossdale, Cook county, State of Illinois, and to approve the plans, specifications, maps, profiles, drawings, etc., therefor, and to provide for the construction of said improvement.
“Be it ordained by the President and Board of Trustees of the Village of Grossdale:
“Section 1. That the nature, character, locality and description of a connected system of drains and sewers in and^ along the streets and avenues of the. village of Grossdale be and the same are hereby established, determined and defined, and the plans, specifications, maps, profiles, drawings, etc., therefor, as herein contained and herewith and heretofore filed in the office of the village clerk' of said village, are hereby approved.
“Sec. 2. That the location of such connected system of sewers is hereby established in and along the streets and avenues of said village, as follows: On and along a line fifteen feet west of and parallel with the east line of Burlington avenue, from its connection with the proposed sewer in Garfield avenue to a point four hundred and fifty feet north of the center line of Garfield avenue.” (Then follows a long list of the streets and avenues in the village in and upon which sewers are to be constructed.)'
If an incorporated city or village, in providing sewers and drains for the incorporation, is restricted, in the passage of an ordinance, to one street, and to that alone, then this ordinance would be invalid; but, on the other hand, if a city or village has the right, in one ordinance, to provide for a connected system of sewers and drains in and along the streets and avenues of the incorporation, whereby its various streets and avenues may be improved, then the ordinance in this case may be sustained. Here, as we understand the ordinance, the village undertook to establish by one ordinance a connected system of drains and sewers for the entire village. The improvement was in no sense a double improvement, but was a single improvement, extending over different streets in the village. A similar question was raised in Prout v. People ex rel. 83 Ill. 154, and Payne v. Village of South Springfield, 161 id. 285, and ordinances similar to the one here in question were sustained.
It is next contended that the ordinance is void for uncertainty. Upon an examination of the ordinance it will be found that it specifies the various streets in which the improvement shall be made. It gives the internal dimensions of the improvement, the grade of the sewer in each street, material of which it shall be constructed, and the character of the work in detail. In addition, the ordinance in express terms approves the plans, specifications; maps and profiles on file in the office of the village clerk. In view of the various specifications of the ordinance, in connection with the plans on file in the office of the clerk, the ordinance cannot be regarded as void for uncertainty.
It is also contended that the ordinance is void because it contains the following provision: “The board of trustees reserves the right to reject any proposal, at their discretion.” Paragraph 164 of the City and Village act (Rev. Stat. p. 239) provides: “All contracts for the making of any public improvements, to be paid for, in whole or in part, by a special assessment, and any work or other public improvement when the expense thereof shall exceed $500, shall be let to the lowest responsible bidder, in the manner to be prescribed by ordinance.” It is apparent that the section or clause of the ordinance is in conflict with the statute, and, being in conflict with the statute, it is nugatory. But it does not vitiate the balance of the ordinance. The clause in question may be rejected as being in conflict with the statute and leave the balance of the ordinance in force. If the board of trustees had ever acted under the section of the ordinance in question, and had rejected a bid made by the lowest responsible bidder, a different question might be presented; but, so far as appears, no action was ever taken by the board of trustees under the ordinance. A section of an ordinance similar to the one involved was before the court and condemned in Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Co. v. City of Chicago, 144 Ill. 391, but in that case the judgment was reversed on other grounds.
It is next claimed that the commissioners appointed to make the assessment did not take the oath prescribed by the statute. The oath administered was as follows: “We, the undersigned commissioners, appointed, etc., do solemnly swear that we will a true and impartial assessment make of the cost of the said improvement upon the village of Grossdale, or any property benefited by said improvement, to the best of our ability and according to law.” The oath conforms to the language of the statute, except the words “or any” are used before the word “property,” when the words required should be “and the.” If the objection interposed had been made on the application to confirm the assessment it might have been sustained; but on an application to confirm a special assessment, where the court has jurisdiction to render the judgment of confirmation, such judgment will conclude the land owner from questioning any of the proceedings had prior thereto in a subsequent application for judgment and order of sale of the premises. (People v. Markley, 166 Ill. 48.) Here the affidavit was defective, but the defect was not of such a character as to deprive the court of jurisdiction. In Larson v. People ex rel. (ante, p. 93,) it was expressly held that objection to a defective affidavit like the one in question must be made on the application to confirm the assessment, otherwise it will be regarded as waived.
It is next contended that the judgment is erroneous because it was provided by the ordinance under which the assessment was made, that the assessment should be divided into installments. Section 8 of the ordinance provided that said assessment shall be divided into and collected by installments, ten in number, in accordance with the provisions of an act of the General Assembly of the State of Illinois entitled “An act to authorize the division of special assessments in cities, towns and villages into installments,” etc., approved June 17, 1893, in force July 1, 1893. The first section of the act referred to in the ordinance is as follows: “That whenever the corporate authorities of any city, town or village have heretofore levied or shall hereafter levy any special assessment pursuant to law, it shall be lawful for such corporate authorities, at any time prior to the commencing the collection thereof, to provide by ordinance that said assessment be divided into installments, not more than seven in number, the first of which installments shall be due and payable on and after confirmation thereof, and the second installment one year thereafter, and so on until all are paid; but such division shall be so made that the first installment shall include all the fractional amounts, leaving each of the remaining installments equal in amount and multiples of one hundred dollars, which said assessment and installments shall bear interest from and after thirty days succeeding the date of confirmation, at the same rate and be collected in like manner as is now provided by law: Provided, that any special assessment levied for building sewers and laying water mains may in like manner be divided into not exceeding ten installments.”
Under this section of the statute it is claimed that the village of Grossdale had no authority to divide the assessment into installments by the ordinance which provided for the improvement, but that the village could only do so by the passage of a separate ordinance after the assessment had been levied and a judgment of confirmation had been rendered. While there may be some doubt in regard to the meaning of the statute, we do not regard the construction contended for as sound. We think a fair construction of the language, “whenever the corporate authorities of any city, town or village have heretofore levied or shall hereafter levy any special assessment,” was intended by the legislature to mean merely that whenever the corporate authorities have heretofore determined or shall hereafter determine to levy any special assessment, then they may provide, by ordinance, for a division of the assessment into installments. If we are correct in this, then when the corporate authorities have determined to pass an ordinance, they may, as was done in this case, add a section dividing the assessment into installments. Nothing could be gained by waiting until the judgment should be confirmed before it was settled whether the tax-payer should be required to pay the entire assessment in one amount or whether it should be divided into installments. On the other hand, it would seem to be a much better practice to settle the matter when the ordinance for the improvement is passed, as was done here.
On the application for confirmation of the assessment it appears that the petition was dismissed as to some ninety-five lots which had severally been assessed by the commissioners, and it is claimed that as the petitioner voluntarily dismissed the petition as to these lots, and thus allowed them to escape the burden which had been placed upon them, the remaining lot owners cannot be held for the assessment. Under paragraph 144 of the City and Village act (Rev. Stat. p. 236,) any person interested in any real estate to be affected by the assessment may appear and file objections to the report of the commissioners. Paragraph 145 provides: “The hearing shall be conducted as in other cases at law, and if it shall appear that the premises of the objector are assessed more or less than they will be benefited, or more or less than their proportionate share of the cost of the improvement, the jury shall so find, and also find the amount for which such premises ought to be assessed, and judgment shall be rendered accordingly.” Under paragraph 147 the court has. authority, at any time before final judgment, to modify or change any assessment. If appellants’ property was assessed more than it will be benefited or more or less than its proportionate share of the cost of the improvement, the proper place to raise that question and obtain the proper relief was in the county court, on the application to confirm the assessment. So, also, if the dismissal of the petition as to ninety-five lots which had been assessed by the commissioners resulted in making appellants’ assessment greater than their proportionate share of the cost of the improvement, the proper place to obtain relief was in the county court, or by an appeal from the judgment of confirmation, but no relief can be obtained on the application for judgment against appellants’ lands.
The judgment of the county court will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.