Loeffler v. City of Chicago

Per Curiam :

This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Cook county sustaining the demurrer of appellees and dismissing for want of equity the bill of complaint of appellant to enjoin the city of Chicago and its officials from entering into a contract with the Federal Improvement Company for the construction of a certain sewer in the city of Chicago and town of Cicero.

The bill alleges that proceedings had been taken under the provisions of section 97a of the Local Improvement act, (Hurd’s Stat. 1909, p. 480,) to construct "the sewer in question. That section provides, in part, as follows: That any city, village, incorporated town or other corporate authorities to which the provisions of the Local Improvement act shall apply, may join with any other city, village or other corporate authorities to which such provisions shall apply, within .the same county, in the making of any local improvement or improvements thereunder, and all the terms and provisions of the Local Improvement act shall apply, except so far as the same are modified by said section; that the resolution of the board of local improvements of each municipality shall only describe so much of said improvement as lies wholly within the municipality for which said board acts; that when the proceedings come into court, if it is found a substantial variance exists between the ordinances of the various municipalities, no further proceedings shall be had until the ordinances have been amended; that when the court is satisfied that the ordinances are alike in substance, it shall enter an order consolidating the petitions and' designate therein one of the municipalities to conduct the proceedings thereafter; that the proportion of the cost of the said improvement, if any, which shall be of benefit to the public, shall be assessed between the petitioning municipalities in such amounts as shall appear just and equitable; that neither of the municipalities can dismiss the petition without an agreement from both; that the board of local improvements of the municipality so designated by the court shall have charge of letting the contract and the superintendence and acceptance of the work and the issuing of bonds and vouchers therefor, but that each of the municipalities shall have charge and control of the collection of the assessments levied upon the land lying within its jurisdiction.

The bill alleges that the proposed sewer is to be constructed of concrete in South Fifty-second avenue from a point thirty-five feet north of the center line of West Madison street, in the city of Chicago, to the center line of Twelfth street, within said city; that Twelfth street at this intersection with South Fifty-second avenue is the dividing line between the city of Chicago and the town of Cicero; that the sewer, also of concrete, is to be continued in South Fifty-second avenue from the center line of said Twelfth street to the south line of section 33, township 39, north, range 13, east of third principal meridian, in the town of Cicero,—that is, about as far south as Thirty-ninth street.

After proceedings had been taken by the boards of local improvements of both municipalities and petitions had been filed in the county court of Cook county, an order was entered in that court consolidating said petitions arid designating the city of Chicago to conduct all the proceedings in the consolidated case. Thereupon the proper officials of the city of Chicago filed an assessment roll for the said improvement of $304,950.75. Of this amount $68,573.55 was assessed against the city of Chicago as public benefits and $128,377.20 was assessed against the lands in the city of Chicago as specially benefited, while the balance of $108,000 was assessed against the lands in the town of Cicero as specially benefited. No public benefits were assessed against' the town of Cicero. Numerous objections wrere filed to said assessment roll, and after hearing and certain reductions amounting to about $30,000, the roll was confirmed as modified. Thereupon the city of Chicago advertised for bids for said improvement as a whole, and the Federal Improvement Company, being the lowest responsible bidder, was awarded the contract. Appellant thereupon filed the bill here in question, alleging that he owned property situated in the town of Cicero which was assessed $400 for the improvement, and that he was also a taxpayer in the city of Chicago.

Counsel for appellees insist that appellant was not entitled to file this bill in equity to restrain the collection of a special assessment against his property in the town of Cicero because all of the questions he has raised in the bill could have been urged in the application for judgment and order of sale. Without passing on that question, it is sufficient to say that if the proceedings in the county court were unauthorized and void for the reasons set up in the bill, the letting of the contract to the Federal Improvement Company to do this work would be' unlawful and an injury to appellant as a tax-payer in the city of Chicago, the proceedings here showing that a part of the cost of the improvement charged to the city of Chicago as benefits would have to be paid out of the general taxes of said city. If the allegations of the bill are true, the appellant, as a taxpayer, is entitled to file it to enjoin the payment of public money for purposes not warranted by law. Lindblad v. Board of Education, 221 Ill. 261; Burke v. Snively, 208 id. 328; Holden v. City of Alton, 179 id. 318.

Counsel for appellant contend that said section 97a, under which the proceedings for this improvement were instituted, is unconstitutional and void because it purports to confer authority upon cities, towns and other corporate authorities to levy special assessments for other than local improvements and to assess and collect taxes for other than corporate purposes. Section 9 of article 9 of the constitution of 1870 provides, in part, that “the General Assembly may vest the corporate authorities of cities, towns and villages with power to make local improvements by special assessment, or by special taxation of contiguous property, or otherwise.” (Hurd’s Stat. 1909, p. 69.) Appellant argues that the improvement here is not a' local improvement; that such an improvement, within the meaning of this constitutional provision, must be entirely within one municipality. In answer, appellees contend that the improvement here in question is two separate improvements,— one a sewer in the city of Chicago from Madison street to Twelfth street, and the other a sewer in the town of Cicero from Twelfth street south to the end of the proposed improvement; that each is a separate and distinct sewer and therefore each a local improvement; that the order of consolidation by the county court could not change the character of the two sewers and malee them one sewer and a single improvement. If these sewers were separate and distinct improvements there would have been no necessity for invoking in the county court the provisions of said section 97a, for each proceeding could have been carried on separately under the provisions of the Local Improvement act. All the provisions of said section 97a show that it was added to said Local Improvement act for the purpose of permitting one and the same improvement to be constructed jointly by two or more municipalities. The second paragraph of said section provides that the board of local improvements, or other corporate authorities, shall in their proceedings recite1 the advisability of making “the proposed improvement within the city or cities, village or villages,” etc. Later, the same paragraph states that only so much of “said proposed improvement as lies within each of said municipalities,” etc. Again, it speaks of the property “fronting that portion of said improvement which lies within any one of said petitioning municipalities,” etc. These and similar expressions throughout the section clearly indicate that the statute contemplates the construction by two or more municipalities in conjunction, not of two connected improvements, but of one improvement lying in two or more municipalities. Moreover, it- is clear from the report of the proceedings in the county court that this was to be one improvement, partly in Chicago and partly in Cicero. The estimated cost of that part within the city of Chicago was only $56,229 and the estimated cost of that- part in Cicero was $248,721.75, while there was assessed as public benefits against the city of Chicago $68,573.55 and against the property adjacent to the proposed sewer in the city of Chicago $128,377.20, making the total to be paid by the citizens of and in behalf of the property within the city of Chicago substantially $200,000, or two-thirds of the cost of the entire sewer, while the estimated cost of that part of the sewer in the city of Chicago was less than one-fifth of the entire cost. Even though it be true, as contended by counsel for appellees, that a large part of the cost assessed against the tax-payers of the city - of Chicago was to pay for the construction of an outlet outside of the city of Chicago for that part of the sewer in the city of Chicago-, that fact would greatly stréngthen the argument that the entire sewer was intended to be one improvement. We are compelled to reach the conclusion that under the provisions of section 9ya, as well as on the facts shown in this record, this must be held 'to be one continuous improvement and not two separate and distinct improvements.

What is a local improvement? That term was first mentioned in the constitution of 1870. (Mason & Fuller on Special Assessments, sec. 32.) The term “local improvements,” as used in said section 9 of article 9 of the constitution, means such improvements as are paid for by special assessment or special taxation. (Wilson v. Board of Trustees, 133 Ill. 443.) In a certain sense all improvements within a municipality are local,—that is, they do not extend to all parts of the State. «They have, however, locality,—that is, they are nearer to some -persons and property than others. Under the constitution of 1848, as well as under the present constitution, it has been held that a special assessment means “an assessment to pay for an improvement for public purposes upon real property which is, by reason of the locality of the improvement, specially benefited, beyond the benefits by the improvement to real property, generally, throughout the municipality, proportioned by such benefits.” (Wilson v. Board of Trustees, supra, p. 469.) A local improvement is a public improvement “which, by reason of its being confined tq a locality, enhances the value of adjacent property, as distinguished from benefits diffused by it throughout the municipality.” (Northwestern University v. Village of Wilmette, 230 Ill. 80; City of Chicago v. Blair, 149 id. 310; Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. City of Decatur, 154 id. 173.) The test as to whether such an improvement is local is whether it specially benefits the property assessed. (Ewart v. Village of Western Springs, 180 Ill. 318.) An improvement may be local, though of some general benefit to the public, when the substantial benefits to be derived from it are local in their nature and the portion of the city where the improvement is made will be specially and peculiarly benefited in the enhancement of the value of the property. (Fisher v. City of Chicago, 213 Ill. 268; City of Chicago v. Law, 144 id. 569; Enos v. City of Springfield, 113 id. 65; 25 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,—2d ed.—1176, and cases cited; 25 Cyc. 1533, and cases cited.) When it is proposed by a municipal corporation to make an improvement, the question whether it is local in its character, so that it can be made by special assessment, is one of fact and not of law. The corporate authorities, however, cannot arbitrarily determine that the improvement shall be treated as local when it is, in fact, general in its character. Their decision on this question is subject to review by the courts. Hewes v. Glos, 170 Ill. 436.

This court, in Hundley v. Lincoln Park Comrs. 67 Ill. 559, had this provision of the constitution under consideration as applying to a special assessment for improving a park in the city of Chicago, and said (p. 566) : “From the evidence in the record it appears this park is to be constructed within the corporate limits of two towns. The property in both the towns is assessed to defray the costs and expenses of acquiring the land and improving the park, and assessments are to be paid by the property owners of those towns, not to pay for lands lying inside and improvements which are to be made within those towns, but for lands situate outside and for improvements which are to be made outside of the corporate limits of such towns. Thus, taxes paid on property in North Chicago would be expended for lands and improvements, some of them in North Chicago and some in Lake View, and taxes paid on property situated in Lake View would be expended in North Chicago. How, then, can it be contended, that the creation of a park in Lake View by taxes in part paid by North Chicago would be a local improvement of North Chicago, or, vice versa, in Lake View? We must hold, therefore, that an assessment on property in North Chicago for a local improvement in Lake View, or vice versa, is not within the meaning we are disposed to give this clause of the constitution." The reasoning in this case seems to be conclusive on the question here under discussion.

Counsel for appellees, however, .attempt to distinguish this case from the Hundley case, 'first, because the sewer here, they contend, is two separate improvements,—one within, the separate limits of each municipality. As already seen, we cannot agree with this contention. Second, they contend that it does not appear from the case just cited that the lands outside of the corporate limits of one town were necessary for the use of parks situated in the other town, and that it is shown here that in order for the sewer in the city of Chicago to be of any benefit to the property within said city, an outlet in the town of Cicero for such sewer was required. Counsel cite Skreve v. Toivn of Cicero, 129 Ill. 226, Cochran v, Village of Park Ridge, 138 id. 295, and Maywood Co. v. Village of Maywood, 140 id. 216, as holding that while it is the general doctrine that a municipal corporation can only exercise its powers within its corporate limits, still that this doctrine is subject to the qualification that such authorities may do those things which are necessarily and fairly implied or incident to the powers expressly granted to them; that, therefore, a municipality must have the power to obtain an outlet for a sewer outside of its corporate limits if no such outlet can be found within such limits. A reading of these decisions shows that they were based upon the theory that the outlet of the sewer was really a part of the improvement and was for the exclusive use of the municipality in question. Such, however, is not the case here. True, that part of the sewer in the town of Cicero is to furnish an outlet for that part of the sewer in the- city of Chicago, but it is alsfor the use and benefit of lands in Cicero adjacent to it. These cases are not in conflict with and do not overrule the general doctrine on this question laid down in Hundley v. Lincoln Park Comrs. supra.

Counsel for appellees further argue that this improvement, considered as a whole, is a benefit to'a special locality and will specially and peculiarly enhance the value of the property ' in that vicinity; that therefore, under the definitions of “local improvement,” this improvement can be held to be one even though it. is partially within two municipalities; that none of the decisions in this State except the Hundley case, supra, would conflict with such a holding. It is clear from an examination of the case? where this court has discussed the meaning of the phrase “local improvement,” as used in said provision of the constitution, it has been understood to be an improvement within and under the control of one municipality. Under former constitutions in this State all taxes, including special assessments and special taxes, were required to be uniform in respect to persons and property within the jurisdiction of the body imposing the same. (Murphy v. People, 120 Ill. 234; Kuehner v. City of Preeport, 143 id. 92, and cases cited.) The same rule obtains now except as to special taxes and special assessments. This provision of the constitution with reference to local improvements being an exception to the general rule as to levying taxes, the public policy of the State, and the dominant principle of the constitution in respect to taxation, ought not to be extended beyond the clear import of the language employed in said exception. Kuehner v. City of Preeport, supra.

It is earnestly argued that the authority to make an improvement such as the one here in question, by two or more municipalities, in accordance with the provisions of said section 970, would be very beneficial to the municipalities of this State. This argument has little force unless the municipal authorities possess, under the constitution, the right to exercise such powers. “It is a general and undisputed proposition of law that a municipal corporation possesses and can exercise the following powers and no others: First, those, granted in express words; second, those necessarily or fairly implied in or incident to the powers expressly granted; third, those essential to the declared objects and purposes of the corporation,—not simply convenient, but indispensable. Any fair, reasonable doubt concerning the existence of the power is resolved by the courts against the corporation and the power is denied.” (Dillon on Mun. Corp.—4th ed.—sec. 87; City of Chicago v. Blair, supra.) Clearly, under the Hundley case, supra, these municipalities do not constitutionally possess the powers attempted to be granted by said section 97a. That case is squarely in point and must control unless overruled. After a review of the authorities cited and a re-examination of the question we adhere to the conclusion reached in that case, and are compelled to hold section 970 of the Local Improvement act unconstitutional. The decision of this question is decisive of the entire case. We therefore forbear comment on the other points raised on the record.

For the reasons given, the judgment of the circuit court will be reversed and the cause remanded to that court, with directions to enter a decree in conformity with the views herein expressed.

Reversed and remanded, with directions.

Mr. Justice Hand, -dissenting.