delivered the opinion of the court:
The appellee on March 1, 1919, instituted a suit in assumpsit to recover the sum of $9201.54 paid to the appellant under the terms of an ordinance passed by the city council of Chicago July 15, 1912. The ordinance provided for- the vacation of certain parts of Cortland street and O’Brien avenue and the alleys connected therewith. Section 2 of the .ordinance further provided that the appellee should within sixty days pay to the appellant the sum of $9201.54 “toward a fund for the payment and .satisfaction of any and all claims for damages which may arise from the vacation of said streets and alleys, and further shall, within sixty days after the passage of this ordinance, deposit in the city treasury of the city of Chicago a sum sufficient to defray all costs and expenses of constructing a sidewalk and curb across entrances to the streets and alleys herein vacated,” etc. The defendant filed eight pleas to the declaration. The first was a plea of the general issue. The second, fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth were as to the operation of the Statute of Limitations, while the third and fourth pleas averred that the ordinance in question is illegal in that it was passed solely for the benefit of the appellee, plaintiff below, and that the money was paid by plaintiff with knowledge that the ordinance was invalid, and that therefore it is not entitled to have return of the amount paid. The plaintiff replied with a similiter to the first plea and demurred to the third and fourth pleas. The demurrers to these pleas were sustained, as was a demurrer to an additional plea filed under leave of court, containing, in substance, the same charge, whereupon defendant abided by said additional plea. A trial was had before a jury and judgment was rendered for the appellee in the sum of $9201.54, and appellant has brought the case here on appeal.
This case is very similar to the case of Lockwood & Strickland Co. v. City of Chicago, 279 Ill. 445. The record shows that the ordinance in question was passed on July 15, 1912, and under the rule laid down in the Lockwood case the Statute of Limitations had run in July, 1917, against claims for damages against the city for the vacating of. said streets and alleys, and the statute thereupon began to run against the appellee. Its suit having been filed in 1919, however, was instituted before the Statute of Limitations had run, and, in fact, the appellant does not contend otherwise here. The holding in the Lockwood case is controlling unless the superior court erred in sustaining the demurrers to the pleas of appellant charging that the ordinance for vacation was illegal and therefore plaintiff had no right to recover the money paid by it.
We are of the opinion that the trial court did not err in sustaining the demurrers to the third, fourth and additional pleas. There' is no doubt that appellant has power to vacate streets and alleys, and it cannot be heard in this case to say that it has exercised that power in an unauthorized or illegal manner. The money was deposited by the appellee in accordance with the ordinance passed by the city, which provided that it should become a “fund, for the payment and satisfaction of any and all claims for damages which may.arise from the vacation of said streets and alleys.” The appellant, therefore, had the benefit of whatever assurance was to be obtained from the depositing of said fund. Had suits or claims been filed for damages by reason of the vacating of said streets and alleys, appellant had the funds deposited by appellee for the purpose of meeting such suits or claims, and since such claims can no longer be filed against it the city has nO' right to retain this fund.
In City of East St. Louis v. East St. Louis Gas Light and Coke Co. 98 Ill. 415, the city by ordinance made a contract with the gas company for the exclusive right to provide gas within that city and for the sale of gas to the city at a certain stipulated price. Upon suit to recover for gas used by the city under the contract the city raised the objection that the ordinance fixing the price and granting the gas company the exclusive right for thirty years was void. This court held that, regardless of whether or not the ordinance was void so far as the question of future performance under it was concerned, as the city had received and enjoyed the benefit of the contract it was not allowed to set up a void ordinance as a defense to the claim for payment for the gas consumed, citing 2 Parsons on Contracts, 790, where it is said: “A general rule has been asserted which certainly rests upon reason and justice. It is, that where a party has accepted and made his own the benefit of a contract he has estopped himself from denying in the courts the validity of the instrument by which those benefits came to him.” The appellant having received the money of the appellee for the purpose of the protection of the city against claims arising from vacating the streets and alleys in question, it is bound under an implied promise to return the same. Lockwood & Strickland Co. v. City of Chicago, supra; Mowatt v. City of Chicago, 292 Ill. 578.
Without passing on the validity of the ordinance vacating the streets and alleys in question, we are of the opinion that the appellant is estopped in this proceeding to urge the illegality of that ordinance as a defense against the repayment of the money paid by appellee. The superior court therefore did not err in sustaining the demurrers to appellant’s third, fourth and additional pleas.
The judgment of the superior court will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.