Court Opinion

ID: 6987486
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 03:18:56.728213+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:09:30.706972
License: Public Domain

Wilson, J. By the acts of February 27th and April 19th, 1869, power is given to the "West Chicago Baric Commissioners to acquire, by purchase or condemnation, lands for parks and boulevards. For this purpose provision is made for the assessment of the damages, by assessors to be appointed by the circuit court, in favor of those whose lands are taken or damaged, and benefits are to be assessed against those benefited by the proposed improvement, for the purpose of raising a fund to pay the damages awarded. Section 13 of the act first named, provides as follow: “From the funds derived from said assessments, and from the other funds of the said board, applicable to such purpose, the said board shall pay to the parties entitled thereto the amounts respectively due them, and thereupon the title to said lands, ways, building line, easements and parks, or that portion thereof so paid for, as aforesaid, shall become fixed and vested in the said board, and their successors, in the manner, to the extent, for the purpose, and subject to the limitations herein provided.” * It is insisted by the learned counsel for the plaintiff in error, that when the power of selection was once exercised, there was no power in the Park Commissioners to abandon or change such selection or location, and to select other lands, either for parks or boulevards; that when the circuit court, in 1870, by its order, confirmed the action of the assessors in awarding damages, the rights of the parties were thereupon unalterably fixed and determined, and the land-owner was entitled to the damages awarded. It is claimed that in this respect the proceedings are unlike the cases where condemnation is sought by cities or railroad corporations, which, it is said, have large powers and a large discretion. We are unable to acquiesce in this view. By section 5 of the act, it is provided “ that the said board shall have power, and it is hereby made their duty, and they are hereby authorized, to select and take possession of, and to acquire, by condemnation, contract, donation, or otherwise, title forever, in trust, for the inhabitants of the town of the West Division of Chicago, and for such parties or persons as may succeed to the rights of said inhabitants, and for the public, as public promenades and pleasure grounds, without the power to sell, alienate, mortgage or encumber_the same, * * * not less than 250 feet,” etc. Section.4 provides “ said'Board of Commissioners shall have full and exclusive power to govern, manage and direct all parks, boulevards and ways authorized by this act, and by them purchased, made,.laid out or established; to lay out, regulate, make and improve the same; to pass ordinances and issue and enforce orders foiythe regulation and government of the same; to levy special assessments on all property by them deemed benefited by the purchase, opening and improvement of such parks, boulevards and ways, as limited by this act; to appoint such engineers, surveyors, clerks and other officers, including a police force, as maybe necessary; and generally in rega/rd to said parks, boulevards and ways, they shall possess all the powers and authority by law conferred upon or possessed by the common council of the city of Chicago, in respect to public squares, places and streets in said city.” These provisions in the Park Act, are quite similar to those contained in city charters, conferring jurisdiction and control over streets and alleys, and we cannot doubt that they invest the commissioners withjffie same discretion which is lodged in the common council of the city of Chicago when laying out, opening or altering its streets and alleys. The Board of Park Commissioners and common council of the city, are municipal bodies within their respective limits, occupying a trust relation to the public. Their functions and powers in respect to public squares, places, streets and roadways,"are wholly similar; and if by reason of a want of funds, or because the damages awarded are too large to justify the expense, the common council of the city has power to abandon comdemnation proceedings at anytime before taking possession of the land, and to select a different route, it is difficult to perceive any valid reason why the Park Commissioners may not do the same in relation to a boulevard. The evil to be avoided may’be as actual in the one case, as in the other; and we ought not] to assume that the legislature intended to tie up the hands of the Park Commissioners, and to deprive them of a discretion, the exercise of which might be as necessary as in the case of a common conn, cil of a city, unless such intention is clearly manifested by the language of the act. It is to be noticed that the act does not prescribe any precise route for the boulevards. It designates the territorial limits within which the improvement is to be made, and the general course of the boulevards, “ with such curves and deviations as the commissioners shall deem expedient.” The commissioners are thus not compelled to adopt a route already marked out by the legislature, and which, therefore, they could not abandon. They are expressly invested with a discretion in the selection of the route, and we think they also have power to abandon the route selected, as also the condemnation proceedings, at any time before taking possession of the land, if, in their judgment, the public interest will be better subserved by the selection of another route. The assessing of the damages and confirmation of the same by the circuit court did not invest them with the title to the land. It is the settled law of this State that cities, or other municipal corporations may, in the absence of any restrictive provisions in their charters, abandon condemnation proceedings at any time before taking possession of the lands. Hyde Park v. Dunham, 85 Ill. 569; Chicago v. Barbian, 80 Ill. 482. And the principle seems to be equally well settled that, until the party seeking condemnation has acquired a vested title to the land by taking possession and appropriating the same to his use, the landholder has acquired no vested right to the condemnation money, and can maintain no action therefor. In South Park Commissioners v. Dnnlevy, 91 Ill. 49, the court says: “The rights of the parties are correlative, the existence of the one depending on the existence of the other. When the party seeking condemnation acquires a vested right in the property, the owner has a vested right in the compensation.” See, also, St. Louis & South Eastern R. R. Co. v. Teeters, 68 Ill. 144; Chicago v. Barbian, supra. The Park Act provides that the title to the land “shall become fixed and vested” in the board, upon the payment of the money awarded to the land-owner. In other States, under charters containing like provisions, it is held that the title only vests upon the payment, of the money, whether the party seeking condemnation has taken possession or not, and that, after taking possession, the party may abandon condemnation proceedings and the land selected, at any time before the payment of the money. In Stacey v. Vermont Cent. R. R. Co., 27 Vt. 39, the charter provided that upon the payment of the damages awarded, or depositing the same in a bank, “ the company shall be deemed seized and possessed of the lands.” The company surveyed and located its line across the plaintiff’s land, and entered and commenced work thereon, under an arrangement with the plaintiff that the damages should be thereafter assessed. Damages were subsequently assessed, and duly confirmed. About a year afterwards, and when the work on the plaintiff’s land had been nearly completed, the company abandoned its line, and located the same on lands other than that of the plaintiff, whereupon the latter brought suit to recover the damages awarded; it was held, that, notwithstanding the company had taken possession of the land, the plaintiff was not entitled .to recover, on the ground that no title to the land vested in the company until the money was paid; and that until the company had acquired a vested title to the land, the owner of the land acquired no vested right to the money. In an elaborate opinion, citing many authorities, Mi1. Justice Isliam says: “Thisprovision is quite specific in stating what act on the part of the corporation vests in them a title to the land. They derive no title or any easement growing out of it, from the fact of their having surveyed the road across the plaintiff’s land, or having placed that survey on record, nor by having the damages appraised by commissioners and causing'the award to be recorded. The statute is express that the payment or deposit of .the money must be made before any such right accrues. * * * When the corporation obtains a vested right to the land,'or to the easement, the land owner has a vested right to the damages; that specific act which vests the right in them, gives also a vested right to the owner of the land. These respective rights are correlative, and have a reciprocal relation; the existence of the one depends upon the existence of the other.” The same doctrine was enunciated ¡in the case of the Baltimore & Susquehanna R. R. Co. v. Nesbit, 10 How. 395. And also in Bloodgood v. Mohawk & Hud. R. R. Co. 18 Wend. 10, where the charter was entirely similiar to that of the Vermont Central Company. On the same ground, and for that reason specifically assigned, the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, in Harrington v. Berkshire, 22 Pick. 267,“granted a mandamus to enforce the payment of damages awarded to the land-owner. The road had been laid and the title to the easement had, under their statute, vested in the public, and because it had vested, it was held that the party had a vested right to the damages. To the same effect are the cases of Westbrook v. 27orth, 2 Greenl. 179; Hampton v. Coffin, 4 N. H. 517; Hawkins v. Rochester, 1 Wend. 53. In this State it has never been 'decided, so far as we are aware, that a suit can be maintained for the recovery of condemnation money awarded to a land-owner before the land has been taken possession of by the condemning party. The actual appropriation of the land by taking possession of the same after confirmation of the award of damages, while it may not vest the title, seems to be considered by our Supreme Court, as a conclusive election to take the property, from which he cannot recede, and by which his liability to pay the damages assessed is fixed. As the Park Commissioners had not taken possession of the plaintiffs’ land before the institution of this suit, the plaintiffs had no right of action to recover the damages awarded, and if not, the claim for interest is without foundation. Should it be urged that by the payment by the commission ers of the money awarded, the title became vested in the Park Board, and therefore a right of action became vested in the plaintiffs, it ¡daces the plaintiffs in this dilemma: If, as insisted by the defendant, the payment of the $9,924 awarded was all the commissioners were required to pay, the plaintiffs have no right to demand any more, and their action fails.- • If, as is insisted by the plaintiffs, the amount is less than the commissioners were required to pay, then it was only a partial payment, and the commissioners acquired no vested right to the land, and not having taken possession of the land, the plaintiffs acquired no vested right to the money, and their action equally fails. As plaintiffs’ land was unenclosed at the time of the assessment of damages, and have so continued, their use has doubtless been of very little value to the plaintiffs; but the Supreme Court have laid down a rule on this subject from which we are not at liberty to depart. They said in South Park Commissioners v. Dunlevy: “ Our conclusion on this branch of the case is, that until the possession of" the property has been taken, interest cannot be allowed; that so long as the owner holds' the possession and use of the property, the compensation should not bear interest; in other words, that the possession and use of the property must be regarded as an equivalent for interest.” Without discussing other questions presented by the record, we are of the opinion that the judgment of the court below was correct, and the same must be affirmed. Judgment affirmed.