147 N.E. 404 | Ill. | 1925
Appellant filed its petition in the county court of Kankakee county to confirm a special assessment for the paving of a street in the city of Kankakee. An assessment roll was filed. Appellees objected to the confirmation of the same and filed twenty-seven objections. The principal objections were, that the ordinance was not properly passed, that it was unreasonable and uncertain, and that it was void because of a substantial variance between the engineer's estimate attached to the ordinance and the ordinance proper, in that the estimate provided the sum of $1651 for court costs and other lawful expenses while the ordinance provided the sum of $1706 for such costs and expenses. The trial court overruled all objections other than the one last referred to and sustained it, held the ordinance void and dismissed the petition. The city has appealed.
The objectors have filed cross-errors, contending that the court erred in overruling objections filed by them. We will consider first the objection sustained by the trial court.
The estimate of the cost of the improvement in the resolution of the board of local improvements was: "Court costs and other lawful expenses not in excess of six per cent of the estimated cost of said improvement, $1651." Section 4 of the ordinance provided: "That the improvement herein provided for, and the whole cost of said improvement, including the sum of seventeen hundred six and no/100 dollars, being the amount included in the estimate of said engineer of the board of local improvements, hereto attached, as the court costs and other lawful expenses as provided for by section ninety-four (94) of an act entitled 'An act concerning local improvements,' approved June 14, 1897, as amended, be paid for by special assessment to be levied upon the property specially benefited, to the amount that the same may be legally assessed therefor, in accordance with the act of the General Assembly of the State of *57
Illinois, entitled 'An act concerning local improvements,' approved June 14, 1897, and amendments thereto." It was objected that this difference of $55 constituted a willful and substantial variance between the resolution and the ordinance. The total cost of the improvement as shown by the estimate is $29,220, including the sum of $1651. Section 94 of the Local Improvement act (Smith's Stat. 1923, p. 351,) provides that in cities, towns and villages having a population of less than 100,000, such city, town or village "may in and by the ordinance providing for the assessment prescribed, provide that a certain sum, not to exceed six percentum of the amount of such assessment," shall be applied toward the payment of the cost of making and collecting the assessment. While it is the rule that a substantial variance between the estimate and the ordinance vitiates the latter, (Gardner v. City of Chicago,
We come, then, to consider the cross-errors assigned by appellees. In their first objection they set out that the ordinance was not properly passed by the city council. It appears from the record that on April 21, 1924, the ordinance was presented to the city council, and at that time a motion was made by one of the aldermen to reject the same, and by a vote of 12 to 2 the ordinance was rejected. Nothing further appears to have been done at this meeting of the city council, but at a later meeting, which appellees say is *58 the second subsequent meeting, held on May 19, 1924, alderman Hertz, one of the two aldermen who voted against the rejection of the ordinance at the meeting of April 21, made a motion that the city council reconsider its vote by which the ordinance was rejected. The records of the city clerk's office show that this motion was carried, though no roll call appears to have been taken on the same. A motion was then made and carried to suspend the rules and put the ordinance on its passage. This motion prevailed. A vote was taken on the ordinance and it was declared passed. Appellees contend that the vote on May 19 to reconsider the action rejecting the ordinance came too late; that such action had become final and the city council did not have authority to pass the ordinance on reconsideration at a later meeting.
A valid ordinance is the foundation of any improvement by special assessment and cannot be dispensed with. (City of EastSt. Louis v. Albrecht,
The effect of a reconsideration, at a subsequent meeting, of a vote by a city council rejecting a local improvement ordinance has not been previously considered by this court. InPeople v. Davis,
In State v. Foster,
In Whitney v. VanBuskirk,
In Wood v. Cutter,
In Keough v. Board of Aldermen of Holyoke,
In State v. Phillips,
In State v. Wadhams,
Kendall v. City Council of Camden,
In Hadley v. Mayor of Albany,
In Lantz v. Hightstown,
Under the decisions here quoted and the general rules relating to powers of deliberative bodies of the character of city councils, we are of the opinion that where such a body has finally voted upon a proposition and no motion for reconsideration or other motion is pending thereon, the city council, upon adjournment of its meeting, has no power to reconsider its action where the rights of other persons *64
have intervened. In this case, by the final action of the city council rejecting the ordinance for this improvement and the adjournment of that body the ordinance was dead. When an attempt was made to pass it at a subsequent meeting the rights of objectors to this improvement had intervened. Those rights were, to have the matter reconsidered by the board of local improvements and to a hearing before that board in advance of the presentation of its recommendations, upon which a new ordinance must be based. Conditions may have changed and a much stronger showing of objections might have been made before the board of local improvements. The ordinance passed was a new ordinance. The rejection of the ordinance vitiated the whole proceeding. Therefore the ordinance, when passed, was not in pursuance of the preliminary requirements of the statute. The rejection of the ordinance put an end to the proceedings under it. In City of Chicago v. Goodwillie,
We are of the opinion, therefore, that the ordinance was void for want of power of the city council to pass it and that it was error to overrule appellees' first objection. Under this view it is not necessary to consider other objections raised, since the petition was dismissed.
The judgment of the court was right though the reason for it was not, and it will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed. *65