173 Ill. 617 | Ill. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the court:
Appellants filed their bill in the circuit court of Cook county, against the city of Chicago and the county collector of said county, appellees, to set aside and annul a judgment of the county court confirming a special assessment for curbing, filling and paving Bonney avenue, and also to set aside and annul judgements for the sale of their property as delinquent for installments of said special assessment, entered at the July term, 1895, and the July term, 1896, of said county court, and to enjoin the sale of said property under the judgments or on account of the assessment or any installment thereof, as well as any further proceedings in pursuance of said special assessment. The court sustained a general demurrer to the bill, dissolved a temporary injunction which had been granted and dismissed the bill at appellants’ cost.
The bill does not show any equitable ground for relief against the judgments or any equitable reason why they should not be enforced. The alleged facts that the ordinance required the use of Trinidad asphaltum, obtained from Pitch lake, in the island of Trinidad; that the improvement was not made of that kind of asphalt, and was soft and uneven and poorly and unskillfully executed, and that the work was not yet completed, leaving two blocks between Sixteenth street and Douglas Park boulevard unimproved, are not grounds of equitable interference with the collection of the assessment. Callister v. Kochersperger, 168 Ill. 334.
It is averred that the judgment of confirmation is null and void because the record of the judgment is not properly entitled. If the judgment is void for that reason its invalidity appears upon its face, and if it is void for any reason so appearing upon the face of the proceedings, any one inspecting the records would discover its. invalidity and a sale under it would constitute no cloud. ' It does not appear that there was any want of notice of the applications for judgment of sale at the July term, 1895. for the second installment, or at the July term, 1896, for the third installment, and if appellants desired to set up that defense they had full opportunity to do so. A court of equity would have no right to interfere on the strength of that averment.
Appellants were not all owners of the several pieces of property at the time of the confirmation of the special assessment, but they allege that neither they nor the grantors of those who purchased after the confirmation had any actual notice of the proposed application for that judgment. The statute requires notice of the application to be posted in at least four public places in the city, two of which are to be in the neighborhood of the proposed improvement. The bill charges that four notices were posted, but that only one of the places was in fact in the neighborhood of the proposed improvement, although the affidavit filed in the proceeding stated that two of them were in the neighborhood of the improvement and gave the county court apparent jurisdiction to enter judgment confirming the assessment. If the bill contradicted the fact of four notices being posted, and came within the rule as to contradicting a return of service of process, it would still be necessary, on an appeal to a court of equity, to show some equitable ground why the judgment should not be enforced, and that is not done in this case. But the bill does not contradict the fact of the posting, but only the conclusion as to two of the places being in the neighborhood. The places where the notices were posted were particularly stated in the affidavit, and were in the city of ChicagT), in which the improvement was to be made. There is no averment of fraud or of any ground of equitable jurisdiction, but appellants simply want to open the question whether two of these places were in the neighborhood. The judgment of confirmation was entered July 14,1893, and they do not deny that they knew of its entry before the improvement was made. So far as appears, they stood by and knew that they were receiving something on the faith of that judgment which they now object to and decline to pay for.
There is no equity in the bill, and the decree must be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.