delivered, the opinion of the court:
The county court of Cook county confirmed a special assessment, collectible in five annual installments, levied by the city of Chicago upon the property of the plaintiffs in error for the purpose of paying for a system of main sewers in South Forty-fifth avenue and other streets in said city. This writ of error seeks to review that judgment.
The ordinance for the improvement was passed by the city council March 25, 1895. The first section describes the location of the sewers, with their dimensions, manner of construction, grades, catch-basins, man-holes and house connections. The second section describes certain territory, including premises not adjoining the sewers, and declares such territory to be a drainage district for the purposes of said improvement. By the fifth section the special assessment is divided into five installments, and the objection to the judgment is based on this section, which is claimed to be invalid for want of power in the city to so divide the assessment. This claim is based upon the assertion that the city, in building these sewers, proceeded under and by virtue of thе act entitled “An act to vest the corporate authorities of cities and villages with power to construct, maintain and keep in repair drains, ditches, levees, dykes and pumping works for drainage purposes, by special аssessment upon the property benefited thereby,” in force July 1, 1885. (Laws of 1885, p. 60.) If it is true that the authority to build the sewers was- derived from that act and the city had no power to provide for the improvement except under the authority thereby conferred, then the provision for a division into installments was invalid and without authority of law. (City of Charlestons. Cadle,
The city of Charleston undertook to improve certain territory within its corporate limits by drаining the lands under the authority of the act of 1885, and we decided that the assessment could not be divided into installments under that аct. In Andrews v. People, supra, counsel did not point out any other act. containing authority for the improvement, and it was assumed that the city proceeded under the act of 1885. In this case there is, as we have said, ample authority outside of that act, and this ordinance does not seem to have been passed in pursuance of it, but under the general act of incorporation. Its provisions are for the building of ordinary sewers, with the usual house connections, such as were built and paid for by special assessment for a long period of years before the statute of 1885 was enacted. Under such general act there is no question of the power of the city to divide the special assessment into installments.
The judgment of the county court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Mr. Justice Mageudee, dissenting.
