delivered the opinion of the court:
Plаintiffs, who are citizens, residents, taxpayers and property owners of the city of Chicago appeal from an order of the circuit court of Cook County dismissing their complaint by which they sought to prevent defendants, Public Building Commission of Chicago, the City of Chicago, the Board of Education of Chicago and the Chicago Park District from implementing plans to construct school and recreational facilities in Washington and Douglas parks. This court has jurisdiction on direct appeal because of the constitutional questions involved.
The facts are to be gathered from statements in the complaint which are admitted by defendants’ motion to dismiss and from joint exhibits admitted into evidence at the request of all of the parties. In 1869 the General Assembly passed “An Act to Provide for the Location and Maintenance of a Park for the Towns of South Chicago, Hyde Park and Lake” which was approved and in force February 24, 1869. (Private Laws, 1869, vol. 1, p. 358.) The statute provided that five persons, to be appointed by the Governor, be constituted a board of public park commissioners for the towns in question to be known as the “South Park Commissioners”. The act authorized the commissioners to select certain lands which are specifically described by metes and bounds and provided in section 4 therеof that the lands “when acquired by said Commissioners, as provided by this act, shall be held, managed and controlled by them and their successors, as a public park, for the recreation, health and benefit of the public, and free to all persons forever.” Pursuant to the granted authority the commissioners proceeded to acquire, among other lands, those which presently constitute Washington Park which is now held by the Chicago Park District as successor to the South Park Commissioners. The deeds by which the property was originally acquired by the commissioners purport to convey an unrestricted title in fee simple without mention of park usage. Washington Park as presently constituted contains 371 acres. It is located on the south side of the city of Chicago and is bounded by 51st Street on the north, Cottage Grove Avenue on the east, 60th Street on the south and Martin Luther King Drive on the west.
In 1869, the same year in which the South Park Commission was created, the General Assembly passed an act entitled “An Act to amend the charter of the city of Chicago, to create a board of Park Commissioners, and authorize a tax in the town of West Chicago, and for other purposes”, approved and in force February 27, 1869. (Private Laws of 1869, vol. 1, p. 342.) By this legislation a board of public park commissioners to be known as “The West Chiсago Park Commissioners” was created with power and authority to acquire certain designated lands with the stipulation in section 5 thereof “that said board shall have power, and it is 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, and for the public, as public promenade and pleasure grounds and ways.” After their appointment by the Governor the commissioners acquired, among other lands, those which now constitute Douglas Park, presently held by the Chicago Park District as successor to the West Chicago Park Commissioners. This park, consisting of 181.99 acres, is situated on the west side of the city of Chicago bounded on the north by Roosevelt Road, on the east by California Avenue, on the south by 19th Street and on the west by Albany Avenue. The land comprising this park was acquired by 10 deeds, six originals and two reconstructions of which were received In evidence. The remaining deeds were not found in the records of the recorder due to the Chicago fire. Each of the six originals admitted was on the same printed deed form and contained the same restrictive language as that found in section 5 of the act as above quoted. In two of these the restrictive language had been crossed out. In the remaining four it had been unaltered. No restrictions appear in the reconstructed deeds.
The Public Building Commission of Chicago, at the request of the Board of Education of the City of Chicago has undertaken a program involving the construction, alteration, repair, renovation and rehabilitation of public schools in the city, together with park, recreational, playground and other related public facilities which will be leased by the Building Commission to the Board of Education, the Chicago Park District and other governmental agencies. The commission has selected, located and designated sitеs within the territorial limits of the city of Chicago as sites to be acquired for the erection and construction of elementary, middle and high schools to serve about 30,000 pupils, together with park, recreational and playground facilities. Each of the sites has been recommended by the Department of Development and Planning of the City of Chicago in accord with the comprehensive plan for the city of Chicago and in cooperation with the Board of Education of the City of Chicago and also the Chicago Park District in connection with the sites in which the Chicago Park District is involved. Some of these sites have already been аpproved by the city council of the city of Chicago.
A site has been designated in Washington Park for the erection of a school-park facility. The Chicago Park District proposes to convey to the Public Building Commission of Chicago for such purposes a total of 3.839 acres located in the northwest portion of the park about 250 feet from the northern boundary. On 2.586 acres of this site the building commission proposes to construct a middle school for approximately 1500 students to be leased to the Board of Education of the City of Chicago. The remaining 1.253 acres would be utilized in the construction of a gymnasium and recreational facilities which will be leased to the Chicago Park District. Construction had started on this site at the time suit was filed but had not proceeded to a point where original use of the land would no longer be possible. Of the sites thus far selected by the Public Building Commission of Chicago and approved by the city council of the city of Chicago only the 2.6 acres in Washington Park involves property in a park which is to be used for school construction. No site has been designated in Douglas Park but one is under consideration at the present time.
Plaintiffs’ complaint alleges a class action brought on behalf of three classes of citizens: (1) those named who аre citizens, residents and taxpayers of the city of Chicago; (2) those named who are citizens, taxpayers and residents of areas of the city served by a large regional city park such as Washington Park and (3) those named who are citizens, taxpayers and residents of an area served by a large regional city park, such as Washington Park, and who own real property bordering on or in the immediate vicinity of said park in respect to which there is a plan to construct a schoolhouse within the boundaries of such park. It is plaintiffs’ theory that the parks in question are so dedicated that they are held in public trust for use only as park оr recreational grounds and that those of them who are property owners adjacent to or in the vicinity of a park dedicated by the acts of 1869 have a private property right to the continuation of the park use of which even the legislature cannot deprive them. They further contend that all plaintiffs who are citizens and residents of any area of the city have a public property right to enforce the public trust existing by reason of the dedication of the parks as aforesaid and to require that no change of park use be permitted because the legislature has not explicitly and openly so provided by statute. Additionally, plaintiffs contend that the Public Building Commission Act does not authorize construction by the commission of local school houses in Chicago’s regional parks under the plan proposed by defendants and that controlling statutes make this scheme invalid for both the Board of Education and the Chicago Park District. Finally, it is alleged that the Public Building Commission Act is unconstitutional as being too vague and indefinite.
In sustaining defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint the trial court, in its judgment order, rejected all of plaintiffs’ contentions and specifically found that plaintiffs in each of the three classifications asserted had no such interest in Washington Park оr Douglas Park sufficient to enable or entitle them, or any of them, to maintain the action “except as taxpayers.”
We think it is clear from the undisputed facts in this case that there has been a dedication by the General Assembly of the lands in question for use as public parks. This is so notwithstanding the fact that the deeds by which the South Park Commissioners and the West Chicago Park Commissioners obtained title did or did not contain any of the restrictive language found in the legislative enactments. The authority of the commissioners in either case to receive title existed solely by virtue of the provisions of the statutes which created the respective municipаl bodies for the sole purpose of acquiring the lands for the purposes specified. Both acts in substance specified that the lands when acquired should be devoted to park purposes though the language was not the same in each case. Such a dedication having been made by the sovereign, the agencies created by it hold the properties in trust for the uses and purposes specified and for the benefit of the public. See: Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Illinois,
In his extensive discussion of the “public trust doctrine” in the article just cited, the аuthor, Professor Joseph L. Sax, had occasion, at pps. 489-491, to analyze the decision in Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Illinois,
With this much of background we approach the first question presented in this appeal: Have plaintiffs who are property owners adjacent to or in the vicinity of the parks dedicated by the acts of 1869 a private property right to continuation of the park use of which even the legislature cannot deprive them? This question must be answered in the negative. The mere dedication by the sovereign of lands to public park uses does not give property owners adjoining or in the vicinity of the park the right to have the use continue unchanged even though, when the park was established, abutting or adjoining owners were assessed for special benefits conferred. (Reichelderfer v. Quinn,
In asserting a private property right plaintiffs cite South Park Commissioners v. Montgomery Ward & Co.,
South Park Commissioners v. Montgomery Ward & Co., is the last of a long line of cases wherein the owners of property on the west side of Michigan Avenue in the city of Chicago were able to prevent the construction of buildings in Lake Front Park (later Grant Park). A reference to some of the earlier cases, especially City of Chicago v. Ward,
The second question is whether all of plaintiffs, including citizens who are residents of any area of the city, have a public property right to enforce the public trust here and to require that no change of park use be permitted because the legislature has not explicitly and openly so provided by statute. If we understand plaintiffs’ position correctly they do not contend, as far as the rights of the public in public trust lands are concerned, that the legislature could never, by appropriate action, change or reallocate the use in any way. (This would be contrary to well established precedent. See: Droste v. Kerner,
- As to the first part of the question, i.e., the interests óf plaintiffs and their standing to bring the action, the trial judge found that they had no rights sufficient to enable them to maintain the action "except as taxpayers”. In Droste v. Kеrner,
As to the second pаrt of the question, i.e., whether there has been a sufficient manifestation of legislative intent to permit the diversion and reallocation contemplated by the plan proposed by defendants, it should be remembered that in People ex rel. Stamos v. Public Building Com.,
Plaintiffs argue nevertheless that before defendants can be allowed to carry out their plan the legislature must clearly and specifically state with reference to the park or parks in question explicit authority to divert to new public uses and that there must appear in that legislation not only a statement of the new use but a statement or recital showing in some way an awareness on the part of the legislature of the existing public use. Their position is based mainly upon a line of Massachusetts cases including Robbins v. Department of Public Works,
In passing we think it appropriate to refer to the approach developed by the courts of our sister State, Wisconsin, in dealing with diversion problems. In at least two cases, City of Madison v. State,
We believe that most of the remaining questions raised by plaintiffs have been dealt with and decided, either directly or by necessary inference, in our opinion in the Stamos case but we shall endeavor to cover all of them as briefly as possible. First, it is contended here as it was in Stamos that the Board of Education of the City of Chicago is not authorized to lease schoolhouse space from the Building Commission. We refer to p. 182 of our former opinion in answer to this argument. We adhere to our former position for the reasons there given. We have considered the authorities cited by plaintiffs and find that they are not productive of a contrary result. Second, it is said that the Chicago Park District cannot lease land from the Building Commission for any purposes except those related to its. administrative functions. This argument was likewise made in Stamos and there answered at pps. 185-186. We adhere to our position as stated therein. Third, it is claimed that the Chicago Park District cannot donate cash or land and the Chicago Board of Education cannot donate cash to the Public Building Commission for the construction of a building and auxiliary facilities which neither is authorized to lease. It will be noted that this contention is based on the assumption that neither the board nor district can lease. Since, as decided above, both are authorized to lease, there is no basis for this contention. Further, it was specifically decided in Stamos, p. 186, that the Chicago Park District was authorized to contribute property for the purposes specified. We adhere to that decision. The power to donate under section 13 of the Public Building Commission Act, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1967, ch. 85, par. 1043,) is broad. That section confers power to donate property or cash on municipal corporations “which may be desirous of renting space in any building or buildings to be acquired or constructed by such Public Buildings Commission * * * in such amount or amounts as they may deem proper and appropriate in aiding the Public Building Commission to effectuate the purpose for its creation”. Fourth, plaintiffs say that the twenty-year obligations for rental payments and for payments for mаintenance and operation which defendants’ scheme contemplates will be undertaken by the Chicago Board of Education and the Chicago Park District in violation of their annual appropriation requirements and their respective tax limits. This entire argument is met and answered at pps. 183-185 in our opinion in Stamos. We re-adopt that language and reasoning.
Finally, plaintiffs challenge the Public Building Commission Act on the ground that it is vague and indefinite and therefore unconstitutional. The first part of their argument concerns the phrase “essential governmental, health, safety and welfare services” in section 14(c). It is said that it is impossible to determine the scope of such services. This argument was considered specifically in Stamos at pps. 174-177 and the conclusion was that the legislative standards contained in the Public Building Commission Act are more than sufficient to satisfy the requirements of the due-process clauses of the State and Federal constitutions and article III of the Illinois constitution. We also had occasion in Stamos to observe (p. 176) that this court had used the precise word “essential” in sustaining the constitutionality of the original Public Building Commission Act in People ex rel. Adamowski v. Public Building Com.,
Plaintiffs’ second contention as to vagueness comes in connection with section 14(i). That section authorizes a public building commission to “rent such space in such building or buildings as from time to time may not be needed
by any governmental agency for such other purposes as the Board of Commissioners may determine will best serve the comfort and convenience of the occupants of such building or buildings, and upon such terms and in such manner as the Board of Commissioners may determine”. Plaintiffs fear that this section does not serve as a sufficient guide to determine what shall be done in case the Board of Education abandons the building when for one reason or another it becomes no longer useful for their purposes. It seems to us that the section in question is designed specifically to cover such a situation. It is true that administrative problems may arise in the event of damage by fire or other casualty but those are problems incident to the management of any building and it would not be expected that the legislature would attempt to anticipate and solve in advance every problem that might be encountered by the commission. As we observed in Stamos in referring to Hill v. Relyea,
In conclusion, let it be said that this court is fully aware of the fact that the issues presented in this case illustrate the classic struggle between those members of the public who would preserve our parks and open lands in their pristine purity and those charged with administrative responsibilities who, under the pressures of the changing needs of an increasingly complex society, find it necessary, in good faith and for the public good, to encroach to some extent upon lands heretofore considered inviolate to change. The resolution of this conflict in any given case is for the legislature and not the courts. The courts can serve only as an instrument of determining legislative intent as evidenced by existing legislation measured against constitutional limitations. In this process the courts must deal with legislation as enacted and not with speculative considerations of legislative wisdom. As previously indicated in this opinion, existing legislation does not warrant the restrictive interpretation plaintiffs would place upon it.
The judgment of the circuit court of Cook County dismissing plaintiffs’ complaint is affirmed.
ludgment affirmed.
