180 Ill. 341 | Ill. | 1899
delivered the opinion of the court:
In the present case, the property specially assessed was a tract of land, which was unsubdivided. The ordinance attempts to subdivide this tract of land, thus legally unsubdivided, into parcels for the purpose of placing in each parcel a drain. The attempt is made to arbitrarily subdivide the property into parcels of land, each about twenty-five feet in width, for the purpose of the assessment, and for no other purpose. Property must be specially assessed under its known legal description. An ordinance, which arbitrarily subdivides property for the purpose of assessing the same, is illegal and void. The owner of property cannot be compelled to subdivide his land into twenty-five feet strips fronting upon a street. The owner has a right to subdivide his land in such a way, as he sees fit. He may use his own pleasure and best judgment in subdividing it, so that it will produce to him the best revenue. A municipality cannot dictate to the owner how he shall subdivide his land. An ordinance, which thus attempts to place drains into unsubdivided property at each twenty-five feet of ground, is without warrant in the law.
In Warren v. City of Chicago, 118 Ill. 329, where there were certain vacant lots, having a frontage of forty-five feet abutting upon a street, in which lateral service pipes were proposed to be laid, in order to connect the water main with adjacent property, and where the city authorities, for the purpose of assessment for the improvement, made an equal subdivision of these lots, proposing to lay a service pipe to each half lot, and a special assessment was levied upon the property accordingly,—that is, for one service pipe upon each half lot, being for two service pipes upon each whole lot,—we said (p. 333): “Conceding the power to make the assessment, we are clearly of opinion that the scheme adopted, so far as appellant’s property is concerned, was unauthorized and void. * * * The only shadow of justification which is shown for this discrimination against appellant, is the arbitrary subdivision made of his lots for the purposes of the assessment, which was done without any authority, either in law or fact. There is no pretense it was done with the sanction of appellant, or that the property was ever theretofore known or designated, as it is described in the assessment proceeding.”
Section 2 of the ordinance in the case at bar is almost exactly the same, as section 1 of an ordinance for water service pipes, set forth in Gram v. City of Chicago, 139 Ill. 265; and the ordinance in Cram v. City of Chicago, supra, was held to be invalid. In the latter case, the property-assessed consisted of certain unsubdivided blocks, which had not been platted or divided by the owners into lots, but the city, in making the assessment, undertook to make a division. There was a series of descriptions contained in the ordinance for drain pipes, subdividing the property into strips of twenty-five and one hundred feet deep, each as therein shown. Each of these strips was assessed a certain sum. We there held that, in an ordinance of this kind, there cannot be a merely arbitrary description, but the description must be of the lot or tract of land, as it is legally known and designated. We there said (p. 268): “An arbitrary description, or one having no foundation in fact, could never have been contemplated. The property fronting on Root street was divided into blocks, and, in making the assessment, the city had no authority to subdivide these blocks into strips of twenty-five feet, and make the assessment on the property according to that description; but, on the other hand, if the city desired to assess the property, it should have proceeded against the property as it was known and legally described. The question is not a new one in this court. The same question arose in Warren v. City of Chicago, 118 Ill. 329, and a similar assessment was condemned.” (See, also, People v. Clifford, 166 Ill. 165).
As the ordinance in this case is of the same character, as the ordinance which we condemned in Warren v. City of Chicago, supra, and in Cram v. City of Chicago, supra, we must hold, that the court below committed no error in sustaining the objection, made by the appellee, that the ordinance, upon which the assessment is based, made a purely arbitrary subdivision of his property.
Accordingly, the judgment of the county court, sustaining the objection of the appellee, arid refusing judgment and order of sale, is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.