Amsterdam v. City of Chicago

160 Ill. App. 106, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 843
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 16, 1911
DocketGen. No. 15,559
StatusPublished

This text of 160 Ill. App. 106 (Amsterdam v. City of Chicago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amsterdam v. City of Chicago, 160 Ill. App. 106, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 843 (Ill. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice 'Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee in this case, Philip Amsterdam, complainant and cross defendant below, is the owner of two three story brick flat buildings of ordinary construction, from the flat roofs of which people can overlook the West Side National Ball Park. One of them, at 451 South Wood street, had on the roof when he bought it “a grand stand,” as the same is defined in section 656 of the Municipal Code of Chicago; that is tiers of wooden seats rising one above the other. Seats on these stands were presumably rented by the former owners, as they were by appellee in 1905 and 1906 and 1907, to persons desirous of seeing the base hall games in the park without paying therefor as much as was demanded for admission to the park for equally good seats. The other building is at 805 West Taylor street, and was built by tbe appellee in 1907. On it he built a grand stand similar to that on tbe building at 451 South Wood street, but larger, and used it for tbe same purposes.

Permits to Amsterdam “to use roof” of 451 South Wood street as a “grand stand” were issued to him by a deputy commissioner of buildings for tbe city in tbe spring of 1905 and of 1906, and one for tbe “erection of a grand stand on tbe roof” of said building in April, 1907. Tbe permits were on blank forms used for permits for tbe erection of buildings, and all contained tbe clause:

“This permit is granted on tbe express condition that tbe said P. Amsterdam in tbe erection of said building shall conform in all respects to tbe ordinances of tbe city of Chicago regulating tbe construction of buildings in tbe city limits, and may be revoked at any time upon tbe violation of any of the provisions of said ordinances.”

A permit apparently was issued for tbe building at 805 West Taylor street, including a grand stand on tbe roof, on July 19, 1907. At all events tbe evidence shows that on that date plans for tbe building, showing tbe proposed grand stand on tbe roof, were approved by a deputy building commissioner, and the court below in its decree hereinafter described so found.

It is, however, not disputed that tbe permits for tbe erection or use of “grand stands” on both buildings were revoked in tbe fall of 1907, and notice given to tbe appellee by tbe city of Chicago through a deputy commissioner of buildings. This tbe court below also found in its decree, and counsel for appellee in their argument concede that no question is raised by tbe record as to tbe estoppel of tbe city because of the issuance of said permits.

But after that revocation tbe police made objection to people going upon these roofs, and tbe appellee Amsterdam thereupon filed a bill in chancery making' the city of Chicago, its chief of police and its commissioner of buildings defendants, setting forth his ownership of the buildings, the construction of the grand stands upon the roofs, and the profitable use by him for four years of the one on South Wood street. He alleged further by his bill that he had complied with all the regulations of the building department of the city and with all suggestions, additions and improvements required by the city for the purpose of rendering the roofs safe, and that they and the stands were safe; that the building department of Chicago, though admitting the fact that the stands and roofs were safe, were threatening to stop the use of the roofs on the ground that “the corporation counsel had ordered no permits to be issued for stands in the future near the base ball park;” that the police were interfering to prevent persons from going up on the roofs and threatening to arrest the complainant; and “that in the construction of said stands on the roofs and each of them” the complainant had strictly followed the laws and city ordinances. He therefore prayed the court to enjoin the defendants from in any manner interfering with bis premises or with tbe use of tbe roofs of said premises for tbe purpose of placing and seating persons thereon.

A temporary injunction in accordance with the prayer of the bill was granted. The defendants then answered, denying that the buildings and constructions thereon were safe or that the grand stands were erected in accordance with the ordinances and regulations of the city of Chicago, and denying any admission to the contrary by said city or its officers. They denied also that the reason for the refusal for the permit for the building at 805 West Taylor street was that the corporation counsel had ordered that no permit be issued for stands in the future near base ball parks, and alleged that the true reason was that to issue such a permit would be in violation of certain ordinances of the city of Chicago, and especially section 656 of the Kevised Municipal Code of Chicago of 1905.

Said section 656 is set forth in full in the answer and as we think the decision of this case properly turns upon it, we quote it.

“Wooden grand stands or tiers of seats, commonly known and described as grand stands, may be erected within the fire limits where no part of any such structure shall be within sixty feet of any other building or structure, provided that the person or corporation desiring a permit for the construction of such a grand stand shall first obtain the consent in writing of the owners of a majority of the frontage on both sides of the street or streets on each side of the block or square in which it is desired to erect such grand stand.”

With their answer the defendants filed a cross bill against Amsterdam, in which they allege that the two “grand stands” in question are unsafe, and continuing nuisances and menaces to the community, and that they were erected in violation of section 656 of the Municipal Code as there set forth. The bill sets out various ordinances of the city bearing on the subject of dangerous constructions and the power of officers of the city to compel their abatement, and prays that the “grand stands” erected upon the roofs of said premises at 451 South Wood street and 805 West Taylor street be declared in violation of law and the city ordinances, and that an order be entered on the defendant Amsterdam to remove the said grand stands from the roofs of his said buildings.

This cross bill Amsterdam answered formally, praying for strict proof of all its allegations.

The cause was heard before a chancellor in the Circuit Court, and much evidence taken concerning the actual condition of the constructions and their safety and the danger incurred by persons occupying them in case of fire in the building beneath; all which is rendered immaterial by the view that we take of the case, and which we need not therefore discuss.

The court below entered a somewhat elaborate decree, which found in detail the construction of the “grand stands” on the two buildings and of the means of access to and egress from them, and then ordered that Amsterdam should not use said tiers of seats known as grand stands' constructed on the roof of his building at 451 South Wood street until he had complied with “the ordinances of the city of Chicago for buildings known as tenement houses combined with roofs used for spectatorial purposes.”

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Bluebook (online)
160 Ill. App. 106, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amsterdam-v-city-of-chicago-illappct-1911.