Avery v. Village of La Grange

45 N.E.2d 647, 381 Ill. 432
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1942
DocketNo. 26753. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 45 N.E.2d 647 (Avery v. Village of La Grange) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Avery v. Village of La Grange, 45 N.E.2d 647, 381 Ill. 432 (Ill. 1942).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Fulton

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiffs in this suit are citizens and residents of the village of La Grange, Illinois, and the defendants are the village of La Grange, the village officials of La Grange, and the owners of a piece of property situated at the corner of Cossitt avenue and Waiola avenue in said village. There has been continuous litigation over the zoning status of said piece of property since 1927. It consists of a lot extending 100 feet on Waiola avenue and 136 feet on Cossitt avenue. The improvement on the premises is an eleven or twelve room dwelling about 45- years old. In 1923 a comprehensive zoning ordinance had been passed by the village of La Grange and the said property was included in the “A” or single-family-use district.

In October, 1926, Arthur S. McCallister purchased this property and in January, 1927, under a permit to remodel a porch, he installed a kitchen on the second floor, a bathroom on the first floor, an outside stairway to the second floor and interior alterations necessary to make the house into a two-family residence. McCallister filed two petitions to the zoning board of appeals asking for rezoning of this property, but these petitions were not pressed by McCallister. On April 28, 1928, the building commissioner, Greenlee, sued out a warrant before a police magistrate, charging McCallister with violation of the zoning ordinance. On May 29, 1928, McCallister filed an injunction suit against the village and its officers claiming that the zoning ordinance was arbitrary and unconstitutional, and seeking to enjoin the village from threatening the plaintiff with arrest or from prosecuting him. This was filed in the circuit court of Cook county. The suit was referred to a master in chancery who reported back to the court and on November 9, 1931, a decree was entered dismissing McCallister’s bill of complaint for want of equity at his cost. No appeal was taken from that decree.

On June 24, 1931, a deed was executed by McCallister to William G. Clark and wife. McCallister continued to occupy the first floor of the building but the second-floor apartment was rented to one Robert Mann. In 1932, the village, after serving many warnings, commenced and prosecuted a penalty suit in the circuit court of Cook county against William G. Clark and Mary E. Clark, claiming that those defendants had violated the zoning ordinance by using the premises for housing two families.

The McCallisters and the Manns were not parties to this proceeding. A verdict of the jury in favor of the plaintiff, the village of La Grange, was obtained in March, 1934, but was set aside on March 31,' 1934, by the allowance of a new trial, and the village petitioned for and was allowed leave to appeal to the Appellate Court for the First District. On December 31, 1934, the Appellate Court affirmed the action of the trial court in granting a new trial. A petition was filed in the Supreme Court for leave to appeal from the decision of the Appellate Court, but this was denied by the Supreme Court on April 18, 1935. The case was retried in the circuit court in May, 1936, and the defendants, the Clarks, were found not guilty.

The village appealed from this judgment to the Appellate Court for the First District and the case was awaiting oral argument when, in 1937, it was dismissed on the direction of the village board.

After the village had filed the penalty suit against the Clarks, above mentioned, Clark and his wife filed a suit oh June 2, 1933, in the circuit court of Cook county against Greenlee, who was the building commissioner, in the nature of a mandamus suit, charging that the zoning ordinance as applied to the property in question was unconstitutional and sought a writ to compel Greenlee as building commissioner to issue a permit for the use of the property for two families, notwithstanding the ordinance classifying the property for single-family use only.

The village demurred to that complaint and the trial court sustained the demurrer. The Clarks appealed to the Appellate Court for the First District which, on November 10, 1936, reversed and remanded the cause holding that the petition for mandamus stated a good cause of action. This mandamus suit was pending in the circuit court of Cook county in 1937 at the time the “use permit” hereinafter referred to was issued and was dismissed by the Clarks upon the issuance of that “use permit.”

Walter P. Saunders was elected president of the La Grange village board in April, 1937. From 1925 to 1928 he had been a member of the board, and from 1928 to 1935 he had been president of the board. He was a member of the Cook County Zoning Commission and a retired Board of Trade member. The village board met as a committee of the whole early in May, 1937, and it was decided to have Saunders see the attorney for the Clarks, Mr. Gariepy, and see whether litigation could be stopped by issuance' of a permit for the use of the premises for two families, which was the relief sought in the mandamus suit.

The present action in the nature of an injunction suit, was filed July 19, 1937, by appellees who were citizens and residents of the village of La Grange, and directed against the village of La Grange, the village officials, and the owner of the real estate in question. There was some question as to the regularity of issuing a “use permit” and hearings were held in August, 1937, by the village zoning board of appeals as to the advisability of re-zoning the property in question, and in 1938, the board of appeals reported recommending that the property be not re-zoned.

The village then employed independent counsel, Royal J. Schmidt, who had not been connected with any of the previous litigation and is not shown to have been in any way connected with any of the parties to this litigation, and who made a survey and reported both as to the facts and the law and as to his recommendations.

On June 27, 1938, the village board passed an ordinance amending the former zoning ordinance, by which amendment it provided that the boundaries of the districts as indicated upon the zoning map attached to and made a part of the La Grange Municipal Code of 1930, are altered and changed to exclude the property in question from class “A” residence district and include it in class “B” residence district. This ordinance was passed after this suit was filed, and as a result thereof on November 28, 1938, the appellees filed an amendment and supplement, to their complaint, by which they prayed that said amendment of June 27, 1938, be declared unconstitutional and void, and that the village and village officials be restrained by. injunction from permitting the use of the premises for a two-family dwelling or for any other use than that of a •single-family dwelling, and that the building commissioner be restrained from issuing a “use permit,” and that the appellant, Cockrell, be restrained from using said premises for housing two families. To this complaint the appellant, Cockrell, filed her answer on the 12th day of December, 1938, asserting the validity of the zoning-ordinance amendment of June 27, 1938. She also alleged that there had been changes in the circumstances or in the character or conditions of the district in the immediate vicinity of the property since the decision in the McCallister case in November, 1931.

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45 N.E.2d 647, 381 Ill. 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avery-v-village-of-la-grange-ill-1942.