Belton v. Forest Preserve District of Cook County

943 N.E.2d 221, 407 Ill. App. 3d 409, 347 Ill. Dec. 931, 2011 Ill. App. LEXIS 69
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 4, 2011
Docket1-09-3126 Rel
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 943 N.E.2d 221 (Belton v. Forest Preserve District of Cook County) 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
Belton v. Forest Preserve District of Cook County, 943 N.E.2d 221, 407 Ill. App. 3d 409, 347 Ill. Dec. 931, 2011 Ill. App. LEXIS 69 (Ill. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

JUSTICE McBRIDE

delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.

Justices Cahill and R.E. Gordon concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

A dead tree limb fell from a public forest preserve onto a car traveling on an adjacent road. The motorist filed a negligence action, but the trial court entered summary judgment for the forest preserve (735 ILCS 5/2—1005 (West 2004)), on grounds that it did not owe the motorist a duty of care to maintain its property. The motorist appeals.

Plaintiff Darryl L. Belton, 1 of Hammond, Indiana, was injured on December 30, 2005, at about 8:30 p.m. while driving his 2005 Pontiac G6 sedan westbound through Calumet City, Illinois, on 159th Street, which was also known as River Oaks Drive due to its proximity to River Oaks shopping center. The road was controlled by the Illinois Department of Transportation (hereinafter Department of Transportation) or Calumet City. Directly north of the road was land that was mostly undeveloped and maintained as the Green Lake forest preserve by defendant Forest Preserve District of Cook County (hereinafter District). Belton was driving past the public recreational area toward Torrance Avenue when a large, dead limb fell from a cottonwood tree onto his vehicle. He was transported from the scene to the hospital with injuries including a fractured vertebra and his car was towed away. The driver of the vehicle immediately following Belton’s Pontiac saw what occurred.

Belton sued the District, but not Calumet City or the Department of Transportation, in the circuit court of Cook County. In count I of his second amended complaint, Belton sought compensation for personal injuries and property damage caused by the District’s negligence, based on allegations that he was on “a public thoroughfare,” it is “common knowledge *** that dead trees and associated limbs are structurally unsound and at an extreme risk for collapse or fall” and it is “routine for property owners containing trees which adjoin or are near to public roadways to inspect trees and create ‘safe zones’ to ensure trees and limbs do not fall onto public roadways.” He alleged the District “had a duty under [szc] to exercise ordinary care to maintain its property and prevent dead tree limbs or dead trees from falling onto adjoining roadways.” He further alleged, “The cost of a visual inspection of trees adjoining roadways would have been minimal, and should have been employed at the Green Lake Woods area.” Also, the tree and specific limb which fell onto his vehicle were so rotten or decayed for a “substantial period” that it would have been obvious from a “drive-by visual inspection” that they “posed immediate threats to the public,” and because of the limb’s “open and obvious position adjoining River Oaks Drive,” the District “should have known of [its defective] condition.” Finally, “The catastrophic consequences of the [District’s] failure to inspect its trees were foreseeable, known, and greatly outweighed the practicability and cost of inspection.” In count II of the second amended complaint, Belton alleged a statutory violation, but he withdrew this claim, and in prior complaints he had alleged willful and wanton conduct, but he did not allege this theory in the pleading at issue on appeal.

The parties’ discovery included deposing John Raudenbush, a 27-year employee of the District, and his supervisor, Richard D. Newhard, who had been with the District for 36 years. Both men had degrees in natural resources management and were recognized by the International Society of Arborists as certified arborists. Their testimony established that District employees pruned and removed vegetation if it would impede mowing operations or was in recreational areas such as picnic grounds and could pose a hazard to users of the preserve. Most of the resource management employees working in the Green Lake area in 2005 had gone through the time-consuming process of becoming certified arborists and were formally trained to determine whether trees were potentially hazardous. Indications of a potential hazard would include dead wood or branches, a lack of any bark, fungus growth, a compromised root system, erosion, and whether the tree would cause damage to individuals or personal property if it failed. Only about 10% of the District’s property holdings were for recreational use, such as picnicking, and in the other areas the District normally adhered to its statutory mission to preserve, protect, and restore natural areas by allowing vegetation to remain undisturbed as a habitat for fungi, birds, and insects. The District relied on its employees, staff, and the public to identify trees needing pruning or removal, instead of devoting employees exclusively to the task of inspecting vegetation. The District followed up on every report of a potential hazard and heightened its own scrutiny after storms. This had been its practice throughout Newhard’s 36 years with the District, other than an inspection initiative made in the early 1970s to locate and eradicate diseased Dutch elm trees. Raudenbush was not aware of any motorist being struck by a falling tree other than Belton. New-hard had not seen the tree at issue, but had been informed by the District’s real estate licensing engineer that the cottonwood was in the right-of-way granted to the Department of Transportation. As a general rule, the District limited its maintenance to its property, and in instances where a right-of-way had been granted, the grantee took responsibility. There would be liability issues if the District personnel worked on other property. If it appeared that maintenance was needed on an adjacent right-of-way or private land, the District would try to contact the party responsible. The District routinely used Sidwell Maps, which showed all the roads within the county, to determine whether there was a right-of-way, and who was responsible for maintenance.

Belton’s tree expert Jeffrey Ling was also deposed. Ling had approximately 25 years’ experience, was a registered consulting arborist, owned and operated a commercial tree care company in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and worked as a consultant for attorneys, golf courses, municipalities, developers, architects, homeowners, and corporate facility managers. Ling also had taught or was teaching landscape management and urban forestry at Indiana Vocational Technical College, leading professional seminars, and conducting training for the Indiana Urban Forestry Council’s Tree Tenders program, which is a volunteer association of private citizens who are trained to recognize and report hazardous trees to their local parks department or municipality. Ling indicated the tree was visibly infected with Ganoderma fungus for five or six years before Belton’s accident, there were no leaves on the upper half of its crown, and these were problems that could have been seen from a vehicle moving at “a very high rate of speed” on 159th Street and would have warranted further inspection. In Ling’s opinion: (1) given the condition of the tree, whoever was responsible for maintaining it should have done more prior to Belton’s injury, and (2) the District fell below the standard of urban forestry and arboriculture as Ling understood it by not having a systematic inspection system to identify diseased trees that “had targets,” meaning that if all or part of the tree failed, a person could be injured.

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Bluebook (online)
943 N.E.2d 221, 407 Ill. App. 3d 409, 347 Ill. Dec. 931, 2011 Ill. App. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belton-v-forest-preserve-district-of-cook-county-illappct-2011.