City of Chicago v. Bethlehem Healing Temple Church

236 N.E.2d 357, 93 Ill. App. 2d 303, 1968 Ill. App. LEXIS 1007
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 26, 1968
DocketGen. 51,528
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 236 N.E.2d 357 (City of Chicago v. Bethlehem Healing Temple Church) 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
City of Chicago v. Bethlehem Healing Temple Church, 236 N.E.2d 357, 93 Ill. App. 2d 303, 1968 Ill. App. LEXIS 1007 (Ill. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE LYONS

delivered the opinion of the court.

In a bench trial, the defendant, Bethlehem Healing Temple Church, a Religious Corporation, was found guilty of violating the Chicago Municipal Building Code as to the five enumerated counts in the City of Chicago’s complaint. The trial court entered judgment accordingly and imposed a total fine of $500 and costs, without allocation to the specified five counts. The defendant appeals only from the judgment order entered on count three which charges failure to install a standard and approved automatic sprinkler system throughout its entire premises pursuant to sections 48-4.3 and 64-1.2 (h) of the Chicago Municipal Building Code.

The record discloses these facts. The defendant owns and maintains a four-story building located at 12-14 South Oakley Avenue in Chicago, Illinois. The first floor contains a church and an auditorium; the second floor, a dining room; the third floor, two meeting rooms and an auditorium; the fourth floor, two meeting rooms. Religious instructions are given to the children of church members on the third and fourth floors of this building.

The classes are held on Wednesdays from 4:00 p. m. to 7:00 p. m. and on Saturdays from 12:00 noon to 5:00 p. m. The instructors are church members who serve without remuneration. They have other gainful, full-time employment. Courses in religious instruction and the study of the Bible are taught to children ranging in age from three to over twelve. Some high school students are in attendance. At any one time on Wednesdays and Saturdays, up to three hundred and fifty children occupy the meeting rooms on the third and fourth floors during their religious instructions. The minimum number of children at any one time is two hundred.

The trial court agreed with the City of Chicago’s contention that part of this building was being used for educational purposes from time to time and hence an automatic sprinkler system had to be installed throughout the defendant’s entire premises pursuant to the Chicago Municipal Code.

The municipal ordinances in issue are:

Section 48-4.3 of the Chicago Building Code: “Assembly units designed or used for educational or institutional purposes shall be classified as Class C-3, Schools. Every School shall be classified as follows:
“Type 1 Schools: Type 1 Schools shall include day nursery schools, kindergarten schools, elementary schools, high schools and other similar occupancies.
“Type 2 Schools: Type 2 Schools shall include colleges, schools for adult education, commercial and vocational schools and other similar occupancies.”
Section 64-1.2(h) of the Chicago Building Code: “Automatic sprinkler systems shall be provided in the following buildings and areas:
“On or before December 31, 1963, in every existing, preordinance building and buildings hereafter erected, two stories or more in height, used in whole or in part as Type 1 School, or used in whole as a Type 2 School. . . .”

In urging reversal of the trial court judgment, the defendant contends: (1) ambiguity is to operate against the party creating it; (2) it is operating a church and not a school on its premises; (3) the statute requiring the use of sprinklers in schools is a new statute, and as a new statute must be strictly construed; (4) penal or criminal statutes should be strictly construed in favor of the accused; (5) municipal ordinance enforcement proceedings are quasi-criminal in nature and the plaintiff failed to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt.

In response, the plaintiff argues that the defendant is operating a school in its building and under the City’s ordinance, it is required to install an automatic sprinkler system throughout its entire premises.

A municipality has no inherent police power. Rather, its authority to enact and enforce regulatory ordinances in the area of public safety must be derived from a specific statutory grant emanating from the State. The City of Chicago has been delegated a portion of the State’s police power enabling it to enact and enforce regulatory ordinances in the area of building construction. See the Cities and Villages Act, Ill Rev Stats (1963) c 24, § 11-30-4 and § 1-2-1. See also Chicago v. Washingtonian Home, 289 Ill 206,124 NE 414 (1919), in which the municipality’s delegated regulatory police power exercised through an ordinance requiring the installation of an approved automatic sprinkler system in certain enumerated buildings was upheld.

The defendant’s first contention is that these municipal ordinances are ambiguous. It cites the court to treatises on contract law which are not persuasive in a case involving statutory interpretation or construction. The language used in the ordinances under consideration here is not ambiguous. Counsel for both sides agree that this ordinance is enacted and enforced in an effort to prevent a tragic fire such as the one at Queen of Angels Parochial School that claimed approximately one hundred lives of children attending school at the time. The words used by the City Council to effect this legislative purpose are clear and not susceptible to more than one meaning. The regulatory ordinance is applicable only to buildings two stories or more in height, which are used in whole or in part as Type 1 Schools or in whole as Type 2 Schools.

The main issue in this case is not the alleged ambiguity of an ordinance but the legal status of the defendant’s four-story building as either a Type 1 School, and hence within the ordinance, or a church, and hence outside the terms of the ordinance. This is a question of law. Neither party cites the court to any cases judicially defining the word “school” but the plaintiff does provide a definition from Webster’s New International Dictionary, Second Edition, 1944, wherein school is defined, inter alia, as “a building or room given over to instruction.” The defendant’s four meeting rooms on the third and fourth floors which are used for religious instruction twice weekly fall within this definition.

In Weisse v. Board of Education, 178 Misc 118, 32 NYS2d 258 (1941), a “school” was held to be an institution consisting of a teacher and pupils, irrespective of age, gathered together for instruction in any branch of learning, the arts or the sciences. See, to the same effect, State v. Superior Court, 55 Wash2d 177, 346 P2d 999, 1002 (1960). Applying the above definitions to this case, we hold that the defendant is operating a school on the third and fourth floors of its building. Adults acting as teachers are present, systematic instruction is given with each new lesson building on the prior instruction, different classes regularly meet on either Wednesday or Saturday of each week, and anywhere from two hundred to three hundred and fifty children are found at any one time on the top two floors of this building on Wednesdays and Saturdays.

The municipal police power ordinance, intended for public safety, particularly schoolchildren while attending their educational institution, is clearly applicable to the facts of this case.

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Bluebook (online)
236 N.E.2d 357, 93 Ill. App. 2d 303, 1968 Ill. App. LEXIS 1007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-v-bethlehem-healing-temple-church-illappct-1968.