Forest Preserve District v. Miller

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 15, 2003
Docket2-02-0455 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Forest Preserve District v. Miller (Forest Preserve District v. Miller) 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
Forest Preserve District v. Miller, (Ill. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

No.  2--02--0455

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

SECOND DISTRICT

FOREST PRESERVE DISTRICT OF ) Appeal from the Circuit Court

DU PAGE COUNTY,  )  of Du Page County.

 )

Plaintiff-Appellant and  )

Cross-Appellee, )

) )

v. ) No. 98--ED--027

JACK C. MILLER and UNKNOWN  )

OWNERS,  )  Honorable

 )  Robert K. Kilander and  

Defendants-Appellees and ) Patrick J. Leston,

Cross-Appellants. ) Judges, Presiding.

JUSTICE GILLERAN JOHNSON delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff, Forest Preserve District of Du Page County, appeals from the April 10, 2002, order of the circuit court of Du Page County dismissing its condemnation action.  Originally, the trial court had found for the plaintiff and ordered that the condemnation of the subject parcel could proceed for $700,000.  However, the trial court vacated that order and subsequently dismissed the condemnation action after finding that the plaintiff's enabling ordinance failed to reasonably describe the property to be condemned.  The defendant, Jack Miller, cross-appeals from an order entered prior to the vacature and from several findings the trial court made during posttrial proceedings.  We affirm.  

On August 5, 1998, the plaintiff filed a complaint for condemnation, seeking to acquire a 35-acre parcel of property known as the Rodenburg Marsh, pursuant to the Downstate Forest Preserve District Act (70 ILCS 805/6 (West 1998)).  The Rodenburg Marsh was owned entirely by the defendant.  The plaintiff appended to its complaint Ordinance No. 98--322, which it had adopted on August 4, 1998.  Ordinance No. 98--322 provided that the "Executive Director, his staff and the Forest Preserve District attorneys be, and hereby are, authorized to take the necessary steps, either by negotiation or condemnation, to acquire title to the real estate described in Exhibit A and depicted in Exhibit B attached hereto."  Forest Preserve District of Du Page County, Ordinance No. 98--322 (eff. August 4, 1998).  Exhibit A was a metes and bounds legal description.  Exhibit B was a plat map.  Exhibit B, the plat map, portrayed the entire 35 acres of the Rodenburg Marsh property.  However, exhibit A, the metes and bounds legal description, left out a 2.3-acre portion of the Rodenburg Marsh property.

On October 1, 1998, upon discovery of the erroneous metes and bounds legal description, the plaintiff filed an amended complaint.  The amended complaint mirrored the original complaint.  Like the original complaint, attached to the amended complaint was Ordinance No. 98--322, which again provided that the "Executive Director, his staff and the Forest Preserve District attorneys be, and hereby are, authorized to take the necessary steps, either by negotiation or condemnation, to acquire title to the real estate described in Exhibit A and depicted in Exhibit B attached hereto."  Forest Preserve District of Du Page County, Ordinance No. 98--322 (eff. August 4, 1998).  Exhibit A was the same metes and bounds legal description that the plaintiff provided in its original complaint and exhibit B was the same plat map as provided in the original complaint.   However, also appended to the amended complaint was an exhibit C.  Exhibit C was a revised metes and bounds legal description which purportedly was consistent with the plat map and depicted the entire 35-acre parcel.  The trial court accepted the amended complaint.  The trial court  ruled, however, that August 5, 1998, would remain the valuation date.  

On December 9, 1998, the defendant filed his pro se appearance.  On January 5, 1999, the plaintiff moved for a default judgment alleging that the defendant had failed to answer or otherwise plead to the amended complaint.  The trial court subsequently ordered the defendant to file a traverse or counterclaim, should he so desire, by February 15, 1999.  On February 16, 1999, the plaintiff filed a handwritten document.  This document provided in full:

"I Jack Miller am filing [sic] this traverse/counterclaim formally objecting to the condemnation of my property at 7 N 601 Rodenburg Road Roselle Illinois by the Du Page County Forest Preserve."   

The document was not accompanied by any notice of filing.

On March 24, 2000, the plaintiff filed a motion requesting the trial court to enter an order finding that the defendant had waived his ability to file a traverse due to his failure to timely file one.  On May 30, 2000, the defendant filed a handwritten response to the plaintiff's motion.  The defendant's response provided in relevant part:  

"We just recently discovered, by reading the plaintiff's most recent filing that we still had not filed our traverse.  We apologize to the court and to the plaintiff for any hardship this may have caused.  *** We respectfully ask to the court to accept our traverse, at this time, on this date May 30th , 2000.

TRAVERSE  

I Jack Miller on this date May 30, 2000, formally object to the condemnation of my property at 7 N 601 Rodenburg Road by the Du Page County Forest Preserve."

On May 31, 2000, the trial court conducted a hearing.  Following the hearing, the trial court found that the defendant had filed a general traverse, which challenged the condemnation action on two grounds: (1) a lack of good-faith negotiations and (2) the constitutionality of the enabling ordinance.  However, the trial court denied the defendant's traverse on both grounds and set the matter for a March 19, 2001, trial on the underlying condemnation action.

The defendant failed to appear on March 19, 2001.  However, the trial proceeded as scheduled.  The plaintiff called David Phillips as its sole witness.  Philips testified that he was a licensed appraiser.  Philips performed an appraisal on the Rodenburg Marsh property.  The Rodenburg Marsh property consisted of 35.5899 acres zoned for office research.  The property had a wetlands area of 21.8338 acres and only 7 of the acres were buildable.  The land was vacant, except for a single-family home on the southwest corner.  The highest and best use for the buildable portion of the property would be single-family or multi-family residential units.  In his opinion, the Rodenburg Marsh property was worth $700,000.  After the plaintiff rested its case, the trial court ordered the appointment of a court expert, ordered that the expert be paid for by the plaintiff, and continued the matter.  

On May 15, 2001, the trial court vacated its order appointing a court expert.  It entered judgment for the plaintiff, setting just compensation for the Rodenburg Marsh property at $700,000.  On June 11, 2001, the defendant, now represented by counsel, filed a  posttrial motion.  In that motion, the defendant argued, among other things, that (1) the plaintiff lacked the authority to acquire the Rodenburg Marsh property because the ordinance adopted by the district did not accurately describe the Rodenburg Marsh; and (2) the valuation date used at trial was incorrect.

On June 19, 2001, the plaintiff filed a motion to strike that portion of the defendant's posttrial motion challenging its enabling ordinance.

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