Gricius v. Lambert

288 N.E.2d 496, 7 Ill. App. 3d 716, 1972 Ill. App. LEXIS 2351
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 12, 1972
Docket70-173
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 288 N.E.2d 496 (Gricius v. Lambert) 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
Gricius v. Lambert, 288 N.E.2d 496, 7 Ill. App. 3d 716, 1972 Ill. App. LEXIS 2351 (Ill. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

Mr. JUSTICE JONES

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiffs appeal an adverse decree rendered by the trial court following a non-jury trial.

Plaintiffs purchased a tract of land containing approximately 15 acres in 1962. Plaintiff B. Frank Gricius was a contractor in August, 1962, when he entered into an agreement with defendants to sell them a lot of approximately 1.4 acres of the 15 acre tract and construct a house thereon. A roadway was built by plaintiffs from Highland Street, a public highway, running several hundred feet easterly across the 15 acre tract past and abutting the defendants’ lot to plaintiffs’ residence which lay on the easterly edge of the 15 acre tract. Plaintiffs never surveyed the roadway or filed a plat in accordance with the provisions of Illinois Revised Statutes, chapter 109.

After defendants moved into their new home in early 1962 their relationship with plaintiffs deteriorated, eventually evolving into something of a feud. It is the defendants’ position, denied by plaintiffs, that the plaintiffs entered upon a systematic course of harassment by re-striding access to their home over the roadway using the roadway as a weapon against defendants. Defendants charged the Griciuses with the literal physical moving of the road away from a position abutting their property to the south of their property. A photograph was placed in evidence which allegedly showed Mrs. Gricius in the act of picking up pebbles or gravel from the north edge of the roadway and placing them on the south side of the roadway. Steel posts were erected along the roadway, large rocks or boulders were placed on the south edge of the roadway immediately opposite defendants’ driveway and fences were built by plaintiffs along the front of defendants’ lot and along the east edge around the driveway so as to create a cattle chute-like effect causing the defendants and visitors to their home difficulty in turning from the roadway into their driveway. At the time of trial the width of the roadway at its westerly end near Highland Street was seventeen feet six inches and as it approached the defendants’ driveway it was attenuated until it became nine feet six inches in width at defendants’ driveway. On one occasion plaintiffs removed the keys from a department store delivery truck which was unable to make the turn into defendants’ driveway. Sometime before the trial plaintiffs placed a steel chain with two inch links across the roadway near the Highland Street intersection and secured it with I-bolts and a padlock. The defendants cut the chain with a hacksaw when they went to work at 5:00 A.M.

There were plats and maps of the property, together with a large number of photographs, including aerial photographs, introduced in evidence. The exhibits showed every aspect of the roadway and driveway in question.

The action was commenced below by plaintiffs’ complaint for a money judgment for maintenance and upkeep of the roadway between Highland Street and defendants’ lot at the rate of $40 per year. Defendants counter-claimed against plaintiffs for a decree (1) reforming their deed by including therein an easement for an access roadway, (2) obligating plaintiffs to improve the roadway by constructing concrete curbs and gutters along its borders, landscaping it with evergreens, and installing a finish coat of chat, and (3) enjoining plaintiffs from obstructing the public way in front of defendants’ premises, commanding plaintiffs to relocate the public street in front of defendants’ premises so as to permit unimpeded access thereto, ordering removal of a fence and rock obstructions and ordering plaintiffs to comply with the provisions of Chapter 109, Paragraph 1 through 10.1, Ill. Rev. Stat., by dedicating the roadway to the public.

Following the trial the court entered its final judgment, order and decree wherein it made the following findings of facts: Plaintiffs were the owners of a described tract of approximately 15 acres including fee simple ownership of a roadway 40 feet in width from Highland Street (a public road) into the 15 acre premises. On August, 1962, the defendants made a down payment of $2000 on a 1.4 acre described portion of the larger tract. Plaintiffs had a survey made of defendants’ tract and commenced construction of a home for defendants thereon, and both parties knew and understood that the roadway from Highland Street was to serve as a means of ingress and egress to defendants’ tract and was to abut and front it on the southeasterly line thereof. The parties initially agreed that defendants would pay $40 per year to plaintiffs for maintenance of the road and to help defray some of the costs of construction of curbs and gutters. The tract conveyed was less than 5 acres in size, would involve the creation of new streets and easements of access and plaintiffs did not comply with the provisions of Chapter 109, Paragraph 1 through 11, Ill. Rev. Stat. 1959, in that the streets were not platted by a registered land surveyor nor were monuments posted or a plat recorded, as required by said statute. After initial construction of the roadway from Highland Street to and along the southeasterly line of the real estate owned by defendants so as to permit reasonable ingress and egress into defendants’ real estate, plaintiffs gradually changed the roadway over a period of years, moving the north edge of said roadway to the south and away from defendants’ real estate. The plaintiffs have harassed the defendants over a period of several years and have obstructed defendants’ means of ingress and egress into their real estate from Highland Street by changing the course of the roadway so that it no longer abuts upon defendants’ property and by erecting fences and posts and placing boulders along the south edge of the roadway in front of defendants’ driveway.

After making the foregoing findings the court “ordered, adjudged and decreed” that (1) Defendants shall pay plaintiffs $320, with interest; (2) Plaintiffs shall immediately remove the L-shaped fence from the intersection of defendants’ driveway and the roadway from Highland Street, and immediately remove so much of the fence along the easterly edge of defendants’ property as extends south of the southeasterly line thereof, and immediately remove the boulders from the south edge of the roadway from Highland Street lying opposite defendants’ driveway; (3) The real estate owned by defendants has an easement of way appurtenant over the lands of the plaintiffs from Highland Street to and along the south line of defendants’ lot; (4) The plaintiffs are ordered to make a dedication for a public road from Highland Street to the lands of defendants and to take steps necesary to comply with the provisions of Chapter 109 of the Illinois Revised Statute; (5) The plaintiffs are enjoined and restrained from taking any action to harass, impede or curtail the use by defendants, their guests or business invitees, or others on public business, from driving along or upon the roadway; (6) A writ of injunction is to be issued by the clerk forthwith.

The plaintiffs first contend on appeal that it was a denial of their constitutional rights to procedural due process and against their being deprived of their property without due process of law for the court to compel them to dedicate the roadway in question to the public. We agree with plaintiffs’ argument to the extent that they cannot, under the facts presented here, be compelled to dedicate the roadway in question to the public.

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Bluebook (online)
288 N.E.2d 496, 7 Ill. App. 3d 716, 1972 Ill. App. LEXIS 2351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gricius-v-lambert-illappct-1972.