2024 IL App (1st) 232464-U
SECOND DIVISION June 11, 2024
No. 1-23-2464
NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
STEPHEN HAMMER, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County. ) ) v. ) ) No. 23 CH 09451 ) CITY OF BLUE ISLAND and FOREST VIEW MOBILE ) HOME PARK, INC., ) ) Honorable Defendants-Appellants. ) Joel Chupack, ) Judge Presiding. ____________________________________________________ PRESIDING JUSTICE HOWSE delivered the judgment of the court. Justices McBride and Ellis concurred in the judgment.
ORDER
¶1 Held: We affirm the judgment of the circuit court. The circuit court did not abuse its discretion when it entered a preliminary injunction preventing a shutoff of water service to a mobile home park.
¶2 After filing a complaint for both damages and injunctive relief, plaintiff Stephen Hammer
asked the circuit court to enter a preliminary injunction that prohibited the City of Blue Island
from shutting off the water service at the Forest View Mobile Home Park. The mobile home park 1-23-2464
had previously failed to pay its water bill for more than two years, to the extent that the park
owed the City more than $800,000. Plaintiff is an innocent renter who has timely paid his rent to
the mobile home park, and his lease provides that the park will pay for his water service. If
preliminary injunctive relief was not granted, the City intended to shut off the water to the entire
mobile home park until the park paid its water bill in full. After a hearing where the trial court
heard arguments and took evidence from the parties, the court granted preliminary injunctive
relief to plaintiff and enjoined the City from shutting off the water to the mobile home park. The
City of Blue Island now appeals against the issuance of preliminary injunctive relief. For the
following reasons, we affirm.
¶3 BACKGROUND
¶4 The facts in this appeal are relatively straightforward and mostly uncontested. Plaintiff
Stephen Hammer is a disabled individual who owns a mobile home which, at the time he filed
his original complaint in this case, he shared with his two minor children and their mother. Under
a lease agreement with defendant Forest View Mobile Home Park, plaintiff pays monthly rent to
Forest View for the right to use his mobile home as his residence in the park. The lease
agreement provides that Forest View, as plaintiff’s landlord, is responsible for paying certain
utilities including water and sewer services.
¶5 On November 1, 2023, defendant the City of Blue Island made a decision to terminate
water services to Forest View Mobile Home Park. Forest View had a delinquent water account
with the City for $858,447. The City has a single water main set up for the entirety of the mobile
home park, so if it shuts off the water flowing to the park, all the residents will be without
running water. The City has an ordinance that provides how delinquent water accounts will be
handled. Under the ordinance, the City can declare a water bill delinquent and give notice to
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disconnect water services if a water bill remains unpaid more than ten days. The City informed
Forest View and its lessees that, due to its delinquent water bill, the park’s water services would
be shut off on November 20, 2023.
¶6 Shortly after learning about the planned discontinuation of his water service, plaintiff
filed a pro se complaint against defendants along with an emergency motion for a temporary
restraining order. Plaintiff sought to enjoin the City from disconnecting the water service at the
mobile home park.
¶7 At the time for presentment of plaintiff’s emergency motion, counsel appeared in court
and sought leave to represent plaintiff, which the court allowed. Plaintiff’s counsel and counsel
for both defendants consulted and drafted an agreed order which set a briefing schedule on the
motion for a temporary restraining order, required Forest View to promptly pay $425,000 of the
outstanding water bill, which Forest View paid, and prohibited Blue Island from disconnecting
the water service until the motion for injunctive relief could be heard. Plaintiff’s counsel
subsequently amended his complaint and reframed plaintiff’s emergency motion for a temporary
restraining order as a motion for a preliminary injunction.
¶8 Following a hearing, the trial court granted plaintiff a preliminary injunction that
prevented the City of Blue Island from disconnecting the water service to Forest View Mobile
Home Park. The trial court explained that the status quo in this case was the continuation of
water service to plaintiff. The trial court found that the statutes and ordinances plaintiff relied
upon for his entitlement to continued water service demonstrated that plaintiff has a clearly
ascertainable right in need of protection. The trial court also found that plaintiff was subject to
irreparable harm if the preliminary injunctive relief was not granted because it was a risk to
plaintiff’s health and safety to not have water service to his home.
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¶9 The trial court found that there was no adequate remedy at law for plaintiff because
plaintiff did not have an available administrative remedy and his home would become
functionally uninhabitable without water service. The trial court found that plaintiff raised a fair
question about the violation of his constitutional rights should his water be shut off, so he had
established a likelihood of success on the merits under the prevailing standard. The trial court
further found that, in balancing the harms that either side would face from an unfavorable
decision regarding the preliminary relief, the harm plaintiff would face outweighed any harm to
the City. In balancing the equities, the trial court partially faulted the City for its role in letting
Forest View’s delinquent account reach $850,000 and waiting two years into delinquency before
taking this action. The trial court explained that the residents of the park, such as plaintiff, lost
certain remedies by being blindsided by the huge delinquency and then by being faced with the
prospect of losing their water service within 20 days. The City of Blue Island now appeals,
arguing that the preliminary injunction was granted in error.
¶ 10 ANALYSIS
¶ 11 The City of Blue Island argues that the trial court erred when it granted a preliminary
injunction to plaintiff that prevents the City from disconnecting plaintiff’s water service until
plaintiff’s claims in this case can be adjudicated on the merits.
¶ 12 A preliminary injunction does not determine the parties’ ultimate rights or obligations,
but rather preserves the status quo until a case can be decided on the merits. Callis, Papa,
Jackstadt & Halloran, P.C. v. Norfolk & Western Railway Co., 195 Ill. 2d 356, 365 (2001). To
be entitled to a preliminary injunction, the moving party must demonstrate: (1) a clear,
ascertainable right in need of protection; (2) irreparable injury in the absence of the relief sought;
(3) no adequate remedy at law; and (4) a likelihood of success on the merits. City of Kankakee v.
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Department of Revenue, 2013 IL App (3d) 120599, ¶ 17. If these elements are met, then the court
moves forward to balance the hardships the parties would respectively face in the event of an
adverse decision and to additionally consider the public interests involved. Guns Save Life, Inc.
v. Raoul, 2019 IL App (4th) 190334, ¶ 37.
¶ 13 The decision to grant or deny a preliminary injunction rests within the sound discretion of
the trial court and, on review, the decision will not be disturbed absent an abuse of discretion.
People ex rel. Klaeren v. Village of Lisle, 202 Ill. 2d 164, 177 (2002). An abuse of discretion
occurs only when the trial court’s decision is arbitrary, fanciful, or unreasonable or where no
reasonable person would take the view adopted by the trial court. Kieken v. City of Joliet, 2023
IL App (3d) 220392, ¶ 27.
¶ 14 “When considering the discretion exercised by the trial court in issuing a preliminary
injunction, a reviewing court may decide only whether the petitioner has demonstrated a prima
facie case that there is a fair question as to the existence of the rights claimed; that the
circumstances lead to a reasonable belief that they probably will be entitled to the relief sought,
if the evidence sustains the allegations of the petition; and that matters should be kept in status
quo until the case can be decided on the merits. Thus, the only question before the reviewing
court is whether there is a sufficient showing to sustain the order of the trial court.” Hartlein v
Illinois Power Co., 151 Ill. 2d 142, 157 (1992).
¶ 15 The parties disagree about what set of circumstances qualifies as the status quo in this
case. Plaintiff argues that the status quo is the continued provision of water to him until the
merits of his claims are reached. He contends that the preliminary injunction prevents a
threatened wrong by temporarily precluding the City from terminating his water services based
on the “nonpayment of a bill for which he was in no way responsible.” The City, however,
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argues that sometimes, as here, the status quo is a condition of action rather than a condition of
rest (citing Brooks v. LaSalle National Bank, 11 Ill. App. 3d 791, 799 (1973)). The City contends
that Forest View “flagrantly violated the law by failing to pay the City for [its] water service.”
The City maintains that it would be improper to allow Forest View to continue with its violation
of the law just because the violation was occurring at the time the motion for preliminary
injunctive relief was filed.
¶ 16 We agree with the trial court that, under the circumstances, the status quo is the continued
provision of an essential service to the allegedly aggrieved plaintiff. Plaintiff is the party that
filed this lawsuit, and he is the party seeking the preliminary injunctive relief. Plaintiff alleges
that the City of Blue Island has expressed an intent to violate his right to equal protection and his
right to due process by terminating his water service because of the acts of someone else for
whom plaintiff is not responsible. The status quo is “the last actual, peaceable, uncontested
status” before the pending controversy. County of Du Page v. Gavrilos, 359 Ill. App. 3d 629, 638
(2005) (quoting Steel City Bank v. Village of Orland Hills, 224 Ill. App. 3d 412, 417 (1991)).
¶ 17 The City bases its argument about the status quo on an ongoing violation of the law, but
the alleged wrongdoer in that scenario is Forest View, not plaintiff. If the City and Forest View
were quarrelling over a return to their status quo, the City would likely be correct in its analysis.
But here, plaintiff has alleged that the City is the wrongdoer by attempting to terminate an
innocent tenant’s water service because of his landlord’s failures in violation of that tenant’s
constitutional rights. There is no allegation or indication in the record that plaintiff has done
anything wrong, particularly to the City, so the last peaceable, uncontested status between the
parties here is the status where the City is providing water to plaintiff before its alleged attempt
to violate his constitutional rights by wrongfully terminating his water service.
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¶ 18 Under the Blue Island City Code, when a water bill remains unpaid for ten days after the
due date, the water account is deemed to be delinquent. Blue Island City Code §52.023(A) (Aug.
23, 2022). “In each case where delinquent water bills are not paid within the period established
above and the City Administrator or designee has not entered an order to the contrary, the water
being furnished to such premises shall be shut off by the city and shall not thereafter be restored
until such time as the delinquent bill is fully paid or a payment plan is executed by the party
responsible for payment of the bill ***.” Blue Island City Code §52.023(F)(1) (Aug. 23, 2022).
¶ 19 The City of Blue Island argues that the trial court “erred in fact and in law” when it held
that plaintiff has an ascertainable right to continued water service. The City argues that, in order
to show a clear and ascertainable right to continued water service, the plaintiff was required to
allege an injury to some substantive interest recognized by statute or common law (citing
Kilhafner v. Harshbarger, 245 Ill. App. 3d 227, 229 (1993)). Both here and in the trial court,
plaintiff relies on several statutes and ordinances, along with his lease agreement, in an attempt
to show he is entitled to the continuation of his water service despite his landlord's failure to pay
the City. The City maintains that all the statutes and ordinances plaintiff relies upon for his
claimed entitlement to water service speak to the duty of a landlord to provide continuous water
service to a tenant, not a duty by the city to provide free water service to tenants.
¶ 20 Plaintiff’s lease agreement obligates him to pay rent to Forest View. According to the
motion for a preliminary injunction and all indications from the record, plaintiff has paid his rent
on time and in full. In return for paying his rent, Forest View “is responsible for the payment” of
water services. In addition to plaintiff’s lease, the Cook County Residential Tenant Landlord
Ordinance gives tenants in mobile homes, as in any leased dwelling unit, “the right to a dwelling
that materially complies with habitability” standards, which includes a tenant’s right to running
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water. See Cook County Residential Tenant Landlord Ordinance §42-803(A)(1) (eff. June 1,
2021), §42-805(C)(1) (eff. June 1, 2021), and §42-805(C)(3)(h) (eff. June 1, 2021). The trial
court found these two sources to be persuasive when determining that plaintiff has a clear and
ascertainable right to continued water service under the circumstances.
¶ 21 Plaintiff also submits that the Mobile Home Park Act (210 ILCS 115/1 et seq.) supports
his claimed right. That Act provides that “[a]n adequate supply of water of safe, sanitary quality,
*** shall be furnished at each park.” 210 ILCS 115/9.4 (West 2022). Plaintiff additionally
invokes the Mobile Home Landlord and Tenant Rights Act (765 ILCS 745/1 et seq. (West 2022))
which requires the mobile home park owner to supply water to the residents in exigent
circumstances. 765 ILCS 741/14.3 (West 2022). Plaintiff also points to the Rental Property
Utility Services Act (765 ILCS 735/0.01 et seq. (West 2022)) which provides that, when the
lease agreement for a property requires the landlord to pay for water services, the landlord must
ensure that the water is available to the tenant throughout the lease term and make timely
payments for the service so that water service to the tenant is not interrupted. 765 ILCS 735/1
(West 2022). The trial court considered these additional sources and found them to be somewhat
supportive of its determination.
¶ 22 In support of their argument that plaintiff has no clear right to relief, defendants cite
Sterling v. Village of Maywood, 579 F.2d 1350, 1352 (7th Cir. 1978). In Sterling, the City
terminated a tenant’s water service at the landlord’s request and declined to reinstate service after
the tenant promised to pay for future service. The tenant sued the city for damages and
declaratory relief based on the Civil Rights Act, (42 USC § 1983). The United States Court of
Appeals for the Seventh Circuit found that a tenant did not have a property right or a substantive
due process right to continued water service from the municipality. The Sterling court explained
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that the plaintiff did not have any contractual relationship or understanding with the Village for
continued water service, and she additionally could not point to any “provision in the state’s laws
or in the municipal ordinances that purports to provide her with a legitimate claim of entitlement
to water service.” Id. at 1354. According to the City of Blue Island, because there is no
substantive due process right to continued water service from a municipality, our inquiry should
end there because plaintiff cannot demonstrate the existence of a clearly ascertainable right in
need of protection.
¶ 23 In this case, however, plaintiff has submitted for consideration several sources of law that
were not presented to the court in Sterling. The Cook County Residential Tenant and Landlord
Ordinance became effective in 2021 and the relevant provisions of the Blue Island City Code
became effective between 2007 and 2022, all long after Sterling was decided 50 years ago. The
Cook County Residential Tenant Landlord Ordinance gives plaintiff “the right to a dwelling that
materially complies with habitability,” including a right to running water. See Cook County
Residential Tenant Landlord Ordinance §42-803(A)(1) (eff. June 1, 2021), §42-805(C)(1) (eff.
June 1, 2021), and §42-805(C)(3)(h) (eff. June 1, 2021). The current version of the relevant city
code provisions authorizing the City to discontinue Forest View’s water service and any city
code provision that might give plaintiff a right to claim entitlement to water service were
established long after Sterling was decided, and such ordinances have successfully been used by
tenants in other cases to prevail on similar claims. See Blue Island City Code §52.023(F)(1)
(Aug. 23, 2022); Pilchen, 728 F. Supp. 2d at 198; Lewis, 2011 WL 43029 at *7. These newer
sources of law, along with the developments in case law and the alternative ways the courts have
viewed the purported deprivation, could establish that plaintiff has a legitimate claim of
entitlement to the right.
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¶ 24 At this stage of the case, plaintiff is not required to establish that he will be ultimately
entitled to relief on the merits. He only needs to show that there is a “fair question” about the
existence of his right. Buzz Barton & Assocs., Inc. v. Giannone, 108 Ill. 2d 373, 382 (1985); see
also Hayden’s Sport Center, Inc. v. Johnson, 109 Ill. App. 3d 1140, 1145 (1982) (for purposes of
a preliminary injunction, “[a]ll that is necessary is that the petitioning party raise a fair question
as to the existence of a right claimed.”). Multiple federal courts have explained that a tenant has
a constitutional right to not be faced with constructive eviction based on the absence of an
essential to human existence—water—because of the landlord’s failure to pay the water service
provider. See, e.g., Davis v. Weir, 497 F.2d 139, 144-46 (5th Cir. 1974); see also DiMassimo v.
City of Clearwater, 805 F.2d 1536, 1539 (11th Cir. 1986). Other federal courts have found a
property right or due process right in continuing water service based on city codes and
ordinances. See Pilchen v. City of Auburn, N.Y., 728 F. Supp. 2d 192, 198 (N.D.N.Y. 2010);
Lewis v. Schmidt, No. 10 CV 1819, 2011 WL 43029, at *7 (N.D. Ill. Jan. 4, 2011).
¶ 25 In his complaint, plaintiff’s claims against the City of Blue Island consist of alleged
violations of his constitutional rights. No Illinois court has specifically addressed whether a
tenant has any valid constitutional claim against a City who intends to shut off water to the
leasehold due to the landlord’s failure to pay the water bill. However, several circuits of the
federal court of appeals have addressed the issue and found that a municipal water service
provider might violate a tenant’s constitutional rights if it disconnects the tenant’s water service
due solely to the landlord’s failure to pay.
¶ 26 Beginning in the 1970s with Davis v. Weir, 497 F.2d 139, 144-46 (5th Cir. 1974), the
court held that a tenant could have a constitutional claim against a municipal water service
provider that refused to provide water service to the tenant’s leasehold property based on the
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outstanding debt of the landlord. The Davis court’s reasoning was that “[t]he City has no valid
governmental interest in securing revenue from innocent applicants who are forced to honor the
obligations of another [party] or face constructive eviction from their homes for lack of an
essential to existence—water.” Id. at 144-45. The holding in Davis was adopted and applied in
multiple other federal courts in the country. See Craft v. Memphis Light, Gas & Water Div., 534
F.2d 684 (6th Cir. 1976) (affirmed at 436 U.S. 1 (1978)) (holding that the water utility
“unconstitutionally refused to install [water] services” for the plaintiff due to a debt by a prior
tenant for which the plaintiff had no responsibility); O'Neal v. City of Seattle, 66 F.3d 1064, 1068
(9th Cir. 1995) (explaining that where the city’s stated purpose is to collect debts from the
landlord, refusing water service to a tenant because of the debt of an unrelated prior tenant is
illogical); Golden v. City of Columbus, 404 F.3d 950, 961-62 (6th Cir. 2005) (explaining that
“the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment bars [a municipality] from
terminating the water service of a tenant whose landlord owes water bills”).
¶ 27 The cases in federal court in which the tenant is found to have a constitutional claim are
underpinned by the idea that a governmental policy denying water service to a tenant for a prior
tenant or the landlord’s debt “divorces itself entirely from the reality of legal accountability for
the debt involved,” (Davis, 497 F.2d at 144-45) because the party who is “penalized by the
scheme is not the debtor but an innocent third party with whom the debtor contracted” (Golden,
404 F.3d at 962). In 2018, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals confirmed the continuing validity
of those prior holdings by explaining that the court “agree[s] with the Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, and
Ninth Circuits that requiring a tenant without any legal obligation for a landlord’s unpaid bill to
pay that bill to retain or restore water service fails rational basis review.” Winston v. City of
Syracuse, 887 F.3d 553, 563 (2d Cir. 2018).
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¶ 28 Some of the federal court cases decided between the time Davis was decided and the time
Winston was decided only dealt with the issue of whether a current tenant could be penalized for
a prior tenant’s nonpayment. But Winston speaks directly to the issue of whether a current tenant
can be penalized for his landlord’s contemporaneous failure to pay for water, even if the water
bills are comprised of some use by the tenant. In Winston, the City argued that the plaintiff was
not an “innocent third party” with regard to her landlord’s water service arrears because the
plaintiff “has lived at the property in question for over ten years, and thus presumably lived on
the premises when the arrears accrued.” Id. at 565. The court flatly rejected the argument.
“We conclude that that argument is also unavailing. The argument does not
distinguish this case from the situation in Davis, where the plaintiff ‘was current
in his rental payments,’ and Atlanta ‘terminated his water service’ because the
plaintiff's ‘landlord ... refused to pay the water bill.’ In both Davis and this case,
the plaintiffs were current tenants who may have contributed to the water usage
resulting in the landlord’s unpaid water bill. However, even if this did distinguish
Winston's allegations in her complaint from some other cases, it would not change
our result. As we discussed above, the City cannot rationally compel tenants to
pay their landlord’s bills, because the tenants have no legal obligation to pay those
bills. Their prior use of water does not change the fact that only the landlord is
contractually obligated to the City to pay the water bills. Absent a change in the
City's policy to allow tenants to open water accounts, that fact will not change—
and the City's alleged water service termination policy will fail rational basis
review under the Equal Protection Clause.” Id. at 565.
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¶ 29 For purposes of preliminary relief, we find that plaintiff has raised a fair question about
the existence of a clear and ascertainable right—the right to not have his water shut off due
solely to the actions of his landlord.
¶ 30 The second and third requirements for a preliminary injunction are an irreparable injury
to the movant in the absence of the relief sought and the lack of an adequate remedy at law. City
of Kankakee, 2013 IL App (3d) 120599, ¶ 17. The City of Blue Island argues that plaintiff will
not suffer irreparable injury and has an adequate remedy at law, such that injunctive relief is not
appropriate. The City somewhat combines its arguments concerning the second and third
requirements for a preliminary injunction, as it highlights that the second and third elements for a
preliminary injunction are closely related. See Ron & Mark Ward, LLC v. Bank of Herrin, 2024
IL App (5th) 230274, ¶ 62.
¶ 31 The City points to the fact that plaintiff, in his complaint, seeks damages from his
landlord, Forest View, for its failure to provide water services as required. The City suggests that
the allegedly irreparable damages are compensable by statute and that all the relevant statutes
“provide adequate legal remedies and calculable damages for any tenant whose water service is
discontinued due to the landlord’s failure to pay the water bill.” The City also contends that the
relevant statutes specifically provide for damages against a landlord when the landlord renders a
dwelling uninhabitable. Thus, according to the City, plaintiff is entitled to recover from his
landlord all reasonable expenditures to obtain substitute housing while his dwelling is
uninhabitable and, therefore, he has an adequate legal remedy.
¶ 32 The City acknowledged in the trial court that living without water, even for only a few
days, poses a risk to health and safety. Statutes and case law invariably classify a lack of running
water as a condition that renders a dwelling unfit for habitation. If plaintiff is left without
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running water at his mobile home for any period of time, his home will be immediately
uninhabitable he will clearly suffer an irreparable injury. Among many other sources, the Cook
County Residential Tenant Landlord Ordinance gives plaintiff “the right to a dwelling that
materially complies with habitability,” including a right to running water. See Cook County
Residential Tenant Landlord Ordinance §42-803(A)(1) (eff. June 1, 2021), §42-805(C)(1) (eff.
June 1, 2021), and §42-805(C)(3)(h) (eff. June 1, 2021). Without running water, a dwelling unit
is considered uninhabitable (id.), and a tenant is considered constructively evicted when water
service to his dwelling is discontinued (2 Illinois Real Property § 11:14 (West 2022)).
¶ 33 The City’s argument is more of a challenge to plaintiff’s position that he has no adequate
remedy at law. While it is true plaintiff seeks money damages along with his prayer for
injunctive relief, his pursuit of damages alone does not prohibit him from receiving a preliminary
injunction. “The mere existence of a remedy at law, or the fact that a monetary judgment may be
the ultimate relief, does not deprive the trial court of its power to grant injunctive relief if that
remedy is inadequate.” Ron & Mark Ward, 2024 IL App (5th) 230274, ¶ 62.
¶ 34 The City suggests that plaintiff’s remedy at law is adequate because he can recover from
his landlord all the losses that he experiences because of his mobile home being made
uninhabitable. However, the City discounts the fact that plaintiff is disabled, and his sole
residence is his mobile home. The mobile home park owes upwards of $500,000 to the City so, if
the water services are disconnected and not reinstated until the bill is paid, it appears there will
be a prolonged period where plaintiff’s dwelling is uninhabitable. The idea that plaintiff can go
out and purchase substitute housing for such a period and then would be made whole by suing
Forest View for damages is a fantasy. The financial remedy alone would not be sufficient
especially if, as plaintiff is attempting to prove, he has a constitutional basis for securing an
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uninterrupted supply of water under the circumstances. This observation is an apt segue into the
fourth and final factor—whether plaintiff has shown a likelihood of success on the merits.
¶ 35 The parties both discuss at some length the Seventh Circuit’s decision in Sterling v.
Village of Maywood, 579 F.2d 1350 (7th Cir. 1978). Although the court in Sterling cast doubt on
the plaintiff’s claimed property right, the court found that the plaintiff adequately stated a claim
for both a violation of her right to equal protection of the law and a due process violation. Id. at
1355-56. For its equal protection analysis, the Sterling court followed the reasoning of Davis,
and for the due process analysis, the court relied on the specific language of the ordinance to find
that the plaintiff might have an entitlement to continued water service. Id. In this case, plaintiff
has identified several ordinances and statutes to support its position which did not exist in 1978
when Sterling was decided. Subsequent rulings from the Second, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, and Ninth
Circuits cited above all cast some doubt on the City’s course of action in this case. We find
plaintiff has demonstrated a sufficient likelihood of success on the merits to support the trial
court’s issuance of preliminary injunctive relief.
¶ 36 After addressing the four requirements for granting preliminary injunctive relief, the trial
court here moved on to weigh the harm the aggrieved party would suffer from an adverse
decision concerning the preliminary relief sought. See Save the Prairie Society v. Greene
Development Group, Inc., 323 Ill. App. 3d 862, 871 (2001) (“Finally, the court should weigh the
balance of the harms from granting or denying the preliminary injunction.”). As the trial court
recognized, the harm plaintiff is facing without a preliminary injunction is severe. Plaintiff
would be left with an uninhabitable home until the time the court could address his challenges on
the merits. The City, meanwhile, loses out on some of its leverage to secure payment from Forest
View and must, at least temporarily, pursue other avenues to collect the unpaid debt. Aside from
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shutting off the water to the residents of the mobile home park, the City has other means at its
disposal to attempt collection of the unpaid debt from the actual party who owes the money. The
City has already obtained a lien against Forest View’s property. The City can further pursue legal
redress which, if it obtains a judgment, would give the City further options to recover the unpaid
bill.
¶ 37 In undertaking the balancing of harms, the trial court also observed that the City’s delay
in taking certain action on the unpaid bill in this case exacerbated its own injury and harmed the
innocent tenants by allowing the bill to go unpaid for two years without notice to tenants, thereby
undermining their ability to protect themselves by seeking legal remedies sooner. The City
repeatedly cites to its municipal code for the proposition that it is entitled, or even required, to
shut off an account owner’s water when the account is delinquent—which by the express terms
of the ordinance occurs 10 days after a bill is unpaid. However, the City did not move to shut off
the water at Forest View until two years after the bills began remaining unpaid and when there
was more than $800,000 in debt outstanding. The trial court also observed that it would be
against the public interest to discontinue water service to the mobile home park. JL Properties
Grp. B, LLC v. Pritzker, 2021 IL App (3d) 200305, ¶ 57 (before granting a preliminary
injunction, the circuit court must balance the hardships and consider the public interests
involved).
¶ 38 The City objects to the trial court’s analysis attributing some fault to it for the delay and
posits that the trial court made a determination of the parties’ rights before the case was
completed. We simply view the trial court’s analysis on this point as part of its balancing of the
equities in determining whether preliminary relief is warranted. The trial court’s statements do
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not fix the parties’ rights in any way, they simply provide the parties with an explanation for one
of the reasons the trial court weighed the equities in the way that it did.
¶ 39 The City additionally faults the trial court for not expressly discussing the City’s
arguments relating to the interpretation of municipal ordinances generally. Specifically, the City
points out, municipal ordinances are presumed to be constitutional (Fedanzo v. City of Chicago,
333 Ill. App. 3d 339, 346 (2002)) and the party challenging the constitutionality of an ordinance
has the burden of rebutting the presumption of validity and establishing a constitutional violation
by clear and convincing evidence (Village of Chatham v. County of Sangamon, 216 Ill. 2d 402,
419 (2005)). The City contends that the trial court’s ruling is also at odds with Illinois law which
gives municipalities the authority to make rules for managing their waterworks and sewage
systems (citing 65 ILCS 5/11-139-8 (West 2022)). The City argues that its ordinance mandating
water service be disconnected as the result of a delinquent water bill is an ordinance passed
under the City’s police power and “the exercise of police power is presumed to be
constitutionally valid” (citing Bibb v. Navajo Freight Lines, 359 U.S. 520, 529 (1959)). The City
concludes that “[a] facial challenge to the constitutionality of the City’s legislative enactment
and exercise of police power is unlikely to be successful.”
¶ 40 We disagree, and we find that plaintiff has raised a fair question about the existence of
his right such that the court should preserve the status quo until the case can be decided on the
merits. Trial courts are presumed to know the law, and therefore, the trial court is deemed to
have known the presumptions afforded to the constitutionality of ordinances and exercises of
police power. See Guns Save Life, Inc. v. Raoul, 2019 IL App (4th) 190334, ¶ 17. More
importantly, the almost entirely uniform application of Davis for the last 50 years across the
federal courts in this country to arrive at a finding that a tenant has a constitutional safeguard
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against a municipality discontinuing water service based on the landlord’s failure to pay
demonstrates that plaintiff has a likelihood of success on the merits, such that preliminary
injunctive relief can be found to be appropriate.
¶ 41 The City of Blue Island stressed during the preliminary injunction hearing that it had
exhausted all of its options with Forest View in an attempt to get the mobile home park to pay
the outstanding water bill. It explained that shutting off the water service to the park was the last
resort in its efforts to be paid. The City argued that the other residents of Blue Island were being
forced to subsidize Forest View’s water service and that the City was forced to forego upgrades
to its waterworks due to the unpaid bill. This type of justification has consistently been presented
by municipalities as the reason they should be entitled to shut off water services, but the federal
courts have consistently raised concerns about such a course of action.
“No one could doubt that the Department’s methods are calculated to expedite the
liquidation of unpaid bills. A collection scheme, however, that divorces itself
entirely from the reality of legal accountability for the debt involved, is devoid of
logical relation to the collection of unpaid water bills from the defaulting debtor.
The City has no valid governmental interest in securing revenue from innocent
applicants who are forced to honor the obligations of another or face constructive
eviction.” Davis, 497 F.2d at 144–45.
Plaintiff has raised a genuine constitutional question regarding the propriety of the City’s
intended actions. A trial court has broad discretionary powers to grant or deny a
preliminary injunction. Shodeen v. Chicago Title and Trust Co., 162 Ill. App. 3d 667, 673
(1987). We conclude that the trial court did not abuse those broad discretionary powers in
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this case, and it did not abuse its discretion when it entered the preliminary injunctive
relief in plaintiff’s favor and against the City.
¶ 42 CONCLUSION
¶ 43 Accordingly, we affirm.
¶ 44 Affirmed.