Hieronimus v. Moran

272 Ill. 254
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 272 Ill. 254 (Hieronimus v. Moran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hieronimus v. Moran, 272 Ill. 254 (Ill. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellees, as owners of certain lots situated in William Turkinson’s boulevard and park re-subdivision of block 9 of Drexel & Smith’s subdivision of the west half of the northwest quarter and the west half of the west half of the southwest quarter of section 11, township 38 north, range 14, east of the third principal meridian, filed their bill in the circuit court of Cook county against appellants, Michael B. Moran and Simon W. Strauss, as owners of lots 10 and 11 in said block, to enforce a certain building line restriction. Appellants’ defense to this suit was, in substance, (1) that appellees had not observed and enforced the building line covenants before appellants became owners of their said lots and began to build, and therefore have no equitable right to have the building line restrictions enforced against appellants; (2) that appellants have substantially conformed to the requirements of said covenants by their building plans and specificátions, and that their building as planned and built does not, and will not when completed, encroach upon or violate said building line agreement. The court found and decreed' that appellees in the erection of buildings upon their respective lots had constructed them in compliance with the building line agreement, and that they had not abandoned or violated their said building line agreement and that it was still in full force and effect; that appellant Michael B. Moran on February 27, 1914, purchased lots 10 and 11, in said block 9, with full knowledge of the building line agreement; that on October 20, 1914, he executed and delivered to Simon W. Strauss, to secure a loan of $100,000, a trust deed thereto, and that Simon W. Strauss has no interest in said lots other than as trustee as aforesaid; that on October 31, 1914, the said Michael B. Moran commenced constructing two three-story stone and brick apartment buildings on said lots, and that the parts of said buildings north of said twenty-foot building line on both of said lots, in so far as they are enclosed and contain glass casement windows, window frames and mullions, are in violation of the terms and restrictions of said building agreement and obstruct the light, air and view of appellees, and that he, his heirs and assigns, be and are forever enjoined and restrained from further erecting any construction or building north of said building line except porches, bays and ornamental projections, and is ordered to remove said obstructions by April 18, 1914, and pay the costs of this suit.

The building line agreement was executed on March 5, 1896, by all the lot owners then owning lots in said block 9, and was recorded in Cook county, Illinois, on April 8, 1896. The material parts of the agreement are contained in the following words and figures, to-wit:

“It is understood, covenanted and agreed that no building shall be erected upon said premises, or any part thereof, by any of the parties hereto, their heirs or assigns, extending (exclusive of porches, bays and ornamental projections,) north of a line twenty feet south of the north line of said lots 1 to 11, inclusive, above described, it being the intention of the parties hereto to hereby establish a building line of twenty feet, exclusive of porches, bays and other ornamental projections, as aforesaid, over the entire block covered by said lots 1 to 11, as above described. It is further understood, covenanted and agreed that any violation or contemplated violation of this agreement on the part of any of the parties hereto shall be subject to injunction in any court of competent jurisdiction, and that any building erected upon the north twenty feet of either of said lots in violation hereof shall be removed at the suit of any person owning any other of said lots, in ejectment or other appropriate action, an easement for light, air and view being hereby created on the north twenty feet of each of said lots for the use and benefit of the owners of the other of said lots. This agreement shall be construed to run with the land, and shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of all parties hereto and their respective heirs and assigns, owning one or more of said lots or any part thereof.”

The facts in this case were largely set forth in a written stipulation, with the agreement that further evidence might be introduced by either party, and therefore there is very little dispute as to the real facts in this case.

Drexel square is a boulevard in the city of Chicago one block long, running east and west between Fifty-first street on the north and Fifty-second street on the south. It intersects at right angles Drexel avenue on the east and Cottage Grove avenue on the west, and would run into the north part of Washington park if extended west. Block 9 is situated on the south side of Drexel square and fronts north. In March, 1896, the block consisted of eleven vacant lots of the width of fifty feet each, except lot 1, which was seventy-three feet wide. Lot 1 is situated at the corner of Drexel square and Drexel avenue, and proceeding westward from lot 1 the other lots were numbered serially up to number 11, which was situated at the corner of Drexel square and Cottage Grove avenue. Original lots 4 and 5 had been further subdivided into sub-lots 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5, each twenty feet wide. The sub-lots were numbered serially, No. 1 being the west twenty feet of original lot 5 and sub-lot No. 5 being the east twenty feet of lot 4. Sub-lots 3, 4 and 5 in 1896, sub-lots 1 and 2 in 1897, the east half of lot 8 and the west half of lot 8 in 1898 and 1899, and the east half of lot 7 in 1902, were all improved with three-story stone and brick residences built on the same general plan. Parts of the front walls of those houses are on the building line, and from those parts porches project northward in distances varying from about six to eleven feet. The porches vary in width from about ten to fifteen feet. The other parts of the front walls of those houses extend north over the building line in varying distances from about three and one-half to four and one-half feet, forming bay-shaped walls, some of which are circular while the others have three surfaces or faces and resemble the exterior surfaces of a half of a regular hexagon. The bay walls extend from the foundation to the top of the building and form extensions of a room in all three of the stories. There are three windows to every story, and, in fact, they are bay windows. Bay windows are expressly permitted by the building line agreement, as the word “bays” in the building line agreement evidently has reference to bay windows. A bay window is defined by the American Encyclopaedic Dictionary as “a window projecting beyond the line of the front of a house, generally either in a semi-hexagon or semi-octagon,” and then is explained thus: “Strictly speaking, a bay window rises from the ground or basement, while an oriel is supported on a corbel or brackets, and a bow window is always a segment of an arch; but in ordinary use these distinctions are seldom accurately observed, all these words being used as synonymous.” “The mere fact that the bay window rises from a foundation in the ground instead of being a mere projection outward from the wall some distance above the ground does not make it any the less a bay window within the ordinary meaning of that term.” (Keith v. Goldsmith, 194 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
272 Ill. 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hieronimus-v-moran-ill-1916.