Hoyt v. McLaughlin

95 N.E. 464, 250 Ill. 442
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 95 N.E. 464 (Hoyt v. McLaughlin) 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
Hoyt v. McLaughlin, 95 N.E. 464, 250 Ill. 442 (Ill. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellant, William M. Hoyt, filed a bill in the superior court of Cook county, on the chancery side, for an injunction against Herman P. Grube and Robert G. McLaughlin, the appellees, the latter Uif whom was running a dram-shop located on the corner of Fifty-fifth street and Lake avenue in the city of Chicago. The bill alleged that the dram-shop was owned and conducted by McLaughlin under a license issued to Grube; that the ordinance under which said license was issued was void; that the petition filed with the application for license did not contain a sufficient number of signers, as required by the ordinance, and that said dram-shop was operated and maintained by said McLaughlin illegally and without any warrant of law. The bill further alleged that appellant is the owner and in possession of a four-story brick building located at 5528 and 5530 Lake avenue, which building contains on the first floor two store rooms leased and occupied for merchandise purposes, and on the second, third and fourth floors are eighteen flats or apartments occupied as dwellings by tenants, for which a certain rent is paid to appellant. The bill further alleged that appellant’s property is located in the same block as the dram-shop and about two hundred feet distant therefrom; that the operation of said dram-shop denies “to the complainant and his said tenants the peace and quiet to which they are entitled, and said saloon, and its patrons attracted thereto, are a constant source of injury and damage to the said property of complainant used for dwellings and for other purposes, as aforesaid, and depreciate the value of complainant’s said property; that by reason, of the nuisance of the said saloon and by reason of the inherent nature of the business said complainant cannot rent his said apartments or flats as dwellings and stores advantageously, and is forced to rent the said dwellings at a greatly reduced rent from that which he otherwise could have obtained, to the great loss of the complainant; that the class of tenants who will rent such dwellings and stores while said unlawful saloon or dram-shop is operated embrace a larger number than there otherwise would be of persons who are unable to pay their rent when due and often fail wholly to pay their rent, to the great loss of complainant.” The bill alleged that the damage and injury to appellant occasioned by maintaining and operating said dram-shop were great and irreparable, and that appellant would continue to suffer such damage and injury unless appellees be enjoined from further operating, conducting and maintaining said dram-shop. A general demurrer was filed' to the bill, which was sustained by the court and the bill dismissed for want of equity. The court having certified that the validity of a municipal ordinance of the city of Chicago was involved and that the public interest required that the question should be passed upon by this court, an appeal was prayed and allowed and the case has been brought here for review.

The bill alleges that the property described is in what was the village of Hyde Park before its annexation to the city of Chicago; that prior to said annexation the village adopted an ordinance which, in part, is as follows: “Any person who shall desire to obtain a license to keep a saloon or dram-shop shall, in addition to the requirements now provided by ordinance, present his application, in writing, to the village comptroller for such license, in which shall be stated the name of the person or firm to whom the license is to be issued and the place where such saloon or dram-shop is to be kept, which application shall be signed by a majority of the property owners, according to frontage, on both sides of the street in the block in which such dram-shop is to be kept, and shall also be signed by a majority of the bona fide householders and persons or firms living in or doing business on each side of the street in the block upon which such dram-shop .shall have its main entrance,” and which said ordinance is now in full force and effect in that part of the city of Chicago which was formerly Hyde Park. The bill alleges that said ordinance was not complied with by securing the signatures to the application for license of a majority of the property owners, according to frontage, on both sides of the street in the block in which the dram-shop is located, nor by securing to the application the signatures of a majority of the bona fide householders and persons or firms living in or doing business on each side of the street in the block upon which the dram-shop has its main entrance. It is alleged that at the time the license was issued the total number of bona fide householders, persons or firms living or doing business on the east side of Lake avenue in the block in which the dram-shop is located was nine, but that only two of this number had signed the application. The entrance to the dram-shop is in the corner of the building on Lake avenue and Fifty-fifth street, and is alleged to be as much on one street as the other. The bill charges it was the duty of the applicant for license to secure the signatures of a majority of the bona fide householders and persons or firms living in or doing business on each side of both Lake avenue and Fifty-fifth street because the main entrance was on both of said streets, and it is alleged the application was not signed by any householder, person or firm living or doing business on either side of Fifty-fifth street. The bill sets out a number of ordinances of the city of Chicago relating to the subject of dram-shops, among them section 1340, which divides the license year into two periods of six months each, and authorizes a license for either period upon the payment of the fee in advance for the period. This ordinance, it is alleged, is In conflict with the Dram-shop act and is invalid. ■

While the trial court certified that the validity of an ordinance of the city of Chicago is involved and the public interest required the appeal to be prosecuted to this court, we have not been favored by counsel for appellees with any reference to or discussion of the validity of any ordinance. The grounds relied upon by appellees to sustain the decree of the superior court are, that the bill does not make a case showing special damage to appellant different from that suffered by the public at large, and in the absence of such showing it is claimed the nuisance could only be abated in. an action by or in the name of the People. It is also insisted that the validity of a city ordinance cannot be raised in a court of equity by bill for an injunction.

An unlicensed dram-shop or saloon is declared by law to be a nuisance. (Hurd’s Stat. 1909, chap. 43, par. 7.) Can such a nuisance be abated at the suit of a private person? The answer to this question depends upon whether an individual has suffered special damage different from that suffered by him in common with the public. The rule is well settled by the decisions- of this and other States that a public nuisance will not be enjoined at the suit of a private person unless the nuisance causes such person a special and particular injury distinct from that suffered by him in common with the public at large. In cases where no private or special injury is caused to an individual an action to abate the nuisance must be instituted by or in the name of the public. But a public nuisance may also be a private nuisance, (Wood on Nuisances, sec. 674,) as where the propert) of an individual is injured in a manner special to him and different from the injury to the public.

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Bluebook (online)
95 N.E. 464, 250 Ill. 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoyt-v-mclaughlin-ill-1911.