Hurt v. Hejhal

259 Ill. App. 221, 1930 Ill. App. LEXIS 764
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 1, 1930
DocketGen. No. 33,688
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 259 Ill. App. 221 (Hurt v. Hejhal) 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
Hurt v. Hejhal, 259 Ill. App. 221, 1930 Ill. App. LEXIS 764 (Ill. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McSurely

delivered the opinion of the court.

By this appeal complainants question the propriety of a decree dismissing, after hearing, their bill of complaint which sought a mandatory injunction enjoining defendants from erecting or maintaining a building alleged to be erected in violation of certain building restrictions contained in a deed and of the zoning ordinance of the City of Berwyn.

Neither the City of Berwyn nor William Kramer, building commissioner, has filed an answer to the bill. We shall hereafter designate Rudolph J. Hejhal and Marie Hejhal as defendants. Their answer denied that their premises were subject to the alleged restrictions in the deed and asserted that their premises were rezoned as an apartment district and that there were a large number of other apartment buildings in the locality; that they have complied with all the requirements of the building commissioner of the City of Berwyn and that they have expended large sums of money, in excess of $25,000, in accordance with the building permit issued to them. The answer also denied that the erection of the building would cause damages to the complainants.

The premises in question are in the City of Berwyn, at the southeast corner of Clarence Avenue, a north and south street, and 19th Street, which runs east and west. The premises owned by complainants lie immediately to the south and adjoin the lot owned by defendants.

In September, 1926, 25 lots in this Berwyn subdivision, including the lots owned by the parties here, were conveyed to Joseph J. Mrizek and Vlasta Mrizek by a deed which contained the following:

“The said premises are hereby restricted to two or more residence (commonly known as two flat buildings) purposes only, and shall not at any time hereafter be used for any other purpose.
“The said conditions shall run with the land and inure to the benefit of and be binding upon the grantees herein and all subsequent owners of the respective lots hereby conveyed.”

In October, 1926, Mrizek and his wife conveyed to the complainants the premises now occupied by them. It was already improved with a two-story building, containing two flats, which were thereafter occupied by the grantees as their respective residences. This deed provided that it was subject to the conditions and restrictions shown in the prior conveyance.

" A zoning ordinance was adopted by the City of Berwyn in September, 1923, whereby restrictions were laid upon lots in the locality in which defendants’ lot was situated, restricting improvements to two apartment buildings and forbidding any building to exceed 35 feet in height or two and a half stories or to cover in excess of 40 per cent of the area of a corner lot, with an exception not now involved. There was also a provision that there should be a rear yard of not less than 10 per cent of the depth of a corner lot. The building proposed by defendants was a three-story building with about eight inches of rear yard and occupying in excess of 71 per cent of the area of the lot.

February 15, 1929, Mrizek and his wife conveyed to the defendants the corner lot in question, which was then vacant. Thereafter, on March 4, 1929, Rudolph J. Hejhal applied to and obtained from the building commissioner of Berwyn a permit to construct on said premises a nine-apartment building covering nearly the entire area of the lot.

Dr. Hurt, one of the complainants, protested to the building commissioner of Berwyn. There is some dispute as to how far the work had progressed at this time. Defendant Hejhal testified that he commenced work on or about March 13; that the first time Dr. Hurt ever talked to him was about March 25, when building operations were suspended for two days and at which time the building had progressed beyond the first floor and almost to the second. A meeting of the building committee of the council was called for March 27 to consider the matter. This meeting was continued to April 9, when the Berwyn officials ordered the building stopped and nothing was done for two weeks. On April 23, the city council rescinded the order of April 9 stopping the work and thereupon defendants continued the work. The building was up to the roof at the time this bill was filed.

Had the building restrictions contained in the deed been so far disregarded and abandoned by general consent and the acts of the property owners in the locality so that a court of equity will not enforce such restrictions by injunctions ?

The general rule is stated in Ewertsen v. Gerstenberg, 186 Ill. 344:

“Equity will not, as a rule, enforce a restriction, where, by the acts of the grantor who imposed it or of those who derived title under him, the property, and that in the vicinage, has so changed in its character and environment and in the uses to which it may be put as to make it unfit or unprofitable for use if the restriction be enforced, or where to grant the relief would be a great hardship on the owner and of no benefit to the complainant, or where the complainant has waived or abandoned the restriction, — or, in short, it may be said that where, from all the evidence, it appears that it would be against equity to enforce the restriction by injunction, relief will be denied, and the party seeking its enforcement will be left to whatever remedy he may have at law,”

To the same effect are Curtis v. Rubin, 244 Ill. 88; Kneip v. Schroeder, 255 Ill. 621; Wiegman v. Kusel, 270 Ill. 520; Gilmore v. Keogh, 241 Ill. App. 28.

The evidence shows that within a radins of one block from the premises in question there are 6 large apartment buildings; that within a radius of 3 blocks there are approximately 15 apartment buildings of various sizes and in each case larger than a two-flat building; that within a radius of 4 blocks there are over 20 apartment buildings ranging from 3 to 38 apartments. These physical facts indicate clearly an abandonment of the building restrictions contained in the deed above referred to and a general acquiescence in the breach of such restrictions or conditions.

In Wiegman v. Kusel, 270 Ill. 520, cited by complainants, it was held that equity will not enforce a building restriction where, by the acts of the grantor who imposed it or of those who derived title under him, the character of the property in the vicinity has so changed as to make it unfit or unprofitable for use if the restriction is enforced. In that case, although the injunction was ordered, the facts found by the court were that there had been no change in character or environment making it unprofitable to enforce the restriction, that the building restriction had been observed not only on the street there under consideration but on other streets in the subdivision, with only one possible exception some distance away.

It is worthy of comment that there was no legal proceeding brought by any of the lot owners, including the complainants herein, to prevent the erection of any of these other apartment buildings, and this is impressively true of the two large apartment buildings occupying, respectively, the northwest corner and the southwest corner of Clarence Avenue and 19th Street. Defendants’ property occupies the southeast corner of this intersection. There is also another apartment building in the same block.

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Bluebook (online)
259 Ill. App. 221, 1930 Ill. App. LEXIS 764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurt-v-hejhal-illappct-1930.