John Anisfield Co. v. Edward B. Grossman & Co.

98 Ill. App. 180, 1901 Ill. App. LEXIS 252
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 21, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 98 Ill. App. 180 (John Anisfield Co. v. Edward B. Grossman & Co.) 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
John Anisfield Co. v. Edward B. Grossman & Co., 98 Ill. App. 180, 1901 Ill. App. LEXIS 252 (Ill. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Windes

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellees, some of whom are owners and others lessees of certain premises on the west side of State street near Monroe street, Chicago, known as numbers 172 and 178 State street, the latter being improved by a five-story stone and brick building and the former by a building which has a basement and upper stories, though the kind of structure is not shown. JSTo. 178 is used by tenants of certain of the appellees, who are in the millinery business, and FTo. 172 is occupied by the appellee Grossman & Company, a corporation, engaged in the business of selling cloaks, suits, wraps and kindred articles of merchandise.

State street at this point is a very busy street and during business hours is continually thronged and greatly congested with foot passengers and vehicles of all kinds in both the roadways and sidewalks. The sidewalk in front of the premisos owned and occupied by appellees as well as appellant is twenty feet in width, and the street, including the sidewalks from Madison street, which is one block north from Monroe street, extending south for many miles, is of a uniform width of 100 feet.

ISTos. 174 and 176 State street, being the premises between said ISTos. 172 and 178, have a frontage on State street of forty feet, are improved by a five-story stone and brick building, are owned by one Ayer and leased to certain persons who, in turn, lease to the appellant company, which occupies the first and ground floor of said building, the lease terminating on April 30, 1907.

The above described premises, including other property along the west side of State street and south of Monroe street, were included in a plat known as the school section addition to Chicago, made by the trustees of schools as owners, which was recorded August 4, 1846. This plat shows Monroe street to be sixty-six feet in width and State street one hundred feet in width, and the titles to the premises owned and occupied by appellees and appellant have passed by a series of mesne conveyances from the trustees of schools as a common source, to the present owners and occupants, the west line of State street having all that time remained unchanged of record.

By common consent of all the owners and tenants of the buildings now standing upon all the above mentioned premises, the front or show windows thereof have been constructed so as to extend eighteen inches beyond the east line of the lots as originally laid out and shown upon said plat, to the height of the first story of said buildings, and so that said front or show windows encroach upon the sidewalk space in State street in front of said premises eighteen inches. The front or face of all said buildings above the height of the first story is now and always has been along the east line of the lots as originally laid out by the school trustees;

On or about the first day of July, 1901, the city council of Chicago passed an ordinance which by its terms gave permission to the appellant company to construct and maintain, a bay-window in connection with the building at said numbers 174 and 176 State street, which should extend along the entire front of said building, except the space left open for an entrance, and “ in width a distance of eighteen inches over the sidewalk adjoining said building,” and providing for a payment of $55 annually to the city of Chicago for said privilege, and that the same should cease absolutely at the expiration of ten years from the date of the ordinance, and at any time upon the order of the mayor of said city.

Pursuant to this ordinance and a permit granted by the city of Chicago, the appellant company proceeded to construct the bay-window therein provided for, for its sole private benefit, and thereupon appellees filed their bill against appellant, alleging, among other things, the matters hereinabove set out; also that said premises have become of exceeding great value, and that their rental value depends to a very large extent upon the amount of room afforded for display or show of merchandise; that “every inch of space upon said street where said premises are located is of great value, and that everything which tends to deprive the tenants or occupants conducting business in said premises of the opportunity for the display of their merchandise, and everything which tends to shut out the view of the front of said premises and to interfere, to any extent, with the sunshine, light, air and warmth which said premises have hitherto enjoyed -by reason of the width of said street, and by reason of the fact that no projection of any kind was extended, or does extend, beyond the front of said premises, will cause serious and continuing damages and injury to your orators and their said property, and that such damages will amount to many thousands of dollars and will be beyond legal remedy or relief if not prevented by this court;” also that any encroachment whatever upon the sidewalk space in front of appellee’s premises is a “serious menace to all of the people, and a special cause of damage and injury to owners, occupants and tenants of premises immediately contiguous to such encroachment;” also “that the maintenance of the unobstructed view and the right to the unobstructed access of light, warmth and sunshine to all of the front of said premises is of special pecuniary value, and that any obstruction which tends to diminish the sunshine, warmth and light of said premises by the defendants, as hereinafter mentioned, would be of great and irreparable damage to your orators’ property;” that the said structure proposed to be erected by appellant company will “obstruct the free access of light, ventilation, sunshine and warmth, and display of merchandise, to which your orators, all of the complainants herein, and their tenants, are entitled, and will greatly interfere with and obstruct the view of the premises of your orators from pedestrians and others who might become customers of your orators’ tenants, and of your orator, Edward B. Grossman & Co., and will cause pecuniary loss and damage to your orators, and specially tend to depreciate the value of your orators’ premises, and will, moreover, tend still further to obstruct and impede ail persons who may be passing along said State street, and tend greatly to increase the crowding of such persons, whereby the public will suffer great annoyance, inconvenience and danger.”

The bill prays for an injunction to prevent the erection of the proposed structure and from creating any obstruction upon the sidewalk to the east of the present line of the front of the said buildings, and from in anywise molesting or impairing the rights, privileges and easements of appellees, and of the public at large, to light, air and free access with reference to appellee’s premises. An application for an injunction was made to the chancellor, on notice to appellant upon the bill, which wras sworn to. and a hearing was had upon the bill and certain affidavits filed by appellant in opposition to the motion.

The affidavits show, in substance, that the bay-window proposed to be erected by the appellant company would be entirely ol' transparent plate glass, riveted together by screws and without any perpendicular iron or steel support for the same, and that part of it which would project eighteen inches from appellant’s building would be two feet and six inches from the north line of the building and ten feet and six inches north of the premises, No.

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Bluebook (online)
98 Ill. App. 180, 1901 Ill. App. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-anisfield-co-v-edward-b-grossman-co-illappct-1901.