Park Ridge Fuel & Material Co. v. City of Park Ridge

167 N.E. 119, 335 Ill. 509
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1929
DocketNo. 19013. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 167 N.E. 119 (Park Ridge Fuel & Material Co. v. City of Park Ridge) 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
Park Ridge Fuel & Material Co. v. City of Park Ridge, 167 N.E. 119, 335 Ill. 509 (Ill. 1929).

Opinions

A bill in equity was filed in the superior court of Cook county by the Park Ridge Fuel and Material Company, a corporation, against the city of Park Ridge, for an injunction restraining the city from interfering with complainant in the construction of buildings, coal silos, switch-tracks, fences and appurtenances, to be used as a coal and material yard, upon the premises of complainant under the Zoning act and ordinances enacted in pursuance thereof by the city. Bernhard Grupe, Emma Louise Grupe, Paul Kaiser and Rose Kaiser were made defendants to the bill upon their intervening petition. They filed an answer to the bill, and also filed a cross-bill praying for a perpetual injunction restraining complainant in the original bill from erecting the buildings and structures and from operating or maintaining a coal and material yard on the premises. The city of Park Ridge also filed a cross-bill asking the same relief. The cause was heard by the chancellor on the original bill, cross-bills, answers and replications and evidence heard in open court. A decree was entered dismissing the original bill and the cross-bills for want of equity, without an award of costs. All prayed and were allowed appeals to this court, the court certifying that the validity of a municipal ordinance is involved. Neither the defendant city nor the complainant in the original bill has assigned cross-errors or perfected their appeals. That is to say, errors are assigned only by the individuals made parties defendant to the suit by their intervention.

The original bill avers substantially, so far as now deemed material, that complainant is a corporation organized for the purpose of buying, selling, storing and otherwise dealing in coal and other materials; that it purchased the real estate described in the bill of complaint for the purpose of conducting the business of storage and sale of coal and erecting thereon buildings, coal silos for the storage *Page 511 of coal and other appurtenances to be used in connection with its business; that the establishment and maintenance of the business and the erection of the buildings and appurtenances thereto were not and are not a violation of any ordinance of the city or of any law of this State; that on July 15, 1927, it applied to the city for a permit to erect buildings, coal silos and appurtenances upon its property and exhibited to the city clerk and to the building inspector of the city, plans, specifications and blue-prints of the buildings, silos and other appurtenances; that the plans, specifications and blue-prints conformed to the laws of Illinois and ordinances of the city relating to the structures sought to be erected; that the city clerk and building inspector examined and approved them, and the city clerk on July 15, 1927, issued to complainant a permit accordingly; that complainant thereupon entered upon the construction and erection of the buildings and entered into various contracts therefor; that it was not molested until August 11, 1927, when the office building, garage and barn were substantially completed at a cost of more than $5000, two of the four silos were practically completed and the foundations of the other two completed at a total cost of more than $3000, and other work and labor had been performed and material furnished at a cost of more than $19,000; that on August 11, 1927, the city clerk delivered a notice to Frank Mates, president of complainant, stating that at a special meeting of the city council it was ordered that the work must be discontinued until further notice; that complainant did other work and was stopped at various times until August 18, 1927, when it was stopped from further work by the police officers of the city, and on September 7, 1927, the city council revoked the permit issued to it. The prayer for relief, on the facts stated in the bill, was for an injunction restraining the city from interfering with complainant in the erection and construction of the buildings. *Page 512

The cross-bill of the intervening defendants charged that the buildings and structures of complainant are in violation of the zoning ordinance adopted by the city on September 12, 1922, and averred that if the court should hold the zoning ordinance of June 29, 1926, a valid ordinance, said buildings and structures are also in violation of that zoning ordinance; prayed that the zoning ordinance adopted by the city on June 29, 1926, may be declared null and void and of no effect; that the zoning ordinance of September 12, 1922, may be declared to be in full force and effect; that the buildings and structures may be decreed to be in violation of the zoning ordinance; and that complainant in the original bill may be perpetually restrained and enjoined from erecting or constructing any buildings or structures for other than residential purposes, from operating and maintaining a coal and material yard upon the premises, and for general relief.

The Park Ridge Fuel and Material Company and Frank Mates filed joint and several answers to the cross-bill of the intervening defendants, the cross-complainants, which admit the ownership and location of their property and its occupancy by residences; aver that they are not advised of the existence of the zoning ordinance of said city adopted in 1922; deny that their buildings and structures are in violation of any zoning ordinances of the city; admit that the city council passed a zoning ordinance June 29, 1926, but deny that the ordinance is invalid, illegal or void; deny that the buildings and structures being erected are in violation of any zoning ordinances of the city now in force; deny that the premises are zoned for residence purposes under any ordinance of the city; aver that cross-complainants are guilty of laches, in that they did not bring any action to have the ordinance of June 29, 1926, declared null and void until after cross-defendants had purchased the land and commenced the construction and erection of the buildings and other structures thereon; that cross-complainants *Page 513 on July 15, 1927, presented to the zoning board of appeals a petition to have the property re-zoned from industrial to residential; that the petition was denied; and that the cross-complainants are bound by the action of the zoning board of appeals and are not in equity entitled to relief.

The substance of the record above stated shows the issues upon which the cause was heard in the superior court so far as necessary to a decision upon this appeal. The evidence shows that complainant contracted to purchase the ground in controversy if the Northwestern Railroad Company would put in a switch-track and the city of Park Ridge would issue a permit for a coal yard on the premises. It had no use for the lot except for that purpose.

As matter of practice, the building commissioner of Park Ridge was the officer who issued building permits. The city clerk, apparently in addition to his other duties, had been acting as building commissioner for some time, and in July, 1927, one Lothrop was appointed and was acting as building commissioner at the time the building permit was issued to complainant. He and the clerk occupied the same room in the city hall as an office. Complainant presented its plans, specifications and blue-prints to Lothrop on July 13, 1927, and requested that they be approved and a building permit issued. Lothrop examined them and declined to approve them on the specific ground that they did not have on them an architect's signature and seal. On July 15 complainant again submitted the plans to Lothrop, having in the meantime procured the architect's signature thereto. Lothrop and the city clerk examined the plans. A question arose as to the size of the water meter. Mates, representing complainant, and Irwin D.

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Bluebook (online)
167 N.E. 119, 335 Ill. 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/park-ridge-fuel-material-co-v-city-of-park-ridge-ill-1929.