Quilici v. Village of Mount Prospect

78 N.E.2d 240, 399 Ill. 418, 1948 Ill. LEXIS 286
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1948
DocketNo. 30353. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 78 N.E.2d 240 (Quilici v. Village of Mount Prospect) 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
Quilici v. Village of Mount Prospect, 78 N.E.2d 240, 399 Ill. 418, 1948 Ill. LEXIS 286 (Ill. 1948).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilson

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal by the village of Mount Prospect from a judgment and decree of the circuit court of Cook County, declaring the amendatory zoning ordinance of the village, adopted on May 6, 1944, unconstitutional and invalid insofar as it affected certain property situated in the village, granting an injunction restraining the village from enforcing "the ordinance against the property involved and removing the ordinance as a cloud upon the title to the property. The trial judge has certified that the validity of a municipal ordinance is involved and that public interest requires an appeal to this court.

A complaint filed by the plaintiffs, George L. and Virginia I. Quilici, alleged that they were the owners of two lots in the village of Mount Prospect purchased in 1928 for $39904 that, at the time they purchased their two lots and at the time the lot adjacent to them was purchased by its present owners, there was in full force and effect a 1923 zoning ordinance of the village; that the lots were then zoned for business or commercial uses and all of the lots were purchased in reliance upon the zoning ordinance; that all of the lots face on a main-traveled four-lane highway known as Northwest Highway and are in close proximity to a railroad paralleling the highway; that, since acquiring their property, they had spent $2750 for local improvements in order to conserve the property for business purposes; that, on May 6, 1944, the zoning ordinance was amended, without any actual notice to the plaintiffs, and, by this amendment, the property was rezoned so as to permit only the use of the property for residential, school, church, park and gardening purposes, thereby depreciating its value; that there is ample vacant property for residential use in the village, and that the ordinance is contrary to the State and Federal constitutions because it is arbitrary and does not bear any reasonable relation, or tend, to promote or preserve the public health, comfort, morals, safety or general welfare, is confiscatory, and constitutes a taking of plaintiffs’ property without just compensation and due process of law. Plaintiffs also charged that the ordinance was invalid and constituted a cloud upon the property, and their complaint prayed for a declaratory judgment finding the ordinance unconstitutional and invalid as affecting the lots in question and for other relief, including injunction, if necessary.

Defendant filed its motion to dismiss plaintiffs’ action upon the ground that the complaint alleged ,no controversy except as to constitutionality; that there were no facts to warrant a declaratory judgment, and that the plaintiffs had a remedy by injunction to determine the validity of the ordinance. In this motion, the village also contended that the complaint should have been stricken because of general, vague and indefinite allegations and conclusions. This motion was overruled and, thereafter, the defendant filed an answer admitting the location of the lots and asserting the legal passage of the amendatory ordinance of 1944. The cause was then heard by the trial judge and, after a full hearing, the judgment and decree for plaintiffs was entered.

The village of Mount Prospect, approximately two miles square in area, is situated about nineteen miles northwest of Chicago. It is a residential community, having a population of about 2,600, and has very little industrial property. The village is bisected by the Northwest Highway and by the parallel Chicago and North Western Railroad right-of-way, both running in a northwesterly and southeasterly direction. The Northwest Highway is one of the main highways in the northern part of Illinois and is the main thoroughfare to the northwest. The highway is approximately 80 feet wide and between the southern edge of the highway and the North Western Railroad right-of-way there is approximately 20 feet of ground. The highway is four-lane and heavily used by both pleasure and commercial vehicles.

The Chicago and North Western Railroad right-of-way is a “main line” at this point on which suburban trains run and there is a siding in front of the property in question in the village of Mount Prospect. Approximately 42 trains pass through the village daily.

On December 4, 1923, the village passed a zoning ordinance which, among other things, zoned as commercial the property along both sides of the railroad and highway throughout the village. In 1923, the population of the village was less than 250 and development did not begin until 1925. In 1925 and under the zoning ordinance of 1923, there were about 4500 residential lots and approximately 550 business lots in the village. In 1927, the plaintiffs purchased lots 40 and 41, relying on the zoning classification of these lots as commercial, or business, property. At the time of the purchase, lots zoned for commercial purposes were marketed for a substantially higher price than those zoned for residential purposes. Lots facing the Northwest Highway, all zoned for business purposes, ranged in price from $1800 to $2200 each while residential lots in the same subdivision were sold at $900 to $1200. Since acquiring these lots, the plaintiffs made certain expenditures for improvements such as paving, drains and water mains, which, with the purchase price, raised the expenditures on the lots to the aggregate sum of approximately $10,000.

At the time the plaintiffs acquired lots 40 and 41, there was not a single dwelling and no building of any kind in either direction on the Northwest Highway for about half a mile. The condition today is substantially the same. The nearest building on the highway, approximately a half mile from the lots in question, is a gasoline station. There has been no building in the vicinity subsequent to the passage of the 1944 ordinance, and no residences have been constructed at any time along the Northwest Highway.

Since 1929, the plaintiffs have had lots 40 and 41 listed for sale with agents and brokers and, also, had a large signboard erected on the property offering it for sale. In 1946, they received an offer for the lots from a broker in Chicago who was willing to pay $5000 for them for use for commercial purposes, but this offer was withdrawn when it was discovered that, in 1944, the property had been rezoned to residential purposes.

On November 5, 1946, the plaintiffs entered into a contract with A. B. Crouch for the sale of the lots subject to the condition that the plaintiffs have lots 40 and 41 rezoned to their original status of business property and that the purchaser obtain lot 39, which, it was also agreed, was to be rezoned to the status of business property. The plaintiffs then applied for rezoning of lots 40 and 41 and a public hearing resulted in a denial of their application for rezoning.

Plaintiffs contend that the amendatory zoning ordinance of 1944 is arbitrary, unreasonable and confiscatory as to the particular property owned by them. They argiie that the 1944 amendatory ordinance is arbitrary, unreasonable and confiscatory and bears no substantial relationship to the exercise by the village of Mount Prospect of any police power delegated to it by the General Assembly under section 1 of article 73 of the Revised Cities and Villages Act. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1947, chap. 24, par.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.E.2d 240, 399 Ill. 418, 1948 Ill. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quilici-v-village-of-mount-prospect-ill-1948.