Rosehill Cemetery Co. v. City of Chicago

8 N.E.2d 664, 366 Ill. 207
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1937
DocketNo. 23769. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 N.E.2d 664 (Rosehill Cemetery Co. v. City of Chicago) 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
Rosehill Cemetery Co. v. City of Chicago, 8 N.E.2d 664, 366 Ill. 207 (Ill. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellee, the Rosehill Cemetery Company, on January 20, 1932, filed a bill in the superior court of Cook county to enjoin appellants, the city of Chicago and its officers, agents and attorneys, from enforcing four certain ordinances enacted by the city of Chicago on October 21, 1931, the first being section 2197, referred to herein as the burial ordinance, and three other ordinances for the opening of Leavitt street, Irving avenue and Glenlake avenue, respectively, referred to herein as the street ordinances, through a 25-acre tract owned by appellee. The city filed an answer and also a cross-bill to restrain the violation of the burial ordinance. The North Town Improvement Association, a community civic organization, and several individuals, by leave of court, intervened as parties defendant and joined in the city’s answer. Following the hearing the chancellor entered a decree dismissing the cross-bill and the intervening petition, and granted appellee’s prayer for a permanent injunction restraining the city from enforcing the burial ordinance and the three street ordinances, and other relief. This appeal is from that decree and comes direct to this court on certificate of the chancellor that the validity of municipal ordinances is involved, and in his opinion the public interest requires that the appeal be taken direct to this court.

This litigation arises out of a controversy between the city of Chicago, joined by certain persons owning property in the vicinity of the land in question, and appellee cemetery company, over its right to use a 25-acre tract of land lying along the north side of Peterson avenue and immediately north of appellee’s cemetery. Much litigation has, in the past, been indulged between these parties. On April 24, 1931, the cemetery company filed a bill to enjoin the city of Chicago, its officers, agents and attorneys, from interfering with complainant and its employees and agents, in improving and using this tract of land for cemetery purposes. In that case the North Town Improvement Association and certain individuals, by leave of court, intervened, and, after a hearing on the bill and answer, the chancellor, on December 31, 1931, entered a decree dismissing the intervening petition for want of equity and granting the prayer of the bill enjoining the city of Chicago from interfering with the cemetery company’s improvement of the tract for cemetery purposes. About ten or twelve days prior to the decree in the former suit, the city sought leave to amend its pleadings and to introduce in evidence the ordinances involved in the instant case. That leave was denied. On direct appeal to this court the decree of the chancellor of December 31, 1931, was affirmed. Rosehill Cemetery Co. v. City of Chicago, 352 Ill. 11.

As many of the facts in that case are the same as in the case before us, it is unnecessary to repeat them here, but reference to the former opinion of this court will disclose such facts. The judgment of this court affirming the decree of the chancellor in that case, determined, as between the parties thereto, that appellee, under its charter, had authority to use the tract in question for burials; that such use did not constitute the tract a new and distinct cemetery, but an addition to the old cemetery south of Peterson avenue, within the meaning of the terms of appellee’s charter; that the act of March 29, 1869, entitled: “An act to amend the charter of the town of Lake View in Cook county,” was unconstitutional and void and did not have the effect of preventing appellee’s use of the tract as a cemetery; that the ordinance of the board of trustees of the town of Lake View was not of any force and effect to prevent such use .by appellee; that, under the evidence, there was no basis for the contention that interference of the officers of the city of Chicago with the use of said tract by appellee as a burial place, was justified under the general police power of the city to prevent and abate nuisances; that the evidence did not establish that such use of the tract would create either a public or private nuisance, and that appellee was not guilty of any bad faith or inequitable conduct toward the intervening petitioners, and did not inform them, or encourage them in the belief, that said 25-acre tract would never be used as a part and parcel of its cemetery for cemetery purposes. It is sought to re-litigate certain of those questions here.

The bill now before us sets out appellee’s charter, the history of the acquisition of this tract, and certain litigation through which appellee compelled the approval of its plats and the recording of same, the removal of the city’s claims as clouds on the title, and litigation resulting in a decree enjoining the city from laying or placing sewers or streets on said tract. The ordinance here attacked seeks to prohibit enlarging or establishing cemeteries within the city, or to make burials in any place not so used when the ordinance was passed, or in any place not already within the enclosure of a cemetery and, by paragraph (d), prohibits burials “in any portion of the tract described as the northwest quarter of section 6, township 40 north, range 14, east of the third principal meridian.” This quarter-section of land embraces the 25-acre tract involved here. Paragraph (d) is the portion of the ordinance particularly complained of. The bill here alleges that this burial ordinance was enacted long after appellee accepted its charter from the legislature and acquired and developed lands for cemetery purposes, and long after it had sold and conveyed divers burial lots and made interments therein; that the ordinance is a cloud upon appellee’s title in violation of its charter rights and the contract created thereby between the State and appellee and its stockholders, and constitutes the taking of property without due process of law, in violation of the State and Federal constitutions. The bill also alleges a final adjudication of its right to use this tract for burials in the case of City of Chicago v. Rose Hill Cemetery Co. 285 Ill. 567. It also alleges certain attempted prosecutions against appellee’s employees and makes other charges, but sufficient is above set forth to present the questions here. The bill prays that the burial ordinance, in so far as it attempts to restrict appellee, be held unconstitutional and void; that the court restrain the prosecution or arrest of appellee’s employees and interference with the erection of buildings by appellee on the property, restrain the enforcement of the three street ordinances, restrain trespassing upon the premises and permit the connection of appellee’s water plant with the city water mains.

Appellants’ contentions are: (1) That the burial ordinance of October 21, 1931, section 2197, is a proper exercise of the city’s police power, and as applied to this tract, it is not discriminatory; (2) that the special statute creating appellee does not confer upon it an exemption from the operation of such a police ordinance; (3) the former proceedings are not res judicata and do not estop the city with respect to the issues here presented, and (4) appellee does not come into court with clean hands. Appellee contends the ordinance, other than as hereinbefore stated, has no application to it.

This court, when this dispute was last before it, settled certain of the issues hereinabove enumerated.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rosehill Cemetery Co. v. Lueder
94 N.E.2d 342 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1950)
Town of Darien v. Town of Stamford
60 A.2d 764 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 N.E.2d 664, 366 Ill. 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosehill-cemetery-co-v-city-of-chicago-ill-1937.