Smart Growth Sugar Grove, LLC. v. The Village of Sugar Grove

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 3, 2007
Docket2-06-0656 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Smart Growth Sugar Grove, LLC. v. The Village of Sugar Grove (Smart Growth Sugar Grove, LLC. v. The Village of Sugar Grove) 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
Smart Growth Sugar Grove, LLC. v. The Village of Sugar Grove, (Ill. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

No. 2--06--0656 Filed: 8-3-07 ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

SECOND DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

SMART GROWTH SUGAR GROVE, LLC, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of Kane County. Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) No. 05--MR--465 ) THE VILLAGE OF SUGAR GROVE, ) Honorable ) Michael J. Colwell, Defendant-Appellee. ) Judge, Presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE O'MALLEY delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff, Smart Growth Sugar Grove, LLC, filed a six-count complaint against defendant,

the Village of Sugar Grove (the Village), challenging (1) the Village's refusal to rezone plaintiff's

property, which the Village had annexed in accordance with an agreement with plaintiff's

predecessor; and (2) a provision in the Village's comprehensive plan recommending that the Village

acquire a right-of-way across plaintiff's property for a possible highway interchange. The Village

moved to dismiss the complaint as untimely (see 735 ILCS 5/2--619(a)(5) (West 2004)) under

section 7--1--46 of the Illinois Municipal Code (Code) (65 ILCS 5/7--1--46 (West 2004)), which

states that a complaint directly or indirectly challenging the annexation of territory to a municipality

be filed no later than a year after the annexation becomes final. The Village also argued that the

counts of the complaint challenging the comprehensive plan were unripe. The trial court held that

all of the counts were untimely, and it dismissed the complaint. No. 2--06--0656

Plaintiff appeals, contending that (1) the two counts of its complaint attacking the Village's

refusal to rezone its property are not governed by section 7--1--46 of the Code; and (2) the trial court

erred in dismissing the four counts of the complaint directed against the Village's comprehensive

plan, as these counts are not governed by section 7--1--46 of the Code and are ripe for adjudication.

We hold that the trial court correctly dismissed the counts of the complaint challenging the

annexation as time-barred and that the dismissal of the remaining counts was proper under the

ripeness doctrine. Therefore, we affirm.

On October 31, 2005, plaintiff filed its complaint. It alleges the following facts common to

all counts. Plaintiff owns 89.40 unimproved acres located south of I-88 on either side of Bliss Road.

On July 23, 2002, the Village passed an ordinance annexing the property. In compliance with a 1991

preannexation agreement with plaintiff's predecessor, the Village zoned the property OR-2 office-

research. In April 2005, the Village amended its comprehensive plan so that it now recommends that

plaintiff's property be developed for single-family residential use, not office-research use. The plan

also recommends that the Village set aside land for the development of a highway interchange at

Bliss Road and I-88. The plan states that, although developing the interchange "is not an immediate

priority for either the Tollway Authority or the Village," a right-of-way could be acquired "as

adjacent property develops." It is not clear whether this recommendation predated plaintiff's

application for rezoning, but it was in the comprehensive plan by the time that the Village staff

reported on the application.

On or about September 13, 2004, plaintiff applied to the Village to rezone the property R-2

residential and for preliminary approval of a plat of subdivision so that plaintiff could develop its

property with single-family homes, parks, and open spaces. In various meetings and reports, the

-2- No. 2--06--0656

Village staff recommended denying the rezoning application because (1) it did not set aside any land

for the highway interchange that the comprehensive plan recommended; (2) in violation of a Village

ordinance, plaintiff did not apply for a planned unit development (PUD); and (3) the preannexation

agreement bound plaintiff to accept OR-2 zoning for the property. However, the staff also stated that

plaintiff's proposed residential development "would be generally consistent" with the comprehensive

plan and "could be an appropriate land use for the area." On September 20, 2005, the Village Board

denied plaintiff's application for rezoning. (We have no record of the decision itself.)

Counts I through IV of plaintiff's complaint are directed against the comprehensive plan's

proposal to use part of plaintiff's property for a highway interchange. Count I alleges that this set-

aside is arbitrary and that obtaining the right-of-way would unfairly diminish the value of plaintiff's

property, and it requests a judgment declaring the set-aside proposal void and enjoining the Village

from enforcing it or acting upon it. Count II alleges that the set-aside violates substantive due

process because plaintiff would bear an undue share of the costs of the interchange, and it requests

a declaratory judgment and damages. Count III alleges that the set-aside is a taking without just

compensation, and it requests a declaratory judgment and damages. Count IV, pleaded in the

alternative to count III, alleges that, even if the set-aside is valid, plaintiff is entitled to just

compensation from the Village.

Count V of the complaint is directed against the Village's denial of plaintiff's rezoning

request and alleges as follows. Under the Village's comprehensive plan, the land south, west, and

east of plaintiff's property is all designated residential. Almost all the property south of plaintiff's

property is zoned R-2 residential, and plaintiff's proposed development is consistent with the two

residential developments immediately to the south. The land directly east and west of plaintiff's

-3- No. 2--06--0656

property is used for agriculture. Directly north of plaintiff's property is I-88; the land north of I-88,

in unincorporated Kane County, is used for agriculture. OR-2 zoning is not suited to plaintiff's

property and is inconsistent with the trend of development in the area. Furthermore, the uses

permitted by OR-2 zoning would generate more traffic, noise, and parking than plaintiff's proposed

development. Therefore, the present zoning is arbitrary and capricious and effects a taking without

just compensation. Count V seeks a declaratory judgment that the OR-2 zoning is unconstitutional

insofar as it bars the proposed development and an injunction to prevent the Village from prohibiting

or delaying the development.

Count VI of the complaint alleges that one reason that the Village denied plaintiff's request

for rezoning was that a Village ordinance requires any residential subdivision consisting of more

than 3 acres or more than 10 lots to be processed as a PUD. According to count VI, this requirement

applies to almost all residential subdivisions in the Village, including the one that plaintiff hopes to

build, and is arbitrary and capricious. Count VI asks the court to declare the PUD ordinance

unconstitutional and to prohibit the Village from enforcing it against plaintiff's property.

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