The County of Cook v. Monat

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 24, 2006
Docket1-05-2001 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of The County of Cook v. Monat (The County of Cook v. Monat) 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
The County of Cook v. Monat, (Ill. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

SIXTH DIVISION March 24, 2006

No. 1-05-2001

THE COUNTY OF COOK, a Body Politic ) Appeal from the Corporate, ) Circuit Court of ) Cook County. Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) v. ) No. 04 M1 402258 ) ALLAN MONAT and BECKY MONAT, ) Honorable ) David B. Atkins, Defendants-Appellants. ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE FITZGERALD SMITH delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff County of Cook, a body politic corporate (the County), filed a

complaint against defendants Allan Monat and Becky Monat for violating zoning

ordinances by keeping two horses on their property in unincorporated Cook County and

sought an injunction to prohibit defendants from keeping the horses on that property. In

response, defendants raised an affirmative defense of a special use, which was granted

to the previous owner of the property and which allowed him to continue boarding his

horses. The circuit court granted summary judgment in the County's favor, enjoined

defendants from boarding horses on their property and imposed a fine on defendants

for the violations. On appeal, defendants contend that the special use runs with the

land. We disagree and affirm the judgment in favor of the County.

The instant action marks defendants' second litigation in their ongoing attempt to

keep horses on property in the Timberlane Estates subdivision in unincorporated Cook 1-05-2001

County. The County and Allan Monat were previously before this court in Monat's

ultimately unsuccessful attempt to build a stable and board horses at another property

in that subdivision, 4110 Timberlane. See Monat v. County of Cook, 322 Ill. App. 3d

499, 750 N.E.2d 260 (2001) (hereinafter, Monat I). In that action, this court found that

the ordinance did not permit expansion of the special use to all the lots in Timberlane

Estates. Monat I, 322 Ill. App. 3d at 509.

The property at issue in this action, the subject property, is located at 4190

Timberlane Drive. Defendants have lived at the subject property since April 2001. The

size of defendants' lot is approximately one-half acre and the lot, like all the others in

Timberlane Estates, is zoned "R-4," or, single-family residential. Defendants purchased

the property at 4190 Timberlane Drive from Ronald Krueger, who had kept horses there

and was granted a special use permit in 1978 to continue doing so. In 1978, Krueger

and one other homeowner, Frank Williams, were sued for violating the zoning ordinance

by having stables on lots smaller than three acres. The Department of Building and

Zoning of Cook County (DBZ) then applied for a special use, which, according to one of

the zoning board members, was for "the private boarding of horses that are presently

existing" in the area. Following a hearing, the special use was granted.

Although defendants lived in the subdivision since the end of 1997, first, for more

than three years at the 4110 property, then at the subject property, they admitted that

they never observed horses on the subject property when it was owned by Krueger.

Defendants also admitted that they never observed horses being boarded there. Since

purchasing the subject property, however, defendants have kept horses there.

-2- 1-05-2001

In November 2003, the DBZ sent defendants a letter informing them that an

inspection of their property revealed violations of certain provisions of the County's

building and the zoning ordinances. Specifically, defendants were notified that there

was one violation of the former, for having a stable that was built without the required

permit (see Cook County Building Ordinance ' 5.3-1(a)(1) (1997)), and two violations of

the latter, for keeping horses on a lot that was smaller than three acres and not zoned

for keeping horses (see Cook County Zoning Ordinance '' 4.4.8.A.1.e, 4.4.6 (2001)).

Shortly thereafter, defendants were informed that the citation for the building ordinance

was rescinded because a prior owner had constructed the stable structure more than 20

years ago. The stable structure is not at issue in this controversy.

Rather, the controversy involves only the keeping of horses on the subject

property. In the same January 2004 letter rescinding the building ordinance violation,

the County's commissioner of building and zoning advised defendants that litigation for

the zoning violations would not be pursued at the time, based on defendants'

compliance with the ordinance by removing the horses from the property. However,

defendants were informed that if they wanted to board "any" horses on their property in

the future, they would have to apply for a special use with the DBZ. The letter also

informed defendants that "an Accessory Use for private stables (boarding horses)

requires a zoning lot a minimum of three (3) acres in size" and that they were "not

permitted to board any horses as an Accessory Use on your property without first

obtaining such a Special Use." The letter encouraged defendants to apply for the

special use and described the procedure for doing so, which includes a public hearing.

-3- 1-05-2001

Defendants were specifically notified that if they returned a horse to the property without

having obtained a special use, the DBZ would "issue a violation for non-compliance with

the Zoning Ordinance" and seek an injunction to prohibit the boarding of horses on the

property and fines for the ordinance violation.

In July 2004, after an inspection revealed that defendants had horses on the

subject property, the County filed its verified complaint for keeping horses on a lot of

approximately one-half acre in size in violation of the zoning ordinance. Defendants

admitted keeping two horses on the property, but raised the 1978 special use as an

affirmative defense. The County denied the affirmative defense and subsequently

moved for summary judgment. In its supporting memorandum, the County referred to a

similar circuit court case, which was one of three consolidated cases concerning

properties in the Timberlane Estates subdivision (County of Cook v. Zorn, No. 99 M1

402044 (Cir. Ct. Cook Co.), County of Cook v. Peterson, No. 99 M1 402045 (Cir. Ct.

Cook Co.), County of Cook v. Amelio, No. 00 M1 400077 (Cir. Ct. Cook Co.))

(hereinafter Amelio), although it recognized that the decision in that case was not

binding. There, the purchaser of the Williams lot, Arthur Amelio, also raised the 1978

special use as an affirmative defense but the court held that the special use granted

expired with the sale of the Williams property.

On May 17, 2005, the court issued a written memorandum order and opinion in

which it found that there had been no zoning change and that the Timberlane Estates

subdivision was zoned R-4, for single-family residential use. The court further found

that the property at issue was a one-half acre lot, defendants were boarding two horses

-4- 1-05-2001

on the lot, and defendants had not been granted a special use permit to do so. The

court considered the affirmative defense at length, but found as a matter of law that the

special use granted in 1978 (to Krueger) expired with the change in ownership of the

property. 1 Finding that the special use did not run with the land, i.e., that it expired

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