The Forest Preserve District of Cook County, IL v. Chicago Title and Trust Company

2015 IL App (1st) 131925, 397 Ill. Dec. 525
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 30, 2015
Docket1-13-1925
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2015 IL App (1st) 131925 (The Forest Preserve District of Cook County, IL v. Chicago Title and Trust Company) 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 Forest Preserve District of Cook County, IL v. Chicago Title and Trust Company, 2015 IL App (1st) 131925, 397 Ill. Dec. 525 (Ill. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

2015 IL App (1st) 131925

FIRST DIVISION SEPTEMBER 30, 2015

No. 1-13-1925

THE FOREST PRESERVE DISTRICT OF COOK ) Appeal from the COUNTY, ILLINOIS, a Body Corporate and Politic ) Circuit Court of of the State of Illinois, ) Cook County. ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) CHICAGO TITLE AND TRUST COMPANY, an ) Illinois Corporation, as Successor Trustee of America ) Trust Company, as Trustee Under Trust Agreement ) No. 00 L 50709 Dated December 18, 1992, and Known as Trust Number ) 36-4033; and ALLEN HOGER, ) ) Defendants-Appellees ) ) (Manufacturers Bank, an Illinois Banking Corporation; ) Illinois Bell Telephone Company, an Illinois Corporation; ) and Unknown Owners, ) Honorable ) Eileen O'Neill-Burke, Defendants). ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE CUNNINGHAM delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Liu and Justice Harris concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Plaintiff-appellant The Forest Preserve District of Cook County, Illinois (the District)

appeals from an order of the circuit court of Cook County granting the defendants-appellees'

petition pursuant to section 2-1401 of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-1401 (West

2000)), which sought to vacate an agreed order and judgment entered in an eminent domain

action. For the following reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County. 1-13-1925

¶2 BACKGROUND

¶3 The District commenced this eminent domain proceeding in 2000 to acquire land in

unincorporated Orland Park, Illinois that was owned by the defendants-appellees, Chicago Title

and Trust Company and Allen Hoger (the defendants). The District sought to acquire the

property by condemnation pursuant to an ordinance that was purportedly passed several years

earlier by the District's board of commissioners on May 20, 1991 (the "May 1991 ordinance"),

authorizing the acquisition of land to connect two preexisting parcels of forest preserve.

¶4 The instant action against the defendants was one of multiple condemnation proceedings

initiated by the District against various property owners premised on the May 1991 ordinance.

However, trial courts in other cases subsequently concluded (in decisions later affirmed by our

court in 2008) that the procedural requirements for the passage of the ordinance at the May 1991

board meeting were not met, and thus the ordinance was never enacted. As explained by our

appellate court in an unpublished decision (the Evergreen Park decision) that consolidated

appeals from two separate cases concerning the May 1991 ordinance: "The original record of the

proceedings of the May 20, 1991 meeting of the District board included an ordinance enabling

the acquisition of land for the forest preserve connection project, but that record did not show

that the ordinance was formally introduced, read, discussed or submitted to an approval vote.

That record instead shows *** that the acquisition ordinance was deferred." Forest Preserve

District v. First National Bank of Evergreen Park, Nos. 1-04-1536, 1-04-3777 cons., slip order at

6 (2008), (unpublished order under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 23).

¶5 The District initiated the instant case by filing a condemnation complaint against the

defendants on July 19, 2000, which cited the May 1991 ordinance as the basis for the District's

authority to condemn the defendants' property. During discovery in the underlying action, the

-2- 1-13-1925

defendants requested that the District produce records concerning its authority to bring the

condemnation action. In response, the District produced an unsigned document purporting to be

the May 1991 ordinance. According to the defendants, they relied on the District's statements

and had no reason to doubt the validity of the May 1991 ordinance. Thus, the defendants did

not file a traverse, motion to dismiss, or any other objection to the District's authority to bring the

condemnation action.

¶6 The District and the defendants reached a settlement agreement under which the

defendants agreed to accept $1.7 million as the total just compensation for their property. On

March 6, 2003, the settlement was memorialized and approved by the trial court in an "Agreed

Final Judgment Order" (the Agreed Order). The Agreed Order included a release provision

stating that upon receipt of the specified compensation, the "owners of the property release the

[District] *** from any and all claims or causes of action of any kind or character made or which

could have been made in this action or any state or federal court, including any claim for

compensation for the property *** and any and all known and unknown losses and damage

relating to or arising from the taking of said property through eminent domain."

¶7 Meanwhile, certain other property owners in separate condemnation actions brought by

the District raised challenges to the validity of the May 1991 ordinance. After such challenges,

the District in May 2003 passed a new ordinance purporting to cure any procedural defects in the

May 1991 ordinance. As noted in our court's subsequent Evergreen Park decision, the District's

May 2003 ordinance "stated that the acquisition ordinance was in fact passed by the District's

board at the May 20, 1991 meeting" and "purported to amend retroactively the record of the

proceedings of that meeting to indicate that the acquisition ordinance had been passed by a

unanimous vote." Id.

-3- 1-13-1925

¶8 On November 19, 2003, the trial court presiding over separate condemnation cases

brought by the District against other owners (consolidated cases Nos. 00 L 50990 and 00 L

50991) dismissed those cases due to the invalidity of the May 1991 ordinance. The trial court

presiding over those cases found that the ordinance was "never adopted," "not signed," and had

not been put to a vote, concluding that since the ordinance was "not valid, the [District] cannot,

as a matter of law condemn Defendants' property." After the defendants in this case became

aware of that decision, they sought to challenge the Agreed Order in their case.

¶9 In February 2004, the defendants filed their first section 2-1401 petition seeking to vacate

the March 2003 Agreed Order, which alleged that the District's condemnation complaint had

falsely represented that a valid ordinance authorizing condemnation of the property had been

passed when in fact "[n]o such condemnation ordinance was considered, voted upon, or

adopted." The defendants alleged that, without the District's claims of a valid ordinance, the

Agreed Order would not have been consented to by the defendants or the trial court.

¶ 10 On March 10, 2004, the District filed a motion to dismiss the section 2-1401 petition,

relying primarily on the release language in the Agreed Order as a bar to a section 2-1401

petition. The District otherwise argued that the defendants failed to allege sufficient facts to

sustain a section 2-1401 petition, including a meritorious defense, due diligence in bringing the

defense in the original action, and diligence in bringing the petition. Specifically, the District

argued that the defendants had failed to assert a traverse or other objection to challenge the

District's authority prior to agreeing to settle the case.

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2015 IL App (1st) 131925, 397 Ill. Dec. 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-forest-preserve-district-of-cook-county-il-v-chicago-title-and-trust-illappct-2015.