Village of Minooka v. Wisconsin Central Ltd.

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 12, 2026
Docket1:24-cv-05200
StatusUnknown

This text of Village of Minooka v. Wisconsin Central Ltd. (Village of Minooka v. Wisconsin Central Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Village of Minooka v. Wisconsin Central Ltd., (N.D. Ill. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

VILLAGE OF MINOOKA, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) vs. ) Case No. 24 C 5200 ) WISCONSIN CENTRAL LTD., ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

MATTHEW F. KENNELLY, District Judge:

The Village of Minooka has sued Wisconsin Central Ltd. (WCL), a subsidiary of Canadian National Railway (CN). Minooka asserts a single claim seeking a declaratory judgment that its 25-ton weight limit on McLindon Road is valid and enforceable and not preempted by the ICC Termination Act (ICCTA) of 1995. WCL asserts a counterclaim seeking a declaratory judgment that the ICCTA preempts Minooka's 25-ton weight limit on McLindon Road and an injunction barring enforcement of the limit. Both sides have moved for summary judgment. For the reasons below, the Court denies both motions. Background The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted. WCL plans to build an intermodal facility and, possibly, a logistics park in what is currently farmland mostly located in the Village of Channahon. Channahon generally borders Minooka to the east and south, but in the area where WCL is intending to build, Channahon also lies to Minooka's west. WCL plans to build the facility between the WCL/CN tracks and the tracks of another railroad, CSX. A bit to the east of the planned facility, in Minooka, lies a north-south road called McLindon Road. The CN and CSX tracks cross McLindon Road. A bit to the south of the planned facility lies US Route 6, an east-west road. A bit to the north and west of the planned facility is Interstate 80, which in this area runs (roughly) in a southwesterly-to-northeasterly direction.

WCL intends to construct the intermodal facility and logistics park in two phases. Phase one will consist of the terminal and associated administrative buildings and roadways. The second phase will consist of a logistics park with warehouses. WCL currently has no information about the types of industrial buildings that may be built at the logistics park or the types of tenants that may occupy those potential buildings. A large volume of incoming and outgoing truck traffic is anticipated. The activities at the intermodal facility would include taking containers from railroad cars and placing them onto semitrucks, and vice versa. This short haul transportation of shipping containers by truck between a rail line and another destination is known as drayage. The drayage trucks will move the train shipments to and from the intermodal facility.

The trucks are privately owned and operated. WCL anticipates that, after completion of phase one, the intermodal facility will have capacity to handle 200,000 containers annually. On a seven-day-per-week schedule, this translates to a little under 550 containers each day. After phase two is complete, the capacity could be expanded to one million containers a year—about 2,740 per day on a seven-day-per-week schedule. WCL's initial design of the intermodal facility contemplated a single access gate on McLindon Road. After Minooka and others expressed concerns about truck traffic, WCL redesigned the facility to have two full access entrances for heavy trucks, one on McLindon Road and one to the south on Route 6. The planned gate on McLindon Road would be at the intersection of McLindon Road and Twin Rail Drive. Prior to March 2024, Minooka's village code provided for a 40-ton weight limit on McLindon Road from its intersection with Twin Rail Drive (which is just north of the CN- McLindon Road crossing), north to Minooka Road. To the south, toward Route 6, the weight limit was 8 tons. In March 2024, Minooka amended the village code to make the 40-ton stretch of McLindon Road start a bit further to the north—north of Twin Rail Drive—and correspondingly extended the 8-ton limit to that same spot, which is where the CSX tracks cross McLindon Road. Then in April 2024, Minooka amended the village code again, this time increasing the McLindon Road weight limit to 25 tons from Twin Rail Drive north to the CSX crossing. The limit remained at 8 tons for the stretch of McLindon Road from Twin Rail Drive all the way south to Route 6, the same limit that had existed for that stretch of McLindon Road prior to March 2024. The current weight restrictions are illustrated on the following map:

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Compl. ¶ 60. Minooka says that it enacted the weight limit ordinance to protect the health and safety of its citizens. Sometime around 2014, Minooka says, a crack appeared in McLindon Road just north of the CSX railroad crossing. Fixing the crack would cost

approximately half a million dollars and Minooka has not budgeted for this cost. WCL and Minooka dispute the extent of Minooka's monitoring and examination of the crack's impact on the road's condition over the past ten years. Minooka's Village President testified that wear and tear on McLindon Road was one of his health and safety concerns related to the ordinance. Minooka's Superintendent of Public Works testified about the concern that heavy trucks would have an impact on McLindon Road and that more heavy trucks would have more of an impact. In addition, in December 2023, Minooka's Village Administrator informed WCL/CN that the Village opposed increased heavy vehicle access to McLindon Road because, in the Village's view, the related noise and emissions would negatively impact local air quality and the overall health of

the community.1 The March and April 2024 ordinances stated: "the Corporate Authorities of the Village have determined that the [weight limit] amendments effectuated by this ordinance are necessary for, and supportive of, the health, safety, and welfare of the motoring public and other residents and citizens of the City." Def.'s Exs. JJ at 2, KK at 2. WCL's expert witness, Jarod Hage, opines that, without access to McLindon Road, twenty-five percent of the drayage trucks estimated to enter and exit the

1 The maps submitted by the parties reflect that there are residential neighborhoods to the east of McLindon Road, north of Route 6 and south of Interstate 80. intermodal facility via McLindon Road would have to exit south on Route 6 and then "double back to head north . . . increasing roadway delays, congestion and maintenance costs." Def.'s Ex. P ¶ 90. Mr. Hage also asserts a number of opinions about the negative impact the weight limit ordinance will have on the internal operations of WCL's

facility. See generally Def.'s Ex. P. Minooka's expert, Robert McConaughey, disagrees with Mr. Hage's opinions. See generally Pl.'s Exs. 12, 15. WCL/CN sent Minooka a letter on April 26, 2024 that it said was in response to Minooka's request "that CN explain why we would not apply for local approval of our interstate intermodal terminal facility." Am. Compl., Ex. 15 at 1. WCL/CN asserted, in substance, that federal law—specifically, the ICC Termination Act, 49 U.S.C. §10501(b)—confers upon the federal Surface Transportation Board exclusive jurisdiction over rail carrier facilities like the one at issue in this case. WCL asserted that federal law "would preempt any effort to use state or local law—including any sort of permitting or approval process—to prevent the establishment" of its facility. Id. at 2.

WCL also asserted in its letter that the ICCTA "preempts state or local laws if they are applied in a discriminatory manner." Id.

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Bluebook (online)
Village of Minooka v. Wisconsin Central Ltd., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-minooka-v-wisconsin-central-ltd-ilnd-2026.