Village of Woodridge v. Board of Education of Community High School District 99

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 26, 2010
Docket2-08-0593 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Village of Woodridge v. Board of Education of Community High School District 99 (Village of Woodridge v. Board of Education of Community High School District 99) 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
Village of Woodridge v. Board of Education of Community High School District 99, (Ill. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

No. 2-08-0593 Filed: 7-26-10

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

SECOND DISTRICT

THE VILLAGE OF WOODRIDGE, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of Du Page County. Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) v. ) No. 05--ED--64 ) THE BOARD OF EDUCATION OF ) COMMUNITY HIGH SCHOOL ) DISTRICT 99, ) ) Defendant-Appellant ) ) (The County Board of School Trustees of ) Honorable Du Page County and Unknown Owners, ) John T. Elsner, Defendants). ) Judge, Presiding.

JUSTICE HUDSON delivered the opinion of the court:

Defendant, the Board of Education of Community High School District 99 (hereinafter

defendant or the district), appeals the Du Page County circuit court's order denying the traverse and

motion to dismiss1 (hereinafter the traverse) it filed in response to an eminent domain proceeding

initiated by plaintiff, the Village of Woodridge (hereinafter plaintiff or the village), as well as the

court's denial of its subsequent motion to reconsider that order. The district also appeals the denial

1 A traverse and motion to dismiss is a procedural device that the target of an eminent domain

proceeding may file to challenge the right of the condemnor to take the property at issue. Village of

Cary v. Trout Valley Ass'n, 282 Ill. App. 3d 165, 169 (1996). No. 2--08--0593

of its posttrial motion. The district raises a number of issues relating to both the traverse and the

valuation of the property taken by the village. A number of school districts have filed a brief as amici

curiae, which we have reviewed and considered. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

The instant case commenced when the village filed an eminent domain action on May 23,

2005. The village sought to acquire a parcel (hereinafter the property) adjacent to its village hall and

owned by the district. The district, whose territorial boundaries lie within seven municipalities,

acquired most of the property in 1967 in a voluntary, negotiated sale. It subsequently acquired the

balance of the property in 1995 in a land swap with the village. When the parties made this

agreement in 1995, they included a provision that would require the village to grant the district a

special-use permit for the property. In 1971, the district and the Woodridge Park District entered

into an agreement under which the park district leased the property for park and recreation purposes.

The lease was for a one-year term, and it automatically renewed each year. The district could

terminate the lease with 60 days' notice.

On August 15, 2005, the district adopted a resolution regarding its need for the property. The

resolution provided, inter alia, that the property is "necessary, suitable and convenient for school

facilities"; that the taking "will materially impair or interfere with the uses already existing, such

current uses including but not limited to providing for outdoor educational opportunities and the real

estate needs of the district;" that the district will be deprived of the ability to use the property in the

future for school facilities; that the district will not realize full value of the property in an eminent

domain action; that the district will not be able to purchase comparable property with the proceeds

of an eminent domain action; and that the "future taxable value of the [p]roperty will be lost." The

-2- No. 2--08--0593

district asserts that we owe deference to the legislative findings it made in the course of adopting the

resolution.

During the hearing on the traverse, the following evidence was presented. The village first

called Julia Beckman, who was the president of the district. She acknowledged that the district had

solicited bids for the property, through a company called Newcastle. She agreed that the district had

"potential uses for the property," and she explained that the district had drawn up plans for athletic

fields. It had "studied various uses for the property," but it "had no money." Previously, it had

planned to build a third high school on the site, but that was not an "immediate option" due to the

failure of a referendum in 1997. She agreed with the village's counsel that "there weren't any

particular plans in place and there were just potential uses for the property in May 2005." Beckman

was unaware of any school-sponsored educational activity that had ever taken place on the property,

though one was planned for the summer of 2007. To her knowledge, the property had never been

used for any classes. She testified that the district lacked classroom space, as the State continued to

mandate new classes. Beckman stated that she was aware of the opinion of the district's

superintendent that the district could accommodate "a few hundred more students." She agreed that,

"narrowly construed," the opinion was valid. She was also aware of Dr. John Casarda's demographic

report, which concluded that enrollment was at a peak and would decline through 2020. She was

aware of no study that concluded otherwise. Beckman further testified that the district would be

unable to purchase an acceptable replacement if it received the fair market value of the property. On

the other hand, she agreed that the proceeds from a sale of the property could be used to meet

"significant needs for capital improvement." The district had considered selling the property.

-3- No. 2--08--0593

During cross-examination, Beckman testified that she was a realtor and was familiar with the

local market. Though the district considered selling the property, it had never decided to do so. It

had never determined that the property was "surplus." The property itself could not be replaced, as

there was no comparable property within the district. She also testified that, in 1997, the district had

voted to construct a third high school on the property. She noted that the mere fact that a third high

school was not currently a possibility did not foreclose building one in the future. Beckman explained

that the reason bids were solicited for the property in 2005 was to ascertain its value. She believed

that it was better to solicit bids than to simply get an appraisal, because the property was unique and

previous appraisals "just didn't seem to capture its uniqueness." During redirect examination,

Beckman agreed that the effect of the condemnation concerned "the future use of the property"--uses

that "may or may not occur." She acknowledged that her real estate practice consisted primarily of

single-family residences and that she had never sold a parcel the size of the property. Further, one

of the purposes of having Newcastle determine the value of the property was to see if it was high

enough to warrant a sale.

The village next called Dr. David Eblen, the superintendent of the district. Eblen denied that

the district had no intention of seeking another referendum to construct a third high school, though

he agreed that the district had no specific plan to do so as of May 2005. Previously, there had been

three similar referendums, the most recent occurring in 1997, and all three had failed. Eblen agreed

that the district did not have the resources to fund such a project. Moreover, the district had never

made a decision to develop the property or otherwise use it to meet the district's needs. Eblen

acknowledged that the district solicited bids for the property to establish a value so the district could

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