Wakeland v. City of Urbana

776 N.E.2d 1194, 267 Ill. Dec. 543
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 19, 2002
Docket4-01-0991
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 776 N.E.2d 1194 (Wakeland v. City of Urbana) 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
Wakeland v. City of Urbana, 776 N.E.2d 1194, 267 Ill. Dec. 543 (Ill. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

776 N.E.2d 1194 (2002)
267 Ill.Dec. 543

Howard L. WAKELAND and Craig Wakeland, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
The CITY OF URBANA, Illinois, a Municipal Corporation, Defendant-Appellee (Daniel Folk and W. Randall Kangas, Intervenors-Appellees).

No. 4-01-0991.

Appellate Court of Illinois, Fourth District.

July 26, 2002.
As Modified Upon Denial of Rehearing September 19, 2002.

*1197 Glenn A. Stanko (argued), Rawles, O'Byrne, Stanko & Kepley, P.C., Champaign, for Howard L. Wakeland.

Stephen Holz, Assistant City Attorney (argued), Jack Waaler, City Attorney, City of Urbana, Legal Division, Urbana, for City of Urbana.

Jeffrey W. Tock, Harrington, Tock & Royse, Champaign, for Daniel Folk.

OPINION MODIFIED ON DENIAL OF REHEARING

Justice APPLETON delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiffs, Howard and Craig Wakeland, acquired three lots in the 800 block of West Main Street in Urbana, Illinois, intending to tear down the houses on the lots and replace them with an apartment building. Before the Wakelands carried out that plan, the city "down-zoned" the lots, restricting them to single-family residential use. The Wakelands filed a complaint for declaratory judgment against the city, asking the trial court to declare the ordinance unconstitutional as applied to them. Daniel Folk and W. Randall Kangas owned homes near the lots and opposed any further proliferation of apartment buildings in the neighborhood. They filed a petition to intervene, which the trial court granted. After a bench trial, the trial court upheld the ordinance. The Wakelands appeal, arguing that the factors in La Salle National Bank of Chicago v. County of Cook, 12 Ill.2d 40, 46-47, 145 N.E.2d 65, 69 (1957), and Sinclair Pipe Line Co. v. Village of Richton Park, 19 Ill.2d 370, 378, 167 N.E.2d 406, 411 (1960), clearly entitled them to declaratory relief. We disagree with the Wakelands and affirm the trial court's judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

On July 1, 1985, the city created an enterprise zone encompassing the 800 block of West Main Street. The city mailed letters and brochures to local businesspeople, including the Wakelands, encouraging them to invest in the enterprise zone and offering incentives to do so, including financial assistance, exemptions from sales tax on building materials, tax investment credits, and abatement of real estate taxes.

The Wakelands had already built a sixunit apartment building at 813 West Main Street. Intrigued by the incentives the city offered, they conceived the idea of buying the three lots next to 813 West Main Street, tearing down or moving the six-unit apartment building, and building a 48-bedroom (12 unit) apartment building on the four lots. Since 1978, they had built 26 apartment buildings in Champaign-Urbana. Because the University of Illinois was nearby and its north campus was expanding, apartments were in demand. Howard Wakeland made sure that the three lots, 807 1/2, 809, and 811 West Main Street, were zoned as R-4 (mediumdensity, multiple-family residential). In October 1986, the Wakelands bought the three lots.

The Wakelands' six-unit apartment building stood at the southeast corner of the intersection of Main Street and Lincoln Avenue. The three lots were beside it, on the same side of the street. Lincoln Avenue, a four-lane arterial highway, extends north and south through the length of the city and intersects with Interstate *1198 Highway 74 to the north. Main Street extends into the downtown business district some four blocks east of Lincoln Avenue. The downtown begins at roughly the intersection of Main Street and McCullough Avenue. Immediately west of Lincoln Avenue, Main Street enters the university's north campus. One block north of Main Street is Clark Street. One block south is Stoughton Street.

Run-down houses, ranging from 70 to 90 years old, stood on the three lots; former owners had converted them into rental properties. The house at 809 West Main Street was a rooming house. The house at 807 1/2 West Main Street was divided into two apartments, and the house at 811 West Main Street, a large Victorian house, was divided into three apartments. The Wakelands intended to redevelop the lots within three or four years after buying them. In the meantime, they continued to rent the houses to tenants. On May 14, 1995, the house at 811 West Main Street burned down. Although the Wakelands collected $50,000 in insurance for that house, they never built anything in its place. At the time of trial, tenants occupied the other two houses. The Wakelands never built the apartment buildings and never did anything in anticipation of building them, such as preparing diagrams or blueprints, buying building supplies, or applying for a building permit.

Howard Wakeland testified:

"[T]he fact that you buy property right now doesn't mean that you're necessarily going to build on a property. It means that you have put it in your inventory for the future, for development, and you're going to pull it out when you need it."

On October 17, 1988, the city council passed a resolution directing the Urbana planning commission (Commission) to study the "Downtown to Campus Area," a broad tract of 500 acres between the university and downtown, and to recommend how to reconcile the diverse uses of land in the area. Urbana Resolution No. 8889-R8 (eff. October 19, 1988). The mayor approved the ordinance on October 19, 1988. One of the objectives of the study was to "[i]dentify methods for protecting and preserving the character, scale[,] and appearance of the low[-]density residential sections of the [s]tudy [a]rea." Urbana Resolution No. 8889-R8 § 3(6) (eff. October 19, 1988).

In the summer of 1988, the Commission invited the public to come to meetings and identify problems in the current use of land within the study area. In late 1988, the Commission gathered data about the study area, including land uses, zoning, infrastructure, traffic, and the age of structures. The Commission acquired the data by field surveys—walking or driving through the entire area, building by building, block by block—and from public records, such as township assessor records, tax rolls, and utility records. To assess the historical, significance of houses, the Commission relied on a 1985 survey by the Preservation and Conservation Association, a nonprofit group of architects and historians. This survey discussed the age and architectural styles of houses in a large portion of the study area, including Main Street from Lincoln Avenue to downtown. In June 1990, after 30 public meetings, followed by open meetings of the city council, the Commission published its "Downtown to Campus Plan."

The "Downtown to Campus Plan" was an 82-page document setting forth the Commission's findings and recommendations, supported by historical overviews, maps, and housing and population statistics and projections. The document described a proliferation of apartment buildings that threatened the neighborhood's *1199 single-family homes, many of which were old and architecturally significant. According to the documents, the area was losing its historic appearance.

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776 N.E.2d 1194, 267 Ill. Dec. 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wakeland-v-city-of-urbana-illappct-2002.