Wheeling Trust & Savings Bank v. County of Lake

333 N.E.2d 705, 31 Ill. App. 3d 636, 1975 Ill. App. LEXIS 2837
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 2, 1975
Docket73-418
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 333 N.E.2d 705 (Wheeling Trust & Savings Bank v. County of Lake) 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
Wheeling Trust & Savings Bank v. County of Lake, 333 N.E.2d 705, 31 Ill. App. 3d 636, 1975 Ill. App. LEXIS 2837 (Ill. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

Mr. PRESIDING JUSTICE SEIDENFELD

delivered the opinion of the court:

• The County of Lake as defendant and James R. Mulvihill and Carl E, Russell as intervening petitioners join in this appeal from a judgment declaring that the County Zoning Ordinance classifying the use of plaintiffs’ property as single-family residential is invalid as applied. The judgment order permits the plaintiffs to develop the property for an automobile service station, a convenience food center and other related service stores. The defendants and intervening petitioners. contend that the plaintiffs did not sustain their burden of proof by clear and convincing evidence that the zoning ordinance as applied to their property is arbitrary and unreasonable. The defendant County additionally contends that the plaintiffs did not exhaust administrative remedies and therefore may not resort to declaratory judgment procedures.

The failure of the property owners to exhaust administrative remedies is not a substantial issue in our view. Hannon Hendrix and Ms wife (hereinafter, Hendrix) as title holders had requested.rezoning of the property in 1969 and relief was refused after a public hearing before the Zoning Board of Appeals. The denial was confirmed by the Lake County Board of Supervisors. In 1970 Hendrix sold the property under contract to the Wheeling Bank. The bank in turn entered into an agreement to sell to the Dominion Development Company, subject to rezoning. In 1972 Dominion applied for rezoning which was again denied. Hendrix and Ms wife were in title when the suit was brought and were added as party plaintiffs.

The County argues that the fact that Hendrix, as title holder, did not participate in the 1972 zoning application constitutes a failure to exhaust administrative remedies prefatory to seeking judicial relief. The argument must fail.. The purpose of the exhaustion doctrine is to afford local authorities the opportunity to correct errors, as a matter of judicial policy and not as a jurisdictional question. (Bass v. City of Joliet (1973), 10 Ill.App.3d 860, 865; Tomasek v. City of Des Plaines (1975), 26 Ill.App.3d 586, 595.) Here the local authorities twice had the opportunity to correct any error in the zoning of the subject site and further appeal to the local body would be a useless act. (See Van Laten v. City of Chicago (1963), 28 Ill.2d 157, 159; cf. La Salle National Bank v. City of Evanston (1974), 57 Ill.2d 415, 427.) There is no reason therefore to apply the doctrine as a bar to the- plaintiffs’ suit.

The subject property is a vacant parcel of land located at the southeast comer of Deerfield Road and Saunders Road having a frontage of approximately 232.16 feet on Saunders Road and 327.58 feet on Deerfield Road and containing approximately 52,000 square feet. It is located about a quarter of a mile west of Toll Road Interchange 1-94. Saunders Road runs in a north and south direction while Deerfield Road runs generally east and west. The intersection has an average 24-hour traffic count of approximately 11,000-15,000 cars and is governed by four-way stop signs.

The property is classified under the County Zoning Ordinance for single-family residential use. Immediately to the east and adjacent to the subject property fronting on Deerfield Road and west of 1-94 is a 10-acre vacant tract of land which has been owned by School District 110 for more than 10 years. Immediately east of the school property but west of the toll road there are 16 homes located in a residential subdivision of 1-acre lots served by septic tanks and individual wells. These homes do not, however, face on Deerfield Road.

Immediately to the north of the subject property on the north side of Deerfield Road lies the Village of Riverwoods. All the property in the village both east and west of Saunders Road is zoned for single-family residential use. Directly across the street from the subject property commencing at the northeast comer of the intersection and continuing east on Deerfield Road is the Village of Riverwoods, a large area of prestigious homes wherein a subdivision known as the Country Club Estates is currently being developed. Diagonally across the street from the subject property, at the northwest comer of the intersection, James Mulvihill, one of the intervening petitioners, lives in a home that he constructed in 1969. The property of Carl Russell, also an intervening petitioner, is located to the north of the Mulvihill property. His home was completed in May of 1971. These homes are set back and face away from the intersection.

Nearby nonresidential uses include Thorngate Golf Club, the fairways of which are located at the southwest comer of the subject intersection and the Thorngate Country Club building, about 400-500 feet south of the subject property which includes a large restaurant, lounge, liquor bar, steam and sauna rooms, club house, swimming pool and parking lot. Further south on Saunders Road the Baxter Laboratories is being developed on a 180-acre site. To the north there are other golf courses, a dog kennel known as the “Orphans of the Storm” and another dog kennel on Riverwoods Road, a short distance north of the subject property.

Harmon Hendrix, testified for the plaintiffs that he had tried to sell the property for residential purposes for over a year without attracting a buyer and that his prior efforts to sell in 1958 and 1959 were also unsuccessful.

Several expert witnesses testified for the plaintiffs. Arthur Sheridan, a land developer who was the president of the Dominion Development Company and the Yale Development Company and also a real estate broker and appraiser, testified that the Riverwoods Country Club Estates on the northwest comer of the intersection faced away from the intersection and was largely oriented toward interior roadways; that the traffic at the intersection of Deerfield and Saunders was increasing and would continue to do so with the advent of Baxter Laboratories. He stated that the subject property was unlike the residential lots on the northwest and northeast comers of the intersection because those properties were serviced by an interior roadway, whereas the subject property fronted only on Deerfield and Saunders Road.

He testified that because of the heightening traffic and the attendant noise at the intersection and because the subject property was only large enough for a single dwelling under the 40,000-square-foot requirement of fire existing zoning ordinance it was simply not suitable for single-family residence development. He gave his opinion that the highest and best use for the site would be a highway oriented business classification. Since there were no local service stations or stores within 1 or more miles west, lVz miles north, 2 miles south, and lVz miles east of the intersection, he stated that the proposed use would be a public benefit as well as a benefit to the value of the subject property.

Rolf Campbell also testified for the plaintiffs as an expert witness with a background in city planning and experience as a zoning consultant. He noted that Deerfield Road was a four-lane facility from the toll road west until it nan-owed to two-lanes approximately 200 feet from its intersection with Saunders Road. He said that the subject property took its character almost exclusively from Deerfield and Saunders Road.

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333 N.E.2d 705, 31 Ill. App. 3d 636, 1975 Ill. App. LEXIS 2837, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeling-trust-savings-bank-v-county-of-lake-illappct-1975.