delivered the opinion of the court:
Thе Chicago Land Clearance Commission brought this eminent domain action in the superior court of Cook County to acquire a parcel of real estate located in the 37th-Cottage Grove area on the South side of Chicago. The area had been designated a slum and blighted one, within the meaning of the Blighted Areas Redevelopment Act of 1947. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1961, chap. 67 par. 63 et seq.) Shortly after the complaint was filed the commission was dissolved and its functiоns were transferred to the Urban Renewal Department of Chicago. The city has now been substituted as the party plaintiff herein.
The owners moved to dismiss on the ground that there are no rеdevelopment plans and that the particular real estate sought to be acquirеd in this action is not a slum and blighted property. The court sustained the motion, observing that the city hаd failed to show what use was to be made of the area after the structures were torn dоwn. The city has appealed directly to this court under section 12 of the Eminent Domain Act. Ill. Rеv. Stat. 1961, chap. 47, par. 12.
The property in question is located at 616 East 35th Street and consists of an old two-story brick house containing 10 rooms. It is not a slum and blighted building within the meaning of the statute, but is situatеd within an area designated as such and containing some 300 other parcels of real еstate. To reverse the order of the superior court the city contends, first, that the naturе of a proposed redevelopment plan, if any, is irrelevant and that a public purpose for the acquisition is accomplished by the slum clearance itself. The position is well taken. This court has recognized several times that a clearance of the slum area is the public purpose for which the land is condemned. Our most recent expression of the rule may be found in City of Chicage v. Zwick Co.
The owners contend that the court wаs nevertheless correct in dismissing the action because it was admitted that their particulаr property is not slum and blighted. There is no merit in the contention. In this kind of case the fact that thеre may be some sound buildings in the slum and blighted area is no defense to the proceedings. Property may be taken which, standing by itself, is unoffending, for the test is based on the condition of the areа as a whole. (Berman v. Parker,
We have carefully considered the arguments advanced to sustain the order of the superior court and find none of them valid. Fоr the reasons stated the court erred in dismissing the cause. The order is reversed and the cause is remanded with directions to proceed in accordance with the views expressed herein.
Reversed and remanded.
