Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiffs appealed from the order of the circuit court of Cook County dismissing their action for a declaratory judgment and injunctive relief against the defendants, the Chicago Park District and its commissioners, who are sued in both their individual and official capacities. The appellate court affirmed (
In their complaint plaintiffs alleged that they are citizens of the State of Illinois, residents of the city of Chicago, and taxpayers of the Chicago Park District. Plaintiffs alleged further that defendants deliberately and knowingly began and were continuing the unlawful construction of a golf driving range in Jackson Park in the city of Chicago, that such actions of defendants were contrary to the duties imposed upon them by law, that defendants were obligated to restore the site to its previous condition, and to reimburse the Chicago Park District the amount of costs to the park district for the construction and removal of the golf driving range.
The facts are adequately stated in the appellate court opinion and will be reviewed here only to the extent necessary
Plaintiffs sought a declaratory judgment that construction of the driving range was unlawful because of the park district’s failure to receive prior approval from the plan commission pursuant to the lakefront protection ordinance (Chicago Municipal Code sec. 194B—1 et seq.),
In affirming the judgment the appellate court held that the defendant park district “exercises plenary and exclusive jurisdiction over its parks” (
The relevant portions of section 11—12—4.1 of the Illinois Municipal Code and the lakefront protection ordinance provide:
“Whenever a municipality of more than 500,000 population has created a plan commission pursuant to the provisions of this Division 12, every plan, design or other proposal by any public body or agency *** which changes the use of any real property owned or occupied by any public body or agency or the location of any improvement thereon within the territorial limits of the municipality, shall be referred to the plan commission *** to authorize such changes ***. *** A report that any such plan, design,or other proposal is not in conformity with the long range planning objectives of the municipality, or the official plan for the municipality *** shall not bar the public body or agency having jurisdiction over such real property or improvement thereon from thereafter making such changes ***.” Ill. Rev. Stat. 1979, ch. 24, par. 11—12-4.1.
“It shall be unlawful for any physical change, whether temporary or permanent, public or private, to be undertaken, including, but not limited to, *** construction of any kind, within the Lake Michigan and Chicago Lakefront Protection District, *** without first having secured the approval therefor from the Chicago Plan Commission ***.” Chicago Municipal Code sec. 194B—5.1.
For the most part the briefs of the parties consist of contentions and arguments concerning the applicability of the lakefront protection ordinance and section 11—12—4.1 of the Illinois Municipal Code and which of them governs the decision of this appeal. In the posture of this case, and on this record, we need not and do not decide these questions. Both the circuit and appellate courts decided that the construction of the driving range was a proper park purpose, and we agree. Further, we agree with the appellate court that under the standards formulated in Paepcke v. Public Building Com. (1970),
Having concluded that the construction of the driving range was a proper park purpose it is apparent that if any impropriety occurred in connection with the project, it stemmed not from actions which exceeded the powers of the defendant commissioners and park district, but from an alleged failure to comply with the ordinances of the city of Chicago. The city of Chicago is not a party to this action, and plaintiffs do not assert that they have standing to act for the city. We know of no authority which gives these plaintiffs standing to seek an order requiring defendants who have taken action consistent with their statutory
For the reasons stated the judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
Many years ago, Daniel Burnham advised the Chicago city fathers: “Make no little plans.” The court’s decision dooms the city to shortsighted and parochial visions of the Chicago lakefront, much of which is bordered by city parks. Jackson Park, the subject of this litigation, was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, recognized as the founder of American landscape architecture, in accordance with Burnham’s directive. It is today one of the State’s great urban natural resources, and it is imperiled by the court’s decision. The majority’s decision completely ignores the statutory scheme created by the State and the city to safeguard that resource. I fear that this can only result in the progressive loss of the park as Olmsted envisioned it, as well as the balkanization of the shores of Lake Michigan contrary to the grand vision of Burnham and the wishes of the people as expressed through the legislature and the Chicago city council.
Section 194B—5.1 of the Chicago Municipal Code (the Lakefront Protection Ordinance), adopted on October 24, 1973, requires all proposed physical changes within the Chicago Lakefront Protection District, including Jackson Park, to receive the approval of the Chicago plan commission. The basic issue in this case is the impact of that ordinance in light of a 1961 statute which effectively makes the approval of plan commissions merely advisory with respect to any “public body or agency” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1979, ch. 24, par. 11—12—4.1), a 1933 statute which charges the Chicago Park District with management of the parks within that city (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1979, ch. 105, par. 333.1), a 1963 statute which permits municipalities to designate certain areas as having historical, community or aesthetic
It is a basic tenet of statutory construction that, to give effect to the intent of the legislature, two statutes which relate to the same subject matter should be read in pari materia so far as it is possible to do so. (Gillespie v. Riley Management Corp. (1974),
The park district and the appellate court attempt to avoid this result by pointing to the statement in the Inter-Agency Referral Act that “[a] report [by a plan commission] that any *** plan, design, or other proposal [by a public body or agency] is not in conformity with the long range planning objectives of the municipality, or the official plan for the municipality *** shall not bar the public body or agency having jurisdiction over [the] real property or improvement thereon from thereafter making such changes ***.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1979, ch. 24, par. 11—12—4.1.) I do not believe that this provision leads to the result urged by the park district. The 1963 act, from which I have quoted extensively and which authorized the Lakefront Protection Ordinance, was enacted two years after the Inter-Agency Referral Act, and it deals specifically with preservation of historic or aesthetic resources, while the Inter-Agency Referral Act deals only generally with plan commissions and long-range planning objectives, without regard to the type of goal that is sought to be furthered. My interpretation, that the 1963 act controls the Inter-Agency Referral Act where the two contrary provisions overlap, follows from two principles of law: First, the rule that “[w]here there are two statutory provisions, one of which is general and designed to apply to cases generally, and the other is particular and relates only to one subject, the particular provision must prevail and must be treated as an exception to the general provision, especially where the particular provision is later in time of enactment”
I also believe that the Lakefront Protection Ordinance is given a sound foundation, independently of the 1963 statute, by the constitutional grant of home rule powers to the city of Chicago; this alternative reason should control this case, irrespective of the provisions of the Inter-Agency Referral Act. The 1970 Constitution vests home rule units with the power to “perform any function pertaining to its government and affairs including, but not limited to, the power to regulate for the protection of the public *** welfare.” (Ill. Const. 1970, art. VII, sec. 6(a).) It is not disputed that the ordinance at issue here comes within this power to regulate. Rather, the park district and the appellate court maintain that under City of Des Plaines v. Metropolitan Sanitary District (1974),
Because the Lakefront Protection Ordinance governs this case, I believe that the majority’s simple statement that a driving range is a “proper park purpose” is a grossly inadequate response to plaintiffs’ concerns. It may be that a driving range is usually a proper park purpose, but the question in this case is whether it is a proper activity in Jackson Park, given the concern the city has expressed in its ordinance for the integrity of its lakefront. It may be that the answer in this case should be in the affirmative, but that is for the Chicago plan commission, not the park district or this court, to decide. Were it otherwise, as the majority appears to have decided, the park district would be able to term virtually any development it wishes a “proper park purpose” without regard to the unique features of Jackson Park and our lakefront, merely by pointing
I do not understand the significance of the majority’s brief statement that the plaintiffs lacked standing to bring this action, as it seems to have addressed the merits of the controversy anyway, but the statement puzzles me and should receive some response. While parties are generally not permitted to litigate where they have no “personal stake in the outcome of the controversy [so] as to assure that concrete adverseness which sharpens the presentation of issues” (Baker v. Carr (1962),
Under the Lakefront Protection Ordinance, the people of Chicago charged the plan commission with the duties of conserving the priceless natural resource of Lake Michigan, its water and shoreline, promoting access to the shoreline and expanding the quality and quantity of the lakefront parks. In the face of this directive, the majority decision creates isolated pockets of the lakefront occupied by public parks which it cuts adrift from the comprehensive
The park district should not be treated as a sort of duchy separate from the city. The use and development of Chicago’s lakefront parks, as well as the lakefront itself, should be subject to the will and desires of all the people of Chicago through the expression of their city council and plan commission.
