delivered the opinion of the court:
The circuit court of Sangamon County held that the Administrative Review Act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1969, ch. 110, par. 265, et seq.), was not available to review the refusal by the City of Springfield of plaintiff’s petition to grant conditional permitted uses to operate a Lincoln Era Wax Museum and Gift Shop in the Lincoln Home area and to waive all set-back, side-yard, rear-yard and off-street parking requirements. After appropriate hearings before the Zoning Hoard of Appeals and the Historical Sites Commission, the City Council followed the respective recommendations of such agencies and denied the petitions. Plaintiff filed a four-count suit. Counts II, III and IV seek relief by way of declaratory judgment. The city has answered and these three counts are at issue and reposing in the trial court. Count I sought relief by way of administrative review. In a carefully considered opinion, the trial court dismissed Count I on the motion of the city and entered judgment. Such dismissal was based on the conclusion that the action of the City Council was legislative and not administrative, and thus no appeal under the Administrative Review Act would lie. The court likewise found that no just reason existed for delaying the appeal and it was taken directly to the Supreme Court. That court transferred it to us for decision.
The narrow issue before us is whether the action of the City Council was administrative in law or in fact and thus reviewable under the Administrative Review Act, or whether it is legislative and not subject to such review under that Act. For the factual background of the litigation, reference is made to our opinions in Rebman v. City of Springfield,
In Count 1, the plaintiff charges that the statutory under-pinnings for the actions taken by the city (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1969, ch. 24, pars. 11 — 13—4 and 5), are unconstitutional in authorizing a city of less than 500,000 population to reserve to itself the right to pass on zoning variations, while in municipalities of over 500,000 population zoning variations are for a board of appeals whose actions are made final by the statute and subject to administrative review. Secondly, these paragraphs are unconstitutional because par. 11 — 13—5 permits municipalities of less than 500,000 population the right by its own legislative fiat to determine whether it will reserve to itself the right to determine variations and conditional uses, while another municipality in the same population category may, if it cares to do so, make zoning variations by action of the Board of Appeals final and thus make available to their citizens a review of such action under the Administrative Review Act. Lastly it is asserted that the act of the City Council in declaring their approval or disapproval of conditional uses and variances makes the City Council the final arbiter of the matter and converts this legislative body into an administrative body within the purview of the Administrative Review Act.
We turn our attention first to the last proposition. If we accept the conclusion that the action of the City Council is administrative rather than legislative, then the constitutional questions fade into insignificance.
The plaintiff relies heavily on Appeal of Clements, Court of Appeals of Ohio,
In his brief the plaintiff urges the adoption of the rule enunciated in the Ohio opinion and in the special concurring opinion in Ward. The plaintiff suggests that Illinois should now align itself with those States holding that the act of the City Council here is administrative rather than legislative. The difficulty is that plaintiff seeks total waiver of set-back and parking restrictions while the ordinance limits such reduction to 10%. A new ordinance is required and the views expressed in the special concurrence in Ward do not apply. In Artz v. Commercial National Bank of Peoria,
We are not persuaded that the challenged sections of the statute and the Springfield zoning ordinances adopted thereunder violate Art. IV, sec. 2, of the Illinois Constitution of 1970 which prohibits class legislation nor is it a denial to the citizens of Springfield of either due process or equal protection of the law. As stated in City of Danville v. Industrial Com.,
Judgment affirmed.
TRAPP, P. J., and SIMKINS, J„ concur.
