*1 Illinois Official Reports
Appellate Court
Mazal v. Arias
,
Appellate Court VICTOR MAZAL and ELIATH MAZAL, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. Caption JOHANNA ARIAS and MARCO PINTO, Defendants-Appellees. District & No. First District, First Division
No. 1-19-0660 Filed December 16, 2019
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 18-CH-006279; the Hon. Sanjay Tailor, Judge, presiding. Review Judgment Affirmed.
Counsel on Jonathan Lubin, of Skokie, for appellants.
Appeal
Scott B. Mueller, of Stinson LLP, of St. Louis, Missouri (Anne J. Kelly, of counsel), for appellees.
Panel PRESIDING JUSTICE GRIFFIN delivered the judgment of the
court, with opinion.
Justices Hyman and Walker concurred in the judgment and opinion. *2 OPINION
¶ 1 On May 16, 2018, plaintiffs Victor and Eliath Mazal filed a two-count verified complaint
against defendants Macro Pinto and Johanna Arias seeking to (1) quiet title to a 16-foot-wide strip of land that runs between the parties’ properties in Lincolnwood, Illinois, and (2) enjoin defendants from building a new fence on the property. Plaintiffs’ claims were based on alternative theories of adverse possession and a prescriptive easement. The trial court initially entered a temporary restraining order in plaintiffs’ favor but later
dismissed their verified complaint with prejudice pursuant to section 2-619(a)(9) of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-619(a)(9) (West 2018)). The trial court based its decision on the following findings: (1) the 16-foot strip was statutorily dedicated property held by the Village of Lincolnwood in trust for public use as an alleyway; (2) the 20-year limitations period on the recovery of lands did not begin to run until 2008, when the Village of Lincolnwood vacated its interest in the property; and (3) plaintiffs could prove no set of facts establishing their use or possession of the property for the required 20 years. Plaintiffs’ motion to reconsider was denied. Plaintiffs appeal and ask us to reverse the trial court’s judgment. Plaintiffs contend that the
limitations period on the recovery of lands ran against the Village of Lincolnwood and they can satisfy the 20-year limitations period because (1) the 16-foot strip never functioned as a public alleyway and (2) alleyways do not serve a public use. For the following reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County. BACKGROUND On October 5, 2016, plaintiffs purchased a home located at 6618 N. Monticello Avenue in
Lincolnwood, Illinois. After defendants purchased the abutting property on April 26, 2018, plaintiffs filed a two-count verified complaint against defendants in the circuit court of Cook County. In their lawsuit filed on May 16, 2018, plaintiffs sought to quiet title to a 16-foot-wide strip of land that ran through the parties’ backyards and to enjoin defendants from interfering with the property. Plaintiffs’ claims were based on alternative theories of adverse possession and a prescriptive easement. Plaintiffs alleged that when they purchased their home, a chain link fence divided the
parties’ backyard property lines and the 16-foot strip was on their side of the property. Plaintiffs built a play set for their children within two feet of the fence and claimed that their use and possession of the premises spanned “thirty years.” Though they acknowledged that a “decades- old” survey of the land showed that the 16-foot strip was a dedicated public alleyway, plaintiffs alleged that construction of the alleyway “never occurred, and there is no such alleyway running between the properties.” On May 24, 2018, the trial court entered a temporary restraining order in plaintiffs’ favor,
and on August 15, 2018, defendants filed a combined motion to dismiss ( id. § 2-619.1) the action pursuant to sections 2-615 ( id. § 2-615) and 2-619(a)(9) ( id. § 2-619(a)(9)) of the Code of Civil Procedure. Section 2-615 allows a defendant to seek the dismissal of a claim on the basis that it fails to state a cause of action. § 2-615. Section 2-619(a)(9) provides for dismissal when a claim is barred or defeated by an affirmative matter. § 2-619(a)(9). *3 Defendants advanced several bases for dismissing plaintiffs’ verified complaint pursuant to section 2-615, but the crux of their combined motion was that an affirmative matter defeated the action altogether under section 2-619(a)(9). Defendants argued that the 16-foot strip was statutorily dedicated to the Village of Lincolnwood for use as a public alleyway and, as a matter of law, the Village of Lincolnwood was not subject to the 20-year limitations period on the recovery of lands embodied in section 13-101 of the Limitations Act (735 ILCS 5/13-101 (West 2018)). Defendants claimed that the limitations period started to run in 2008, when the Village of Lincolnwood vacated its interest in the property through the adoption of a municipal ordinance (Ordinance No. 2008-2787), and plaintiffs could not establish their use or possession of the property for the required 20 years. Defendants attached several public records to their combined motion to dismiss, including
a copy of the original “Lincoln Ave. Gardens” subdivision plat, dated February 11, 1927, and a copy of Ordinance No. 2008-2787. The plat showed the proposed “public alleyway” running through the parties’ properties and expressly provided that it was “approved by the President of the Board of Trustees of the Village of Tessville” (Lincolnwood was formerly named Tessville). Ordinance No. 2008-2787 contained an express finding of the board of trustees that the vacation of the 16-foot strip would serve the “public interest” and indicated that upon vacation, title to the property would vest in the abutting landowners in equal eight-foot portions. Plaintiffs filed a response, arguing that the limitations period in section 13-101 ran against
the Village of Lincolnwood some time prior to 2008 because (1) the 16-foot strip never functioned as a public alleyway and (2) public alleyways do not serve a public use. Plaintiffs claimed they could satisfy the 20-year time period and asked the trial court to deny defendant’s combined motion to dismiss. On January 23, 2019, the trial court dismissed plaintiffs’ verified complaint with prejudice
pursuant to section 2-619(a)(9). The trial court found that the 16-foot strip was statutorily dedicated property, the limitations period in section 13-101 began to run in 2008, and it was “impossible” for plaintiffs to satisfy the required 20-year period. As part of its dismissal order, the trial court vacated the temporary restraining order. Plaintiffs filed a motion to reconsider on February 2, 2019, claiming “new evidence”
showed that the Village of Lincolnwood expressly abandoned its interests in the property prior to 2008. The alleged new evidence, which plaintiffs attached to their motion, included (1) a copy of a “request for board action,” dated January 17, 2008, that plaintiff obtained from the community development director of the Village of Lincolnwood (Request) and (2) a copy of the minutes of a meeting held by the president and board of trustees of the Village of Lincolnwood on January 18, 2008 (Minutes). The Request identified certain alleys (including the alleyway at issue) as “paper alleys,” meaning they “exist only on paper, but in reality have not functioned as public alleyways” and contained a recommendation that the board should take action to vacate the alleyways. The Minutes stated that the property was vacated because it was “never improved for public use.” The trial court denied plaintiffs’ motion to reconsider on March 7, 2019. Plaintiffs appeal and ask us to reverse the trial court’s section 2-619 dismissal of their
verified complaint. Plaintiffs maintain that the limitations period in section 13-101 began to run against the Village of Lincolnwood some time prior to 2008 and they can satisfy the 20- *4 year period such that the dismissal of their verified complaint was not warranted. ¶ 14 JURISDICTION On January 23, 2019, the trial court granted defendants’ combined motion ( id. § 2-619.1)
and dismissed plaintiffs’ verified complaint with prejudice pursuant to section 2-619(a)(9). The trial court declined to reconsider its judgment on March 7, 2019. Plaintiffs timely filed a notice of appeal on April 3, 2019. Accordingly, we have jurisdiction over this appeal. Ill. S. Ct. R. 301 (eff. Feb. 1, 1994); R. 303(a)(1) (eff. July 1, 2017). ANALYSIS The trial court dismissed plaintiffs’ verified complaint with prejudice pursuant to section
2-619(a)(9) and determined that a section 2-615 analysis was therefore “not necessary.” We
review the dismissal of a complaint pursuant to either section 2-615 or section 2-619(a)(9)
de novo
and may affirm the trial court’s judgment on any basis in the record.
Kean v. Wal-
Mart Stores, Inc.
,
admits all well-pleaded facts and all reasonable inferences therefrom, and asserts an affirmative
matter outside the complaint that bars or defeats the action.
Reynolds v. Jimmy John’s
Enterprises, LLC
,
into section 13-101, which sets a 20-year statute of limitation on the recovery of lands.
Joiner
v. Janssen
,
public.
J&A Cantore, LP v. Village of Villa Park
,
plaintiff claimed to have adversely possessed property that was statutorily dedicated to Village
of Elmhurst for use as a public street.
Id.
¶ 29. The plaintiff argued in part, as plaintiffs do here,
that the property could be adversely possessed because it never functioned as a public street
and therefore, served no public use. ¶ 84. The court rejected the argument and reasoned as
follows: “[W]hen Elmhurst accepted the dedication of its portion of the disputed property, it
was for a public use. This public use continues to color the use of Elmhurst’s portion of the
disputed property, because it remains a portion of a platted, dedicated, and accepted public
street, even if it has not been developed as a street.” ¶ 89.
J&A Cantore
rejected the
argument raised by plaintiffs here, that a municipal entity must develop statutorily dedicated
property or risk losing it in an adverse possession lawsuit brought by a private citizen.
The public alleyway here is no different from the public street in
J&A Cantore
; title to both
properties vested in fee to the public pursuant to a statutory dedication, and they were both
held in trust for public use by municipal entities. See
General Auto Service Station v. Maniatis
328 Ill. App. 3d 537, 544 (2002) (a statutory dedication vested fee to the premises in the
public);
Emalfarb v. Krater
,
dedicated public alleyway.
J&A Cantore
,
complied with in order to complete a statutory dedication (see
Bigelow v. City of Rolling
Meadows
,
a statutorily dedicated public alleyway does not constitute abandonment. We recognize that a
village or municipality may be estopped from asserting its right to a platted street, if for
example, there was a “long period of non-use and permanent buildings or improvements have
been constructed upon the land in good faith” (see
Zemple v. Butler
,
Lincolnwood, and plaintiff can prove no set of facts that would entitle them to relief. The trial court’s section 2-619(a)(9) dismissal of plaintiffs’ verified complaint was warranted. The trial *7 court also did not abuse its discretion when it denied plaintiffs’ motion to reconsider. The statements contained in the document attached to plaintiffs’ motion (the Request and Minutes) merely recognized that the property never functioned as an alleyway. As already discussed, that fact is immaterial. CONCLUSION Accordingly, we affirm. Affirmed.
