165 N.E. 143 | Ill. | 1929
Appellant, Fred K. Nimpfer, filed his bill, amended bill, supplemental bill and second amended bill in the circuit court of Lake county praying for an injunction to restrain appellees, the village of Fox Lake and certain of its officials, from opening a street or roadway in a certain subdivision in the village. A temporary injunction was issued. Appellees appeared and moved the court to dissolve the injunction for matters apparent upon the face of the bill. The motion was heard and a decree entered dissolving the injunction and dismissing appellant's bill for want of equity, from which decree an appeal has been perfected to this court.
Appellant's amended bill, among other things, alleged that he purchased two lots from Angenettie Ostrander in accordance with a purported plat recorded by her; that said property consists of a large family hotel, surrounded by well-kept lawns and shade trees, and fronts on Fox lake; that between said lots the supposed plat showed a roadway, which had never been opened to the public and which served only the two lots belonging to him and which was of no *48 benefit to any other lot owners in the subdivision; that the roadway had never been surveyed or staked off, and it would be impossible to know where it crossed the land of complainant without being surveyed and staked off; that he and his grantor had maintained a fence along the boundaries of his property and across the supposed roadway for a long number of years and that he had been in the actual possession of the disputed tract since he purchased his two lots; that the plat of the purported subdivision had endorsed on it, over the signature of the board of trustees of the village of Fox Lake, that the plat was approved by the president of the board of trustees of the village; that there was no legal meeting ever held by the trustees of the village of Fox Lake at which this action was taken; that before official action on the part of the village of Fox Lake was taken to accept the plat the complainant and Angenettie Ostrander withdrew their offer to dedicate the roadway in question, and that the withdrawal was evidenced by fencing the roadway against the use of the public and notifying said officials that the offer to dedicate the roadway had been withdrawn, by refusing to allow the public to use said roadway and by the conveyance to appellant by deed from Angenettie Ostrander to him, recorded in the recorder's office of Lake county, of the strip in question, by which he became the owner thereof; that the supposed plat was informal and not in compliance with the statute of the State relating to plats, and did not constitute a statutory plat of the subdivision for the reason that no permanent monument from which future surveys were to be made was indicated thereon; that before the village of Fox Lake had in any way attempted to accept the plat the designer of the plat conveyed by various deeds property located in the supposed subdivision; that he has obtained the ill-will of certain members of the board, of trustees of the village and that such members are attempting to open up the roadway for that reason, only; that the board of trustees of the village *49 has never accepted the plat by legal official action, by use, improvement of the streets or by taking possession of the streets of the subdivision; that there has been no official action taken by the village board to cause the roadway to be opened, and that on the strip of land there are numerous large trees and shrubs, which are of great value to him in connection with the use of his property as a summer hotel.
The motion to dissolve the injunction and to dismiss the bill operated as a demurrer to the bill, and the only question to be determined here is whether or not the bill on its face contained a sufficient statement of ultimate facts to entitle appellant to an injunction against appellees, assuming the facts stated in the bill to be true.
Where a municipality undertakes to take possession of a street to which it has no right the proper remedy is a bill for injunction. (Rose v. Village of Elizabethtown,
When the bill in the instant case is tested by the rules laid down in the cases cited and other similar cases, we find that it states sufficient ultimate facts to require it to be answered by appellees, and that the court could not say from the face of the bill, as a matter of law, that appellant was not entitled to the relief sought.
The decree of the circuit court of Lake county is reversed and the cause remanded to that court for further proceedings not inconsistent with the views herein expressed.
Reversed and remanded. *52