delivered the opinion of the court:
Thе city of Chicago appeals from a declaratory judgment finding its zoning ordinance void as applied to the several pieces of proрerty of the plaintiffs.
The subject area encompasses slightly more than the southerly half of the westerly portion of lots in the block between 114th Street аnd 115th Street and all of the westerly portion of the block between 115th and 116th Place, except for an irregular tract just north of 116th Place. It has a frontagе on the east side of Western Avenue of approximately 1000 feet. Practically all of the strip has a depth of 200 feet east, which is slightly less than the westerly half of the blocks. Thus, it is roughly a strip 1000 feet by 200 feet. Most of the strip is owned by plaintiffs.
Western Avenue is a heavily travelled ioo-foot-wide arterial street extеnding through the city of Chicago.' A large percentage of abutting frontage in its approximately 23-mile length bears a commercial classification and is largely developed to business uses. From 1923 to 1942 the subject area and the east half of the blocks across the street were both zoned commercial. In 1942 this property was zoned R-i (single-family residential) and that classification was retained under the 1957 comprehensive zoning amendment, but the strip on the west sidе of the street remained zoned for business under a B-4 classification.
This action was instituted in 1956, and a supplemental complaint was filed after the adoption of the 1957 amendatory ordinance. The cause was heard, the master’s report was served on the parties on March 3, i960, and was filed on May 4, i960. Therеafter on May 16, i960, the city adopted an amendment covering only the 200-foot strip between 114th Street and 116th Place, changing the classification from R-i to R-3.
Thе city now seeks to invoke the Bright doctrine, (Bright v. City of Evanston,
The territory east of the 200-foot strip is zoned R-i and that lying west of the east half of the blocks facing Western Avenue across the street is zoned R-2. The west frontage of Western Avenue has been extensively developed since 1942 to commercial uses such as restaurants with adjacent parking facilities and a gasoline service station directly across the street. By the way of contrast, there were three residences between 114th and 116th in 1942. Only one was added from then to 1957. Since 1957 two additional dwellings have been built to the north and one on the south extremity of the striр. The only residence within the subject area faces 115th Street. At the north end of the subject area is a chicken farm and the remainder is vacant. Eight large billboards now occupy the tract. The block to the north is vacant except for two residences, a part of one being used by a chiropractor for his office. The next block north is occupied by an institutional home. The first block south has three residences, three vacant lots, and the remаinder is used for a church and school. The second block south has two residences, a narrow parking area, six vacant lots, a C.T.A. turn-around and a serviсe station.
We have recognized that opposite sides of a street may bear different zoning classifications and that a street may be the dividing line bеtween zoning districts. (La Salle Nat. Bank v. City of Chicago,
Although the experts varied as to differences in valuation between residential and business uses, there will be a loss to plaintiffs if the zoning restriction is enforced. Plaintiffs assеrt that the financial loss to them bears no reasonable relationship to the public welfare. While defendant’s witnesses indicated their oppositiоn, some saying they purchased in reliance upon the zoning, their testimony did not fix the extent of damages to property east of the strip. The evidencе does not establish any significant or measurable loss in value of such property. The back property line of lots facing a commercial streеt has been recognized as a suitable zoning boundary. In fact, the city used such a boundary by classifying the east half of the blocks across the street from the subjеct strip B-4 and by giving the west half of such blocks, which faced the next street to the west rather than Western Avenue, an R-2 classification. This court took a similar view in Kоvack v. Village of La Grange Park,
We are of the opinion that plaintiffs’ undeveloped lots partake of the commerсial character of Western Avenue, that the decrease in their value under the present zoning classification bears no substantial relation to thе public welfare, and that the trial court was justified in its holding that the ordinance was void as here applied.
The judgment of the circuit court of Cook County is accordingly affirmed.
r , , , Judgment affirmed.
