delivered the opinion of the court:
In this сase, plaintiff, West Suburban Bank, contests the involuntary annexation of six parcels of land under section 7 — 1—13 of the Illinois Municipal Code (Code) (65 ILCS 5/7 — 1—13 (West 2002)). On appeal, plaintiff maintains that defendant, the City of West Chicago, failed to comply with section 7 — 1—13, because the property annexed (1) exceeded the 60-acre statutory limitation and (2) was not “wholly bounded.” We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
On November 3, 2003, defendant adopted ordinance No. 03 — 0— 0105 (Wеst Chicago Municipal Code § 03 — 0—0105 (eff. November 3, 2003)) pursuant to section 7 — 1—13 of the Code, which allows a municipality to forcibly annex property by the passing of an ordinance. The ordinance annexed eight parcels of land “together with all adjacent streets and highways contiguous to said property” (see 65 ILCS 5/7 — 1—13 (West 2002)). Plaintiff owns six of the eight parcels (parcels 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 8); parcel 2 is owned by Du Page County; and parcel 7 is owned by Glenview State Bank as trustee (see attached diagram). 1 Pursuant to the ordinance, the property annexed is less than 60 acres and is bounded by defendant, a creek, and property owned by the Du Page County Forest Preserve District. Exhibit A, attached to the ordinance, contains legal descriptions of the eight parcels and also states that the property annexed includes “all that part of State Route 64 (alsо known as North Avenue) lying north of, and adjoining, and above described parcels 1, 5, 6, and 7” (Route 64) (West Chicago Municipal Code § 03 — 0—0105 (eff. November 3, 2003)). The plat of annexation recorded with the ordinance states that the “total annexed area” is “62.75 acres more or less.”
Plaintiff objected to the annexation of its property, and on January 20, 2004, it filed a two-count complaint. Count I sought to disconnect the annexed proрerty under section 7 — 3—6 of the Code (65 ILCS 5/7 — 3—6 (West 2002)), and count II sought quo warranto relief (735 ILCS 5/18 — 101 et seq. (West 2002)), which is the proper remedy for testing the legality of the proceedings by which territory has been annexed to a municipality. See Village of Mundelein v. Village of Long Grove,
Plaintiff then moved for summary judgment on count II of its complaint, arguing that the property annexed exceeded the 60-acre limit and was not “wholly bounded.” Defendant filed a response to plaintiffs motion for summary judgment, arguing that the annexed property was approximately 57.14 acres and therefore under the 60-acre limit. According to defendant, the excess acreage consisted of Route 64, which is excluded from the 60-acre calculation under section 7 — 1—1. Defendant alsо argued that it was irrelevant that parcel 2 was owned by a county rather than a municipality. Because parcel 2 was “within the annexed territory,” defendant argued that the property annexed was “wholly bounded” within the meaning of section 7 — 1—13.
On June 29, 2005, plaintiff filed a reply in support of its summary judgment motion. Plaintiff maintained that in a quo warranto proceeding challenging the validity of an annexation, the burden of proof is on the defеndant to demonstrate compliance with the statute. In addition, plaintiff maintained that section 7 — 1—13 unambiguously limits involuntary annexations to 60 acres, and that strict compliance with the 60-acre limit did not allow defendant to exclude Route 64 from the calculation. Plaintiff also maintained that its six parcels were “not wholly bounded by one or more municipalities,” because parcels 2 and 7 were unincorporated property at the time of annexation.
When the parties appeared in court on July 13, 2005, they agreed that no factual dispute existed and that the only issue was a question of law. Recognizing that defendant had not filed a motion for summary judgment, the court inquired whether both parties would agree to treating defendant’s response to plaintiffs motion as a cross-motion for summary judgment. Both parties agreed to this characterization, and the court granted summary judgment in favor of defendant. In particular, the court ruled that Route 64 should not be included in the 60-acre calculation, which reduced the annexed property to approximately 57 acres. The court also found that, given the nature of the property, it was “completely surrounded within the meaning of the statute.” Plaintiff timely appealed.
II. ANALYSIS
In an appeal from the grant of summary judgment, our review is de novo. Land v. Board of Education of the City of Chicago,
This case also presents questions of statutory interpretation, which we review de novo. Elementary School District 159 v. Schiller,
Furthermore, one of the fundamental principles of statutory construction is to view all of the provisions of a statute as a whole. Land,
A. 60-Acre Requirement
Plaintiffs first contention is that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment in favor of defendant when the plat of annexation exceeded the 60-acre limit by showing 62.75 acres of annexed property. The parties agree that the total acreage of the eight parcels, excluding Route 64, is under 60 acres (approximately 57 acres). However, including Route 64 in the calculation increases the total acreage to 62.75 acres. According to plaintiff, it was error to exclude Route 64 from the 60-acre calculation under section 7 — 1—13. Defendant responds that section 7 — 1—1 requires municipalities to annex to the far side of adjacent highways, that the excess acreage consists exclusively of Route 64, and that this additional acreage is not to be included in the 60-acre calculation under section 7 — 1—13. The issue, whether a highway annexed by operation of law under section 7 — 1—1 should be included in the 60-acre calculation under section 7 — 1—13, is one of first impression. We begin our analysis by setting forth the relevant statutes.
Section 7 — 1—1 of the Code provides, in pertinent part:
“Any territory that is not within the corporate limits of any municipality but is contiguous to a municipality may be annexed to
the municipality as provided in this Article. ***
* * *
The new boundary shall extend to the far side of any adjacent highway and shall include all of every highway within the area annexed. These highways shall be considered to be annexed even though not included in the legal description set forth in the petition for annexation.” (Emphasis added.) 65 ILCS 5/7 — 1—1 (West 2002).
The legislature has amended section 7 — 1—1 to provide:
“If any municipality has annexed any area before October 1, 1975, and the legal description in the petition for annexation did not include the entire adjаcent highway, any such annexation shall be valid and any highway adjacent to the area annexed shall be considered to be annexed, notwithstanding the failure of the petition to annex to include the description of the entire adjacent highway.” 65 ILCS 5/7 — 1—1 (West 2002).
“[This] amendment essentially made retroactive the statutory requirement that the adjacent highway is considered annexed even though not included in the legal description оf the petition for annexation.” People ex rel. Village of Vernon Hills v. Village of Lincolnshire,
Section 7 — 1—13, entitled “Surrounded or nearly surrounded territory under 60 acres,” states, in relevant part:
“Whenever any unincorporated territory containing 60 acres or less, is wholly bounded by (a) one or more municipalities, *** (d) one or more municipalities and property owned by the State of Illinois, except highway right-of-way owned in feе by the State, (e) one or more municipalities and a forest preserve district, *** that territory may be annexed by any municipality by which it is bounded in whole or in part, by the passage of an ordinance to that effect after notice is given as provided in this Section.” 65 ILCS 5/7 — 1—13 (West 2002).
It is clear that section 7 — 1—13 limits forcible annexations to territory containing 60 acres or less. Village of Mundelein,
This conсlusion honors the intent of section 7 — 1—1. As defendant points out, the purpose of requiring the annexation of an adjacent highway to the far side of the highway is to prevent any question regarding jurisdiction, maintenance, financing, and traffic control once the annexation has taken place. In re Annexation of Approximately 280 Acres of Land to the City of Decatur,
Decatur and Plainfield are instructive, as they addressed whether owners of fee interest underlying annexed roads were to be counted as owners of record for purposes of annexation. In Decatur, the objectors to the annexation were owners of fee interest underlying the far half of a township road that bordered the territory to be annexed. Decatur,
Plaintiff also contends that the plain, unambiguous language of section 7 — 1—13 calls for strict enforcement of the 60-acre limit, without consideration of the type of property involved. Essentially, plaintiff contends that it is improper to read into section 7 — 1—13 an exception for highway acreage that is not expressed. However, as we have stated, we must construe each provision in connection with every other section. Given the intent of section 7 — 1—1, which mandated annexation of Route 64 by operation of law for the sake of convenience, efficiency, and future growth (Freeport Fire Protection District,
In addition, plaintiffs reliance on People ex rel. Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. City of Des Plaines,
While both parties agree that therе is no Illinois case on point, defendant cites various cases from other jurisdictions, the most persuasive of which is International Paper Co. v. City of Fond Du Lac,
In line with the reasoning in International Paper Co., we conclude that Route 64 should be excluded from the 60-acre calculation. As stated, section 7 — 1—1 states that “[t]he new boundary shall extend to the far side of any adjacent highway.” (Emphasis added.) 65 ILCS 5/7 — 1—1 (West 2002). Because Route 64 is аdjacent to the property annexed, section 7 — 1—1 mandated the annexation of Route 64 to the far side of the highway. Given that Route 64 was annexed by operation of law under section 7 — 1—1, the trial court properly excluded that highway from the 60-acre calculation under section 7 — 1—13.
B. “Wholly Bounded” Requirement
Plaintiff also contends that its six parcels were not “wholly bounded” as required under section 7 — 1—13. As plaintiff points out, section 7 — 1—13 requires that the unincorporated property be “wholly bounded” by “one or more municipalities.” See Village of Mundelein,
Plaintiffs argument misses the mark. As defendant points out, plaintiffs argument that its property was not “wholly bounded” makes little sense when parcels 2 and 7 were simultaneously annexed with plaintiffs property and therefore “within the territory annexed.” We know of no authority, and plaintiff cites none, allowing a plaintiff to isolate or separatе its property from the other property annexed in order to contest the “wholly bounded” requirement. In this case, defendant forcibly annexed plaintiffs property under section 7 — 1— 13(e), which allows annexation of territory “wholly bounded by” “one or more municipalities and a forest preserve district.” 65 ILCS 5/7— 1 — 13(e) (West 2002). As shown in the plat of annexation, the territory annexed is bounded on the west by defendant (incorporated areas of West Chicago except for a small portion of forest preserve fronting the west side of Prince Crossing Road), and bounded on the north, east, and south by a forest preserve. In addition, there is nothing in section 7 — 1—13 that prohibits annexation of parcels under different ownership, and municipalities can validly annex properties owned by other governmental entities. See Flynn v. Stevenson,
In a related argument, plaintiff also claims that Route 64 does not constitute a legally sufficient boundary under section 7 — 1—13(d), which allows annexation of territory “wholly bounded by” “one or more municipalities and property owned by the State of Illinois, except highway right-of-way owned in fee by the State.” 65 ILCS 5/7 — 1— 13(d) (West 2002). Again, plaintiffs argument misses the mark. The fact that section 7 — 1—1 mandated the annexation of Route 64, and that the new boundary extends to the far side of Route 64, does not mean that the property annexed is “bounded” by Route 64. Rather, under section 7 — 1—1, Route 64 becomes the new boundary and the relevant question is whether Route 64 is “bounded” by one or more municipalities or a forest preserve district. As plaintiff concedes, forest preserve property lies north of the north line of Route 64. Accordingly, the property annexed, which includеs Route 64, is “wholly bounded” under section 7 — 1—13(e) of the Code.
As a final matter, plaintiff argues that it was error for the court to treat defendant’s response to its motion for summary judgment as a cross-motion for summary judgment. We note that both parties agreed that no factual dispute remained and that the matter simply presented a question of law. In addition, plaintiff specifically agreed to the trial court’s decision to treat defеndant’s response to plaintiffs motion as a cross-motion for summary judgment. Furthermore, when a court denies one party’s motion for summary judgment, it is authorized to enter summary judgment in favor of the other party, even though that party does not have a pending motion for summary judgment. See Magnus v. Lutheran General Health Care System,
III. CONCLUSION
For the above reasons, the judgment of the Du Page County circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
McLAREN and BYRNE, JJ., concur.
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Notes
Du Page County and Glenview State Bank are not parties to this appeal.
