Court Opinion

ID: 3145107
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-10-22 18:06:28.422074+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:06:38.210572
License: Public Domain

No. 2-09-0473   Filed: 6-9-10 Modified 7-13-10
_________________________________________________________________________________

                                               IN THE

                               APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                                SECOND DISTRICT
_________________________________________________________________________________

THE VILLAGE OF RINGWOOD,                ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
                                        ) of McHenry County.
      Plaintiff-Appellee,               )
                                        )
v.                                      ) No. 07--MC--2
                                        )
DEBORAH FOSTER,                         ) Honorable
                                        ) Michael J. Sullivan,
      Defendant-Appellant.              ) Judge, Presiding.
_________________________________________________________________________________

                                Modified Upon Denial of Rehearing

       JUSTICE O'MALLEY delivered the opinion of the court:

       Defendant, Deborah Foster, appeals from the trial court's order authorizing plaintiff, the

Village of Ringwood, to demolish defendant's building pursuant to section 11--31--1(a) of the

Municipal Code (Code) (65 ILCS 5/11--31--1(a) (West 2006)). On appeal, defendant argues that

the trial court's order must be vacated because it erred in finding her building "dangerous and unsafe"

under the Code, because it erred in finding that she could not reasonably repair the building, and

because plaintiff did not provide the notice the Code requires. For the reasons that follow, we vacate

the trial court's order and remand for further proceedings.

       In June 2007, plaintiff filed a complaint seeking authorization pursuant to section 11--31--1

of the Code to demolish a two-story apartment building defendant owned; the matter later proceeded

to a bench trial. At the trial, defendant testified that she purchased the apartment building, which was
No. 2--09--0473

created in "the late 1800's," for $480,000 in July 2005. She recalled that the building was damaged

by a fire in October 2006 and had not been occupied since and that, as a result of the fire damage, she

received an insurance check, which she never cashed, for over $345,000. Defendant acknowledged

having received a November 2006 letter from plaintiff's counsel informing her that plaintiff's

ordinances prevented her from rebuilding and restoring the building to its prior use and giving her

notice that she had to demolish the building "on or before May 15, 2007." (Defense counsel objected

on hearsay grounds to the admission of this letter into evidence. The trial court admitted it "for the

limited purpose of showing notice," but not for the purpose of establishing the truth of the matters

stated in the letter.) Defendant further acknowledged having received an April 2007 letter to the

same effect. (Defense counsel again objected to the admission of the letter, but the trial court again

allowed the letter to be admitted into evidence for the purpose of establishing that defendant received

notice from plaintiff.)

        Timothy Coppack, an insurance adjuster who inspected the property shortly after the fire,

estimated the total damage to the building at approximately $350,000 (net of depreciation, which he

estimated at approximately $110,000). He estimated that the property was worth approximately

$640,000 prior to the fire. Nathan Michaelson, a second adjuster, who said that the fire damaged the

roof and led to smoke and water damage to the building, estimated the cost to repair the damage to

the building at over $550,000 (including overhead and profit for the contractor who would perform

the repairs). Michaelson recalled that defendant agreed to allow his company to perform repairs on

the building but that his company performed no repairs because village officials told him "that they

did not like the structure, that it looked like it would not be grandfathered in, and that most likely that

type of building would not be able to be rebuilt" but instead "would have to be razed." The village

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No. 2--09--0473

officials further explained to him that "if it's over fifty percent physically damaged, *** [the village

has] an ordinance that says it has to be razed."

       Plaintiff's village president verified that the village had a zoning ordinance that provided as

follows:

               "If any nonconforming building or structure is destroyed by any means to an extent

       of more than fifty (50) percent of the replacement cost of that portion of the principal and

       accessory buildings which are above the average ground elevation, such building or structure

       shall not be rebuilt or reoccupied for any [nonconforming use]."

Defendant does not dispute the accuracy of this testimony. Further, neither party now disputes that

defendant's building was a nonconforming structure.

       Plaintiff's building commissioner, Richard Boettcher, who examined the building after the fire,

recalled that, on the second floor, there were "holes in the ceiling where the light was coming

through," as well as holes in the floor that allowed him to see down to the first floor. He further

recalled that "[e]verything was soaked," that the wood and walls in the building had been burnt or

damaged, that "[t]he building was full of wires, bare wires hanging out of the ceiling," that many of

the joists had been destroyed by the fire, and that counters, cabinets, and windows in the apartments

had been destroyed or badly damaged. Although Boettcher described extensive fire damage on the

second floor, he stated that most of the damage on the building's first floor was caused by water. He

also stated that he detected a strong smell of mold in the building.

       Barry Schlieben, a general contractor, architectural draftsman, home inspector, and appraiser,

testified that he had inspected the building at plaintiff's request. He estimated that the second floor

of the building was "75 to 80 percent completely destroyed," meaning that "everything in that section

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No. 2--09--0473

of the building would have to be disassembled." Schlieben said that the second-floor ceiling, most

of its interior walls, "[a] lot" of the studs for the exterior walls, "a lot" of the electrical wiring, the

heating system, the windows, and the apartments' kitchens and bathrooms had been destroyed or

needed to be replaced. He concluded that the second floor required that "the framing material from

the walls, roof, ceiling would all have to be *** completely removed and reconstructed" and that

"[a]pproximately 75 percent of [the] roof would have to be reconstructed." He said that he observed

on the first floor "[a] lot" of water and smoke damage that would require replacing the drywall, the

windows and doors, the kitchen and bathroom appliances, the heating system, and the hallway

flooring, and sealing or replacing the wall framing. For the basement of the building, Schlieben stated

that the ceiling would have to be sealed and debris cleaned out. He estimated the total cost of the

necessary rebuilding at over $500,000, including 10% overhead and 10% contractor profit (for a total

add-on of approximately $82,000), and that figure was broken down in a written estimate admitted

into evidence. (The written estimate included $35,000 for "demolition," almost $35,000 for washing

and sealing of the entire building including the basement, and over $430,000 in other costs unrelated

to the basement.) He said that his estimate included upgrades (fire-stopping and electrical upgrades)

to make the building code-compliant. His estimate also included appliances such as dishwashers and

window air conditioners.

        Frank Harrison, a real-estate appraiser, estimated the replacement cost of the building as

approximately $567,000 including the basement, or approximately $539,000 without the basement.

His estimates did not include appliances.

        The first witness in defendant's case-in-chief, Allen Stott, a home contractor whom defendant

asked for an estimate for the repairs to her building, testified that he saw smoke damage as well as

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No. 2--09--0473

water damage, which was "[n]ot bad at all," on the first floor of the building. He identified fire

damage on the second floor, but he opined that the "[p]lace wasn't too bad." Stott recommended that

the building receive a new roof, new windows, new drywall for "all [of] the upstairs" and "some of

the downstairs," "some electrical" work, "a cabinet or two here or there," and "a clean up and prime,

paint." He proposed doing the work for just under $274,000. Stott proposed a price for installation

of new drywall much lower than other estimates had proposed, but he agreed on cross-examination

that his bid did not include finishing floors, kitchen cabinets (which he said could be wiped down

instead of replaced), or appliances. Plaintiff's attorney also listed several items not specifically

included on Stott's estimate (such as removing mold, sealing damaged wood, adding fire stops, and

replacing damaged flooring), but Stott testified that several were impliedly included in the estimate,

either because he would have had to perform the tasks to make the building code-compliant or

because the estimate indicated that he and defendant could discuss the project in greater detail at a

later date.

        Called as a witness on her own behalf, defendant recalled that some of the building's second-

floor drywall had been damaged but that the walls were intact and the cabinets "dirty" but not burned.

She noticed minimal damage on the first floor. She also recalled that Boettcher, the village inspector,

responded to her saying that she intended to fix the building by saying "well, no way, Jose, are you

getting a permit; the Village of Ringwood is very happy that [it has] the opportunity to get rid of this

building." Defendant said that she wanted to restore the building and that she had the funds to do so.

She recalled that she solicited bids and designs for the repair work, but she acknowledged that she

never submitted an application for a building permit.

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No. 2--09--0473

       Dale Alvine, defendant's brother and a self-employed contractor, testified that, upon his

inspection of the building, he saw roof damage, burn damage on "the top two feet" of the "lumber"

on the second floor (with "the rest of the board [being] fine"), melted wiring, and "sooted up" but

"salvageable" "vanity tops." Alvine opined that "basically the damage tended to be at the eight-foot

and above range" from the floor. He testified that much of the structure of the building remained

sound after the fire. He estimated that the necessary repairs would cost approximately $244,000.

His estimate included, among other things, new fixtures for those he deemed in need of replacement,

new heating and cooling units, new wires, and painting.

       Ralph Schmidt, an expert in the field of structural engineering, testified that he viewed the first

floor of the building as having water damage but walls that were intact. He said that the second floor

had roof damage and that "the upper portion of some of the walls [was] burnt," but, "[o]nce you got

*** a few feet down the walls were intact similar to the first floor." Schmidt assessed "a lot of

interior type damage but nothing that relate[d] to the skeleton" of the building. He concluded that

the building's structure was "less than 50 percent destroyed." On cross-examination, he clarified that

his estimate included "finishes generally speaking" and that "structural engineering" "included up to

the inside walls but *** not *** the interior type finishes." He further agreed on cross-examination

that, when he delivered his estimate to defendant, he recommended that she contact a general

contractor for more detailed cost estimates.

       The trial court took the matter under advisement before issuing a written decision, which

provided as follows in pertinent part:

               "7. As used at the time of the fire ***, the *** building *** was a nonconforming

       structure because its use was not in conformity with the uses permitted in the B-1

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No. 2--09--0473

      Neighborhood Business District. Further, the building did not conform to the Yard and Bulk

      Requirements of the Zoning Ordinance.

             ***

             9. *** [T]here is interplay between a demolition statute *** and a local ordinance

      which limits the ability to reconstruct a nonconforming structure which has been destroyed.

             10. This court believes that the interplay *** comes into consideration where the trial

      court considers [whether the building is beyond reasonable repair, so that section 11--31--1

      of the Code may be invoked].

             11. This court believes that in this case the standard of what constitutes 'beyond

      reasonable repair' is the requirement of the Village's Local Ordinance ***.

             ***

             13. As a result of the fire ***, the Court finds that the subject building was and is in

      its damaged and unreconstructed state a dangerous and unsafe building.

             ***

             15. The Court believes that the evidence as to the replacement cost of the subject

      building without a basement in the amount of [approximately $539,000] *** was the most

      credible evidence on the topic based on the expertise and methodology of the witness, Frank

      Harrison ***.

             16. The Court believes that the most thorough, comprehensive and credible evidence

      as to the cost of repair of the subject building was the cost of repair estimate of

      [approximately $500,000] given by Barry P. Schlieben.

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No. 2--09--0473

             17. The Court believes that the cost of repair estimates given by Allen Stott in the

      amount of [approximately $274,000] and by Dale Alvine, the Defendant's brother, in the

      amount of $244,000[] lacked detail and specificity as did the testimony supporting the

      estimates. ***

             18. The finding of dangerous and unsafe in this case is based upon the evidence that:

                               a) At least eighty (80%) percent, if not all, of the roof was totally

                       damaged and destroyed.

                               b) The second story of the building was the subject of extensive fire

                       damage to the structure of the building (rafters, joists, and wall studs),

                       extreme water and smoke damage in all areas of the second floor.

                               c) The first floor, while spared most of the direct fire damage, did

                       suffer extensive water and smoke damage.

                               d) The heat from the fire destroyed, even melted, substantial portions

                       of the building's electrical system and heating system.

                               e) The fire, water and smoke caused significant damage to the

                       building's fixtures, particularly on the second floor.

                               f) Substantially all of the windows in the building were damaged or

                       destroyed by the fire or attempts to extinguish the fire.

                               g) The flooring in the building, no matter what type of flooring, has

                       been substantially damaged throughout the building.

             19. This Court finds that under the provisions of the Village's Local Zoning Ordinance

      *** the subject building has been destroyed to an extent of more than fifty (50%) percent of

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No. 2--09--0473

       the replacement cost of the principal building above the ground elevation and is, therefore,

       beyond reasonable repair for the purposes of Section 11--31--1 of the [Code].

               20. The Court [finds] *** that the subject building could *** be repaired, but the

       Court [finds] that the cost of repair is more than fifty (50%) percent of the replacement cost

       of the subject building as stated above. In fact, the Court believes that the more credible

       evidence established that the cost of repair is substantially more than fifty (50%) percent of

       the replacement cost.

               21. The Court finds that the Village did comply with the notice requirements of

       Section 11--31--1 of the [Code]. While the Court did admit the letter [from plaintiff to

       defendant] dated [November 2006] for a limited purpose, the limited purpose was to establish

       that the Village gave notice to the Defendant. The Court believes that the Village has met this

       evidentiary requirement."

The court thus ordered that plaintiff be allowed to demolish defendant's building. Defendant timely

appeals.

       Defendant's first argument on appeal is that the trial court did not enter findings sufficient to

justify demolition under the Code. Section 11--31--1(a) of the Code, the statute the trial court

invoked to order the building's demolition, provides as follows, in pertinent part:

               "The corporate authorities of each municipality may demolish, repair, or enclose or

       cause the demolition, repair, or enclosure of dangerous and unsafe buildings or uncompleted

       and abandoned buildings within the territory of the municipality ***. ***

               The corporate authorities shall apply to the circuit court of the county in which the

       building is located (i) for an order authorizing action to be taken with respect to a building

                                                 -9-
No. 2--09--0473

       if the owner or owners of the building, including the lien holders of record, after at least 15

       days' written notice by mail to do so, have failed to put the building in a safe condition or to

       demolish it or (ii) for an order requiring the owner or owners of record to demolish, repair,

       or enclose the building ***." 65 ILCS 5/11--31--1(a) (West 2006).

       The trial court here found defendant's building "dangerous" and "unsafe"; there has been no

suggestion that the building was "uncompleted" or "abandoned." We therefore consider only the

former two qualifications, "dangerous" and "unsafe." The two words are roughly synonymous (see

Webster's Third New International Dictionary 573 (1993) (defining "dangerous" as, among other

things, "demanding caution or care as extremely unsafe"); Webster's Third New International

Dictionary 2509 (1993) (defining "unsafe" as "exposed or exposing to danger"); see also Webster's

Collegiate Thesaurus 181 (1988) (listing "unsafe" as a word related to "dangerous")), the parties urge

no distinction between them, and the case law has recognized none (see, e.g., City of Aurora v.

Meyer, 38 Ill. 2d 131, 133 (1967) (considering the terms "dangerous" and "unsafe" simultaneously).

We therefore consider the terms as one.

       Defendant argues that the trial court's findings were insufficient to establish that her building

was dangerous and unsafe under section 11--31--1(a) because plaintiff introduced no evidence that

the building was unsafe to "the general public"--primarily those people who might pass near the

structure but not enter, or the community surrounding the structure. Plaintiff responds by disputing

that the statute requires that a building present a hazard to "the general public," and by arguing that

a building may be considered dangerous even if the danger is borne by only a specific segment of the

public.1 The parties present us with a question of statutory interpretation. Such questions raise issues

       1
           In her petition for rehearing, defendant argues at length that our analysis below is erroneous,

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No. 2--09--0473

of law to be reviewed de novo. Tarsitano ex rel. Township of High School District 211 v. Board of

Education of Township High School District 211, 385 Ill. App. 3d 868, 872 (2008).

        A court's goal in interpreting a statute is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the

legislature, and the best indication of that legislative intent is the statute's language, given its plain,

ordinary, and popularly understood meaning. Bigelow Group, Inc. v. Rickert, 377 Ill. App. 3d 165,

169 (2007). Thus, a court generally may not add limitations or conditions to a statute when none are

expressed. Bigelow, 377 Ill. App. 3d at 169. Here, as plaintiff argues, section 11--31--1 uses the

phrase "dangerous and unsafe" without qualification, and without mention of any limitation to

dangers that affect "the general public," as opposed to dangers that affect only those who enter a

structure. Defendant provides us no cause for reading such a limitation into the statute.

        A court interpreting a statute must also examine the statute as a whole, so that "words and

phrases [are] interpreted in light of other relevant provisions of the statute." J.S.A. v. M.H., 224 Ill.
2d 182, 197 (2007). Additional language from subsection (e) of the statute adds to our understanding

of the statute. 65 ILCS 5/11--31--1(e) (West 2006). Subsection (a) sets out a procedure by which

local government entities may obtain court orders allowing them to demolish "dangerous and unsafe

buildings or uncompleted and abandoned buildings": the procedure involves a period of notice

followed by court proceedings to adjudicate the government's authority to demolish the structure.

even "tortured," because it contradicts a line of cases that requires danger to the "public" in order for

section 11--31--1 to apply. However, our discussion below does not contradict that idea; it considers

whether the statute's purpose to protect the "public" includes only the "general public," as defendant

would have it, or specific portions of the public (such as those who might enter the building), as

plaintiff would have it.

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No. 2--09--0473

65 ILCS 5/11--31--1(a) (West 2006). Subsection (e) sets out a special procedure allowing

municipalities to "expedite the removal of certain buildings" by potentially forgoing court

proceedings; this procedure applies to a building the municipality determines is "open and vacant and

an immediate and continuing hazard to the community in which the building is located." 65 ILCS

5/11--31--1(e) (West 2006). The wording of subsection (e) bolsters plaintiff's interpretation in two

ways. First, this wording tells us that, when it drafted section 11--31--1, the legislature made explicit

reference to a hazard "to the community" in at least part of the section, subsection (e). That implies

that the omission of the same phrase from subsection (a) was intentional. Second, such an omission

stands to reason based on the structure of the section as a whole. Subsection (e)'s expedited

procedure is an exception to the general procedure described in subsection (a). We therefore

presume that subsection (e)'s scope is more limited than that of subsection (a). Accordingly, we must

interpret subsection (a)'s use of the phrase "dangerous and unsafe" buildings to include something

more than buildings that are "open and vacant and an immediate and continuing hazard to the

community"; while subsection (e) applies only to those urgent situations in which a building poses

a danger "to the community," subsection (a) applies to a wider range of buildings, namely, buildings

that do not fall within the "immediate and continuing hazard to the community" restriction. 2

        2
            In her petition for rehearing, defendant attacks on two fronts our analysis of subsections (a)

and (e) of the statute. First, she argues that "[i]t is hard to believe" that the legislature intended that

"[i]mmediate threats to the community *** are the only ones that merit quicker redress" while

"immediate threats to those connected to *** the building must go through the normal--slower--

process." On the contrary, such a scheme--forgoing some process in the face of a wider danger--

seems quite reasonable. Second, defendant cites subsection (f) of the statute, which applies to

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No. 2--09--0473

        Further, the limitation defendant urges--limiting "dangerous and unsafe" buildings governed

by subsection (a) to those that pose a danger to the general public and excluding buildings that pose

a danger only to those connected to the building--would frustrate the purpose underlying the statute.

In Village of Lake Villa v. Stokovich, 211 Ill. 2d 106 (2004), the supreme court examined in some

detail the purpose animating section 11--31--1. In Stokovich, the defendants challenged the

constitutionality of section 11--31--1 on the basis that it deprived them of their property rights under

the due process clauses of the Illinois and United States Constitutions. Stokovich, 211 Ill. 2d at 121-

30. The supreme court began its analysis by determining what level of scrutiny to apply to the

statute, and it began that analysis by setting out the nature of the property rights at issue:

                "This court has long acknowledged that '[e]very owner has a right to use his property

        in his own way and for his own purposes, subject only to the restraint necessary to secure the

        common welfare. This is both a liberty and a property right.' [Citation.] The phrase 'restraint

        necessary to secure the common welfare' refers to the police power of the state under which

        the state 'may act to regulate, restrain or prohibit that which is harmful to the public welfare

"property that presents an actual or imminent threat to public health and safety caused by the release

of hazardous substances." 65 ILCS 5/11--31--1(f) (West 2006). According to defendant, the

legislature would have clarified its use of the word "public" in subsection (f) if it thought of the

"public" as somehow broader than the "community" referred to in subsection (e). We disagree. It

is much more unlikely that the legislature would have intended to restrict the reach of a provision

dealing with hazardous waste by applying it only to dangers to the surrounding "community" rather

than the "public," which we have interpreted to include the surrounding community as well as those

connected to the property.

                                                 -13-
No. 2--09--0473

        even though the regulation, restraint or prohibition might interfere with the liberty or property

        of an individual.' [Citation.]" Stokovich, 211 Ill. 2d at 124.

To explain the scope of the police power to avoid "harm[] to the public welfare," the supreme court

cited two cases in which it had held that government abatements of property rights were appropriate

exercises of the police power because the government actions were rationally related to the

government interests. In the first case, Chicago National League Ball Club, Inc. v. Thompson, 108
Ill. 2d 357 (1985), the court upheld as within the police power a statute and an ordinance prohibiting

nighttime events at Wrigley Field in Chicago, because the laws were "intended to abate a public

nuisance" of "the 'intolerable noise' created by nighttime sporting events." Stokovich, 211 Ill. 2d at

124. In the second case, Beverly Bank v. Illinois Department of Transportation, 144 Ill. 2d 210

(1991), the court upheld a statute prohibiting new residential construction on a floodplain, based on

"[t]he legislative purpose of this exercise of the police power *** to reduce the potential for flood

damage, to protect the health and welfare of residents, and to reduce the need for emergency relief

services." Stokovich, 211 Ill. 2d at 125. The supreme court in Stokovich then concluded that, based

on the nature of the rights implicated by section 11--31--1, its constitutionality should be measured

by the rational-basis test:

                "Section 11--31--1 of the Code is in some respects similar to the statute and ordinance

        at issue in Chicago National League Baseball Club. That is, its purpose is to abate a public

        nuisance. And, like the statute at issue in Beverly Bank, section 11--31--1 interferes with a

        property owner's ability to choose how he would use his land. We agree with the Village that

        a property owner does not have a fundamental right to permit his property to fall into such

        disrepair as to create a risk to the health and safety of the public. We conclude that, like the

                                                  -14-
No. 2--09--0473

        statutes at issue in Chicago National League Baseball Club and Beverly Bank, section

        11--31--1 was enacted pursuant to the state's police power and is, therefore, subject to review

        under a rational basis standard ***." Stokovich, 211 Ill. 2d at 125.

        Although Stokovich described the purpose of section 11--31--1 as "abat[ing] a public

nuisance" (Stokovich, 211 Ill. 2d at 125), and although the particular dangers at issue in Stokovich

implicated the safety of the general public and not just those connected to the property (see

Stokovich, 211 Ill. 2d at 129 (citing "a threat of release of methane gas, of contamination of the water

supply," and of the building's providing "a habitat for mice and other vermin that pose a risk of

communicable disease")), our reading of the supreme court's decision leads us to conclude that the

court did not intend to limit the purpose of the statute to remediation of dangers that imperil the

public generally, to the exclusion of dangers that affect only those connected to the building. Rather,

the quoted phrases aside, a reading of the entirety of the supreme court's analysis leaves the

impression that it assumed the purpose of section 11--31--1 to be to effectuate (and be coextensive

with) government police power to protect public welfare. As illustrated by Beverly, one of the cases

cited and described in Stokovich, that police power extends even over dangers, such as the risk of

flood damage to a home or the risk to a particular resident's health or welfare, that do not affect the

public generally, but instead affect only those directly connected to the property.3 Thus, in City of

        3
            Defendant overlooks this point in her petition for rehearing, in which she argues that "[t]he

Supreme Court has never stated or even hinted that the scope of 11--31--1 was so expansive." The

supreme court in fact strongly so hinted when it cited Beverly as an example of the police power that

defines the reach of section 11--31--1. Defendant also says that the flood-plain regulation in Beverly

"obviously involved more than just those directly connected to a certain property." However, other

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No. 2--09--0473

Aurora, the supreme court suggested that "[i]nadequate wiring, or a weakened supporting beam,"

could render a structure "dangerous and unsafe" under section 11--31--1. City of Aurora, 38 Ill. 2d

at 137. Further, the supreme court in City of Aurora did not take issue with (either to denounce or

affirm) the plaintiff's position that the building at issue was unsafe due to " 'electrical wiring, structural

defects, unsanitary plumbing, unsafe floors, walls, roof and windows, and [deteriorating] exterior

brick and mortar' " (City of Aurora, 38 Ill. 2d at 134); it instead remanded the case on an evidentiary

issue "without prejudice to the right of the city to take whatever steps may be necessary to render the

building safe," without specifying what steps the court envisioned (City of Aurora, 38 Ill. 2d at 138).

        Based on the above discussion, we conclude that a structure may be deemed "dangerous and

unsafe" under section 11--31--1 even if the danger is confined to those connected to the property,

rather than the public at large. Defendant makes no argument that the trial court's findings, and the

evidence supporting them, were insufficient to establish that the building here presented such a

danger. In fact, defendant agrees in her briefs that the damage to the building rendered it

uninhabitable. We therefore reject defendant's argument that the trial court erred in concluding that

the building was "dangerous and unsafe" under the statute.4

than saying that the point is "obvious," defendant does not explain why a restriction on building on

a flood plain directly protects anyone other than those who would build on the flood plain.
        4
            In her petition for rehearing, defendant objects that she did not make any argument regarding

the danger to those connected to the building because, before our ruling, case law did not indicate

that such dangers fall within the reach of section 11--31--1. However, now that we have held that

section 11--31--1 does extend to such dangers, the only argument defendant offers is that there was

not "any significant testimony supporting the conclusion that the property is unsafe and dangerous

                                                    -16-
No. 2--09--0473

        Defendant's second argument is that the trial court erred by consulting plaintiff's ordinance

to set the Code's standard for when repair could not be reasonably accomplished, so that the

demolition of defendant's building could be compelled, and by concluding that the damage here met

the 50% standard.

        We begin with the latter question. As noted above (slip op. at 3), the parties agree that the

ordinance provides as follows:

                "If any nonconforming building or structure is destroyed by any means to an extent

        of more than fifty (50) percent of the replacement cost of that portion of the principal and

        accessory buildings which are above the average ground elevation, such building or structure

        shall not be rebuilt or reoccupied for any [nonconforming use]."

Defendant does not dispute the trial court's finding that the replacement cost of the structure was

approximately $539,000. The question here, then, is whether there was sufficient evidence to support

the trial court's finding that defendant's building was damaged to an extent of over 50% of that figure,

or approximately $269,500. When defendant argues that the evidence was insufficient to support that

finding, she challenges a factual finding by the trial court. We will not disturb such findings unless

they are against the manifest weight of the evidence. E.g., City of Chicago v. Old Colony Partners,

L.P., 364 Ill. App. 3d 806, 812 (2006). "A finding is against the manifest weight of the evidence only

if the opposite conclusion is clearly evident or if the finding itself is unreasonable, arbitrary, or not

based on the evidence presented." Best v. Best, 223 Ill. 2d 342, 350 (2006).

to anyone." Defendant overlooks testimony regarding the wiring and structural problems the building

sustained in the fire, as well as the trial court's finding of dangerousness.

                                                  -17-
No. 2--09--0473

       Defendant argues that Schlieben's repair estimate, on which the trial court relied to establish

the damage to the building, included not only repair of the damage but a full renovation, including

improvement of the building from its prior state to bring it into compliance with plaintiff's building

code. Defendant further notes that, because the trial court resorted to the cost of repair to assess the

damage to the building, contractor overhead and profit were included in the damage figure.

However, even discounting contractor add-on costs, Schlieben estimated the cost of repairs at almost

$417,000. To the extent defendant argues that Schlieben overestimated the damage by including the

cost of full replacement of items that were not fully destroyed, there was ample testimony that the

partially damaged items that Schlieben proposed to replace were damaged to an extent to render them

not usable. Thus, full replacement was a proper measure of the damage to those items. Finally, as

to defendant's argument that upgrades for code compliance cannot be considered part of damage to

the preexisting building, we cannot reasonably say that the upgrades discussed--installation of fire

stops and wiring superior to that which had been destroyed--could raise the cost of repair from less

than $269,500 to nearly $417,000. Thus, even if defendant is correct that the trial court might have

overestimated the damage to some extent, we nonetheless cannot say that its ultimate finding, that

the damage exceeded 50% of the replacement cost of the aboveground portion of the building, was

contradicted by the manifest weight of the evidence.

       With that, we move to defendant's argument that the trial court erred by consulting plaintiff's

50% ordinance in the first place to set the Code's standard for reasonable repair. The issue of the

proper standard to be employed under the Code is a question of law, and we review it de novo.

Tarsitano ex rel. Township of High School District 211, 385 Ill. App. 3d at 872. The supreme court's

                                                 -18-
No. 2--09--0473

decisions in City of Aurora and Stokovich are instructive on this point, and we now consider them

at some length.

        In City of Aurora, the defendant homeowner argued that the then-existing version of section

11--31--1, whose repair provisions contained no relevant changes from the current version (see City

of Aurora, 38 Ill. 2d at 133, quoting Ill. Rev. Stat. 1965, ch. 24, par. 11--31--1), was unconstitutional

and that the trial court's " 'dangerous and unsafe' " finding was against the manifest weight of the

evidence (City of Aurora, 38 Ill. 2d at 132). The city sought an order authorizing demolition of the

defendant's building for the above-quoted reasons, and, in court proceedings, it produced testimony

regarding the problems with the building. City of Aurora, 38 Ill. 2d at 132-35. The defendant

responded with evidence of the low cost to repair a structural problem with the building, but the trial

court did not allow her to introduce evidence of the value of the building. City of Aurora, 38 Ill. 2d

at 136. Thus, there was "no proof of the extent or proportion of its value to which the building had

deteriorated," nor any evidence "comparing or evaluating the portions deteriorated and in bad

condition as against those remaining in good condition, to determine whether demolition rather than

repair was appropriate." City of Aurora, 38 Ill. 2d at 135.

        The supreme court began its analysis by laying out the basic principle that demolition of

private property should be forced sparingly:

                "The law is well settled that in cases of this nature courts do not go further than is

        necessary to protect the public interest. Property may be ordered destroyed under certain

        conditions but only if the danger cannot be abated in any other way. It is only in cases where

        an absolute necessity exists that courts adopt the drastic method of correction by ordering

        destruction of the property. [Citations.] In other words the remedy is limited to the

                                                  -19-
No. 2--09--0473

        necessities of the case. Where hazardous conditions may be remedied by repair without major

        reconstruction the building may not be destroyed. [Citation.]" City of Aurora, 38 Ill. 2d at

        136-37.

Against that backdrop, the supreme court provided its interpretation of section 11--31--1:

                "Although not expressed in so many words, the plain implication of the act involved

        here is that if the property can be repaired with comparatively little expense the city ought to

        adopt this course rather than complete demolition, that only in cases where the structure is

        substantially beyond repair is an order for demolition contemplated. There are many kinds

        of deficiencies which would render a building dangerous and unsafe, but which can readily

        be obviated by appropriate repairs. Inadequate wiring, or a weakened supporting beam as in

        the case at bar, even if serious enough to sustain a finding that the structure is dangerous and

        unsafe, would not in many cases warrant complete destruction. The cost of repairs may well

        be a small fraction of the building's value. The court should find from the evidence what the

        specific defects are which render the building dangerous and unsafe. If they are such as may

        readily be remedied by repair, demolition should not be ordered without giving the owners

        a reasonable opportunity to make the repairs." City of Aurora, 38 Ill. 2d at 137.

Based on its interpretation, the supreme court concluded that the trial court had erred in refusing to

allow evidence of the value of the building to be demolished, and it remanded on that basis without

reaching the issue of the constitutionality of section 11--31--1. City of Aurora, 38 Ill. 2d at 137.

That is, "[a]ll" the court decided was "that by a fair interpretation of the statutory language the court

must find the structure to be beyond reasonable repair before authorizing the extreme remedy of

                                                  -20-
No. 2--09--0473

demolition, and that evidence relating to the cost of such repair compared to the value was

improperly excluded in" that case. City of Aurora, 38 Ill. 2d at 137.

       In Stokovich, the supreme court directly confronted the issue of the constitutionality of

section 11--31--1, and, in doing so, it expounded on its interpretation of the statute's operation.

Stokovich began by summarizing City of Aurora:

               "In City of Aurora, we noted that section 11--31--1 provides for repair or demolition

       in the alternative and, thus, 'contemplates repair where feasible and demolition where the state

       of deterioration is such that repairs would amount to a substantial reconstruction.' [Citation.]

       Even after the circuit court finds that the municipality has met its burden of proving the

       structure dangerous and unsafe, the court still may not order demolition unless substantial

       reconstruction would be necessary to correct the defects. [Citation.] *** Under these rules[,

       which allow demolition only if repair is not reasonable], evidence proffered by the property

       owner relating to the cost of repair must be considered by the court before authorizing

       demolition. [Citation.]" Stokovich, 211 Ill. 2d at 127-28.

The supreme court next addressed the property-owner defendants' argument that the interpretation

of section 11--31--1 as incorporating the cost of repairs to determine the municipality's right to

compel demolition was unconstitutional, because, according to the defendants, "after an adjudication

that a building is dangerous and unsafe, a property owner must be given an opportunity to repair,

regardless of cost."    Stokovich, 211 Ill. 2d at 128.        Applying the rational-basis test for

constitutionality, the supreme court disagreed, and it instead concluded that section 11--31--1

implicated a legitimate state interest and embodied a reasonable method of furthering that interest.

On the former point, the supreme court stated that, "[w]ithout a doubt, the demolition of a structure

                                                -21-
No. 2--09--0473

that is dangerous and unsafe, when it has been demonstrated that the structure is not readily

repairable, is rationally related to the legitimate state interest in public health and safety." Stokovich,
211 Ill. 2d at 129. On the latter point, after determining that the statutory 15-day notice requirement

posed no problems under the facts of Stokovich, the supreme court explained as follows:

                "The statutory framework chosen by the legislature is entirely reasonable and protects

        the rights of the property owner while permitting the municipality to deal expeditiously with

        threats to the public health and safety. Section 11--31--1 makes a reasonable distinction

        between properties that are readily repairable and those that are not. The statute guarantees

        a property owner the opportunity to make repairs, either before or after an adjudication of

        'dangerous and unsafe,' if the property is readily repairable. If, however, the property is in

        need of substantial reconstruction to render it safe, a property owner who is willing to

        undertake such a project must *** undertake repairs promptly upon receiving notice. The

        owner of such a property who does not promptly undertake repairs, but instead chooses to

        contest whether the building is dangerous and unsafe and to litigate the question of whether

        the building is readily repairable, runs the risk that he will lose on the merits and an order of

        demolition will issue." Stokovich, 211 Ill. 2d at 130.

        Having ruled the statute constitutional, the supreme court again turned to City of Aurora to

determine how the statute should be applied:

        "Section 11--31--1 requires two findings before an order of demolition may issue. The court

        must first find that the building is dangerous and unsafe. [Citation.] The court must also find

        that the building is beyond reasonable repair. ***

                                                   -22-
No. 2--09--0473

               City of Aurora requires that the second finding--that the building is beyond reasonable

       repair--must be based on a comparison of the cost of repair with the value of the building.

       [Citation.] In City of Aurora, the circuit court refused to admit evidence [comparing the cost

       of repair with the value of the building]. [Citation.] We held that section 11--31--1

       contemplates repair when it is feasible. [Citation.] Therefore, evidence comparing repair cost

       to value should have been admitted. [Citation.] *** The gist of City of Aurora is that

       demolition is justified only if repair makes so little economic sense that it is unlikely that an

       owner would make use of any further opportunity to repair. Because knowledge of the

       current value of the building is necessary to determine whether repair makes economic sense,

       City of Aurora requires that a court find current value before it may issue a demolition order."

       Stokovich, 211 Ill. 2d at 131.

The supreme court concluded that the trial court had received insufficient evidence to establish the

worth of the building, and it therefore vacated the trial court's order allowing demolition and

remanded the cause for further proceedings. Stokovich, 211 Ill. 2d at 131-33.

       Defendant draws from the above case law the idea that, in determining whether demolition

may be ordered under section 11--31--1, a trial court evaluating the owner's right to repair must

employ "a flexible standard *** of reasonableness" rather than "a specific percentage." Thus,

defendant argues, the trial court erred when it borrowed the 50%-of-replacement-cost standard from

plaintiff's ordinance and applied it to determine whether repairs were reasonable under section

11--31--1. We agree with defendant that the ordinance's standard measures something different from

the Stokovich test for reasonableness of repairs under the Code. The ordinance's 50% standard

compares all of the damage to a building with the replacement cost of the building, while the

                                                 -23-
No. 2--09--0473

Stokovich test compares the cost of repairing the dangerous conditions with the value of the building.

However, we disagree with defendant that this discrepancy invalidates the trial court's ultimate

conclusion.

       This case differs in one very significant respect from City of Aurora and Stokovich. In those

cases, the only named impediment to repairing the subject buildings was the cost of repair. Thus, the

supreme court evaluated the reasonableness of repair in terms of cost. Here, however, there exists

another, even more definite impediment: plaintiff has an ordinance forbidding defendant's conducting

repairs because the subject building does not conform to plaintiff's zoning ordinance. As noted above,

the ordinance provides that, if the damage to a nonconforming building exceeds 50% of the

replacement cost of the aboveground portion of the building, the building may not be rebuilt as a

nonconforming building.5 Although, as defendant points out in her briefs, the supreme court said in

Stokovich that "City of Aurora requires that the second finding--that the building is beyond

reasonable repair--must be based on a comparison of the cost of repair with the value of the building"

(Stokovich, 211 Ill. 2d at 131), we do not interpret the supreme court's statement as precluding a

finding that repairs may be unreasonable for some reason other than cost. Rather, we interpret the

supreme court's statement as dictating the means for the normal, cost-based reasons presented in

those cases for why a repair might not be reasonable. The repair in this case is unreasonable because

       5
           Defendant makes no argument that she intended to "rebuild" or "repair" the building so that

it became a conforming building, and, in any event, because the trial court found that the building was

nonconforming as to bulk and yard requirements, demolition would very likely be required for such

"rebuilding" or "repairs."

                                                  -24-
No. 2--09--0473

it is not allowed under plaintiff's ordinance, even if its cost might otherwise make it reasonable.6 We

therefore essentially agree with the trial court; for all intents and purposes, in this case, the ordinance's

50% standard determined whether defendant's proposed repairs were reasonable.7

        6
            In her petition for rehearing, defendant mischaracterizes our point as follows: "The Court

distinguishes City of Aurora and Stokovich [by] reasoning that in those cases the only 'impediment

to repairing' the buildings was the cost of repair. [Citation.] This misstates the Supreme Court's

holdings.      In both [cases], the only potential 'impediment' to repairing the buildings was

reasonableness." We of course agree that City of Aurora and Stokovich relied on a reasonableness

test. Our point is that in those cases repair was unreasonable due to cost. Here, repair is

unreasonable based on another factor: the ordinance barred such repair.
        7
            It is true that, in Stokovich, the supreme court considered crucial to the constitutionality of

section 11--31--1 the fact that its scheme grants the owner the opportunity to repair. However, our

interpretation does not alter section 11--31--1's repair provisions; the obstacle to defendant's right

to repair here comes not from section 11--31--1, but from plaintiff's ordinance. As plaintiff notes in

its brief, ordinance provisions of this type, barring restoration of a nonconforming use after the

nonconforming building is damaged to an extent beyond 50% of the restoration cost, have been

upheld as constitutional. See Boward v. County of Cook, 27 Ill. 2d 52, 54-55 (1963). Defendant

makes no argument that either the ordinance or section 11--31--1 is unconstitutional. In her petition

for rehearing, defendant observes our remark that she makes no constitutionality argument, and she

adds that section "11--31--1 as construed [in this opinion] is unconstitutional." However, aside from

her argument disputing our interpretation of the ordinance and section 11--31--1, and her statement

that property rights are at issue, she offers no constitutional analysis for us to address.

                                                    -25-
No. 2--09--0473

        Indeed, a decision cited in the trial court's written opinion (for the proposition that there is

"an interplay" between plaintiff's ordinance and the statute) appears to follow the very approach we

outline above. In City of Countryside v. Oak Park National Bank, 78 Ill. App. 2d 313 (1966), the

plaintiff brought "an action for leave to demolish defendants' building on the ground that it was in an

unsafe and dangerous condition." City of Countryside, 78 Ill. App. 2d at 313. At trial, the plaintiff

presented a zoning ordinance with the same effect as the ordinance at issue in this case. See City of

Countryside, 78 Ill. App. 2d at 315 (quoting ordinance). The defendants challenged only the

appraisal of the building, and the appellate court rejected that challenge before holding that "[t]he

uncontroverted evidence supports the court's finding that the defendants' building had deteriorated

more than fifty per cent of its replacement cost, and its demolition was therefore properly allowed."

City of Countryside, 78 Ill. App. 2d at 316. Defendant argues that we should not follow City of

Countryside because, since the decision does not quote or cite section 11--31--1, it is "not clear" that

the decision actually involved section 11--31--1. However, given the decision's statement that it came

about as a result of the plaintiff bringing an action for "leave to demolish" a building "on the ground

that it was in an unsafe and dangerous condition," and given that the defendants sought to repair the

building, we share the trial court's inference that the decision was based on section 11--31--1. City

of Countryside, 78 Ill. App. 2d at 313. Defendant also argues that City of Countryside is of limited

precedential value because it has not been cited often and because it was not mentioned in City of

Aurora, which was decided shortly after City of Countryside. However, we do not view the fact that

a case has been seldom cited as detracting from its persuasive force, and for the reasons stated above,

we do not view the approach taken in City of Coutryside as contradicting City of Aurora such that

City of Aurora would have had occasion to refer to it. In any event, regardless of the validity of

                                                 -26-
No. 2--09--0473

defendant's criticisms of City of Countryside, we independently come to the same reasoning that

appears to have supported its analysis.8 Here, as in City of Countryside, because the damage

exceeded the ordinance's 50% standard, repairs were forbidden and thus not reasonable.9 See also

City of Chicago v. James E. Mulligan Enterprises, Inc., 27 Ill. App. 2d 481, 490 (1960) (in a

demolition action under a previous version of the law at issue here, similar law banning repairs on

buildings more than 50% destroyed "offer[ed] additional support for the legislative intention as to the

city's power to take action with respect to" the building at issue).

       8
           Defendant overlooks the remainder of our analysis when she argues in her petition for

rehearing that our reliance on City of Countryside is the "thinnest of reeds" yet "all there is to

support" our decision.
       9
           Because we reject defendant's argument and hold that, due to the ordinance, no repairs

whatsoever would have been reasonable, we do not reach defendant's argument that the trial court's

finding regarding the cost of repair improperly included complete restoration of the building, rather

than repairs only of those conditions that rendered the building dangerous and unsafe under section

11--31--1. It is quite true that the typical "reasonableness" test applied in section 11--31--1 cases

compares the cost of repairing only the dangerous conditions in a building (as opposed to the cost

of repairing all damage in a building) to the value of the building. However, the ordinance, which we

conclude controls the reasonableness question here, compares the overall damage to the building

(dangerous or not) to the overall cost of the aboveground portion of the building. Because we rely

on the ordinance, we need not distinguish the costs of repairing dangerous and other conditions in

the building.

                                                 -27-
No. 2--09--0473

        Defendant's third argument is that the trial court's demolition order must be vacated because

there is insufficient evidence that plaintiff complied with the Code's requirement that an application

for a demolition order be filed "if the owner or owners of the building, including the lien holders of

record, after at least 15 days' written notice by mail to do so, have failed to put the building in a safe

condition or to demolish it." 65 ILCS 5/11--31--1(a) (West 2006). On this point, defendant first

asserts that there was no evidence that any notice was mailed to her, because the trial court admitted

copies of the notice letters only for, as defendant puts it, "the limited purpose of establishing that a

notice was sent by Plaintiff and received by Defendant." Defendant interprets this ruling as allowing

the evidence to establish only "that sheets of paper were sent to Defendant," without any indication

of what was written on those sheets of paper. Defendant misunderstands the trial court's ruling. As

we state above in our recitation of the facts, the trial court allowed the letters to be admitted into

evidence to demonstrate that they were sent, but not for the purpose of establishing the truth of the

matters asserted therein. Thus, the letters were not evidence that the building was unsafe and

required demolition (as the letters claimed), but they were evidence that plaintiff told defendant the

building was unsafe and required demolition.

        Defendant's second objection to the notice is that it was deficient for failing to apprise her of

a right to repair (the notice told her that demolition was required). However, we conclude that the

failure to mention a right to repair cannot affect the outcome of this case under the facts presented.

For the reasons explained above, we conclude that plaintiff's ordinance barred defendant from

repairing her building. Although a court generally may not read unstated limitations into statutes, it

also must interpret statutes so as to avoid absurd results. People v. Hanna, 207 Ill. 2d 486, 498

(2003) ("where a plain or literal reading of a statute produces absurd results, the literal reading should

                                                  -28-
No. 2--09--0473

yield"). Thus, although the statute (and case law) literally says that notice of a right to repair is

required (and, as explained in Stokovich, is an important reason the statute is constitutional (see

Stokovich, 211 Ill. 2d at 130)), we cannot interpret that rule as extending to cases where, for reasons

extrinsic to section 11--31--1 itself, there is in fact no right to repair.10 It would be strange indeed

to interpret the statute as requiring a municipality to tell a homeowner falsely that she has a right to

repair before the municipality pursues a demolition action, and we will not lend section 11--31--1

such a construction. We therefore reject defendant's argument that plaintiff's notice was deficient for

failing to apprise her of a right to repair.11 Aside from the evidentiary argument we reject above,

defendant makes no argument that she was not given notice of plaintiff's intention to seek demolition

of the building. Accordingly, we reject defendant's argument that the notice given her was deficient.

        10
             We do not now hold that notice is unnecessary if it is later determined that there is no right

to repair because repair is too costly and thus not reasonable under the test articulated in Stokovich.
        11
             In her petition for rehearing, defendant argues that our approach allows a municipality to

"presume[] the outcome of the trial," i.e., to forgo notice of a right to repair, and have the omission

validated if it later shows at trial that an ordinance restricts repair. However, the fact that the

ordinance and statutory issues were combined in this case does not mean that they must be; certainly,

the arguments could be considered separately. Indeed, although the municipality here was vindicated

in its assertion that defendant had no right to repair, its failure to provide notice carried a risk. If it

had been wrong, its failure to provide notice would not have been excused. Further, notice of a right

to repair that a municipality opposes could lead to but one result: the owner attempting to exercise

the right to repair would meet opposition from the municipality, and the matter would have to be

resolved before the repairs could go forward.

                                                     -29-
No. 2--09--0473

        Defendant's final objection is that, even if she was given adequate notice, there is no evidence

that notice was given to any lienholders of record, as contemplated by section 11--31--1. As with

defendant's claim regarding the deficiency in the notice to her, we conclude that, to the extent there

are any lienholders of record, notice to them of an illusory right to repair was unnecessary. That

leaves only the argument that plaintiff did not give lienholders adequate notice of its intent to pursue

demolition of the building.

        Plaintiff does not directly address this issue in its appellate brief, other than to argue that

notice generally is not a statutory prerequisite to a municipality's proceeding under section 11--31--1.

Plaintiff is correct that several appellate court decisions have held that the notice requirements

contained in section 11--31--1(a) (or its prior versions) are not prerequisites to the demolition suit

described in that section. See City of Chicago v. General Realty Corp., 133 Ill. App. 2d 662 (1971);

City of Danville v. Hartley, 101 Ill. App. 2d 31 (1968); James E. Mulligan Enterprises, Inc., 27 Ill.

App. 2d 481. However, the holdings in those cases were all based on the notion that the statutory

purpose underlying the notice provision was served under the facts presented, because the parties that

would have received statutory notice were apprised of the municipalities' intentions to demolish the

buildings at issue via their participation in or knowledge of the demolition suits. General Realty

Corp., 133 Ill. App. 2d at 670 ("Jones had notice of the proceedings since August 1, 1968, and the

demolition order was not entered until February 28, 1969 ***. Jones had much more than the

minimum fifteen days"); City of Danville, 101 Ill. App. 2d at 34 ("it is obvious that the continuing

litigation has served the function of the notice and that, under the facts and circumstances here, the

notice is not a condition precedent to further proceedings"); James E. Mulligan Enterprises, Inc., 27
Ill. App. 2d at 488 ("The statute does not say that notice is a condition precedent to suit," and fact

                                                 -30-
No. 2--09--0473

that the owner was aware of the suit gave her the requisite notice of the city's intentions). Here, there

is no indication in the record that any lienholders were given either the statutory notice or notice of

this action. Indeed, the issue of lienholders was not addressed below, and although the testimony

implies that defendant had a mortgage on her property (she referred to dealings with a bank with an

apparent interest in the property), the record contains no definitive statement that a lienholder actually

existed at the time of the hearing.

        Although the state of the record might normally be cause for our deeming defendant's

argument forfeited, we do not do so in this case for two reasons. First, the rights at stake here are

those of the potential lienholder; defendant is in no position to forfeit them without the lienholder's

notice. Second, in its brief, plaintiff neither argues forfeiture nor contests defendant's assertions that

there was a lienholder and that the lienholder received no notice.

        Further, we cannot overlook the purported failure to provide notice (either via the statutory

notice or via notice or involvement in this action) to a lienholder. Section 11--31--1's legislative

history teaches that the statute's inclusion of lienholders among those who must receive notice of a

section 11--31--1(a) proceeding was no accident. Prior to 1971, section 11--31--1(a) required notice

only to "owners"; the section was amended (Pub. Act 77--1416, §1, eff. September 1, 1971) to state

explicitly that notice should be given to "owners, including the lien holders of record." (Emphasis

added.) Compare Ill. Rev. Stat. 1971, ch. 24, par. 11--31--1 with Ill. Rev. Stat. 1967, ch. 24, par.

11--31--1. Thus, we must conclude that the legislature very intentionally provided that notice should

be given to lienholders.

        There is good reason the legislature would have acted to require notice to lienholders of an

action to demolish a building. The purpose of the notice requirement--to allow time to repair or

                                                  -31-
No. 2--09--0473

demolish a building prior to the municipality's obtaining a court order requiring repair or demolition

(James E. Mulligan Enterprises, Inc., 27 Ill. App. 2d at 488)--is served by requiring notice to

lienholders who the statute contemplates might facilitate the repair or demolition. See 65 ILCS

5/11--31--1(a) (West 2006) ("The cost of the demolition [or] repair *** incurred by the municipality,

by an intervenor, or by a lien holder of record *** is recoverable from the owner or owners of the

real estate").

        As important, such a lienholder unquestionably has an interest in the outcome of demolition

proceedings, both because of its interest, as a lienholder, in the building's continued existence (so that

the building may continue to secure the obligation), and because section 11--31--1 contemplates the

subordination of all prior liens to a new lien in favor of the municipality for the cost of any demolition

or repair conducted by the municipality. See 65 ILCS 5/11--31--1(a) (West 2006) ("the lien is

superior to all prior existing liens and encumbrances"); cf. First of America Bank, Rockford v.

Netsch, 166 Ill. 2d 165, 185 (1995) ("liens are property rights entitled to constitutional protection,"

and thus law creating a prior lien retroactively, and impairing the value of the lien, would

unconstitutionally impair lienholder's substantial rights); In re Application of Busse, 124 Ill. App. 3d
433, 441 (1984) ("A mortgagee has a right to his security unimpaired and therefore may maintain an

action before breach of condition to recover damages in the nature of waste against the mortgagor

or a third person for substantial damages done by him to the mortgaged property, even though in its

damaged condition it is of sufficient value to satisfy the mortgage"). Thus, a lienholder in this

situation has the type of "substantial property interest" that may not be curtailed without due process

of law, including proper notice. Cf. Mennonite Board of Missions v. Adams, 462 U.S. 791, 798, 77
L. Ed. 2d 180, 187, 103 S. Ct. 2706, 2711 (1983) (mortgagee has a substantial property interest that

                                                  -32-
No. 2--09--0473

is "immediately and drastically diminished" by a tax sale of the mortgaged property, which sale could

subordinate or avoid the mortgagee's lien, and thus due process requires proper notice). The notice

provision of section 11--31--1 serves not only the purpose of helping to facilitate remediation of

dangerous structures, but also that of codifying the right to notice (and the right to be heard) afforded

by procedural due process to a lienholder whose lien may become subordinate, or severely

diminished, when a court orders that the building securing the lien be demolished. Accordingly, we

conclude that, even if the notice provision of section 11--31--1(a) allows the filing of a demolition

action without notice to owners and lienholders, it does require that the owners and lienholders

receive notice (either via notice of the litigation or otherwise) prior to the trial court's entry of a

demolition order.

        Here, as we say above, the record does not reveal whether proper notice was given to any

lienholders, but plaintiff does not dispute defendant's assertion that it was not. We conclude based

on the above discussion that section 11--31--1(a) requires proper notice to lienholders prior to any

demolition order. We must therefore vacate the trial court's demolition order and remand for the trial

court to determine whether there are, indeed, any lienholders, and, if so, whether they were notified.

If there was no deficiency in notification, the trial court may reenter its demolition order for the

reasons stated herein. If there was inadequate notice to a lienholder, the trial court must ensure

proper notice and hear the lienholder's objections, if any, before entering (or declining to enter) a

demolition order.12

        12
             In her petition for rehearing, defendant argues that any failure to involve a lienholder in this

litigation should render the judgment void and require a retrial. Thus, defendant asks that we now

so order. This argument, however, is one the parties (and lienholder, if applicable) may raise below,

                                                     -33-
No. 2--09--0473

       For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the judgment of the circuit court of McHenry County

and remand for further proceedings.

       Vacated and remanded with directions.

       JORGENSEN and HUDSON, JJ., concur.

after the trial court has determined the extent to which any interested lienholder was deprived of

notice; we express no opinion on the issue now.

                                               -34-