2020 IL App (1st) 191053
No. 1-19-1053
Opinion filed May 11, 2020
First Division
______________________________________________________________________________
IN THE
APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
FIRST DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________
THE CITY OF CHICAGO, a Municipal Corporation, ) Appeal from the
) Circuit Court of
Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County.
)
v.
) No. 05 L 50792
FRED J. EYCHANER and UNKNOWN OWNERS, )
) Honorable
Defendants ) Rita M. Novak and James M.
) McGing,
(Fred J. Eychaner, Defendant-Appellant). ) Judges, presiding.
JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Presiding Justice Griffin and Justice Pierce concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Fred Eychaner again challenges the City of Chicago’s use of eminent domain to take his
property. When the case was last before us, we upheld the taking, finding that the City could use
eminent domain to take the property, which lies in a conservation area, to prevent future blight and
to promote economic redevelopment. City of Chicago v. Eychaner, 2015 IL App (1st) 131833. We
remanded, however, for a new trial on just compensation. After a jury awarded Eychaner $7.1
million in just compensation, he filed a posttrial motion renewing his argument on the taking’s
constitutionality. Eychaner conceded the binding effect of our decision but sought “to preserve”
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the constitutional claim for possible review by the supreme court. He also moved to reconsider the
denial of his original traverse based on purported changed circumstances, asserting the City
adopted a new plan for the area so the taking no longer served a permissible public use.
¶2 The trial court denied the motion based on this court having remanded for the limited
purpose of a new trial on just compensation. As to Eychaner’s invocation of changed
circumstances, the court noted that all the evidence of purported changed circumstances was
available before the second trial, so Eychaner could have filed a new traverse or alerted the court
to his claim of changed circumstances. The court also determined that the City’s new plan adhered
to the previous plan’s goals of redeveloping a conservation area to promote economic revitalization
and, thus, the taking continued to serve a constitutionally permissible public use.
¶3 Eychaner appeals, arguing the City may not use eminent domain to take property in a
conservation area in the name of economic redevelopment. He also contends the trial court erred
in denying his motion to reconsider based on the city’s new redevelopment plan. We affirm. The
law-of-the-case doctrine precluded the trial court, and now precludes us, from reconsidering the
denial of Eychaner’s traverse. As to the reconsideration, we agree with the trial court that the new
plan adheres to the earlier plan so that the taking still serves a constitutionally permissible public
use, and the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion.
¶4 Background
¶5 We laid out the facts in detail in Eychaner, 2015 IL App (1st) 131833, and will summarize
only the relevant facts.
¶6 Fred Eychaner owned vacant land at the southwest corner of Grand Avenue and North
Jefferson Street in Chicago. At the end of 1999, the City proposed creating a planned
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manufacturing district (PMD) there, aimed at protecting industrial jobs; preventing residential
encroachment on existing manufacturing facilities; and encouraging manufacturers to invest,
modernize, and expand their facilities. Residential uses are not permitted within PMDs. See
Chicago Municipal Code §§ 17-6-0403-C, 17-6-0403-F (amended Sept. 10, 2014).
¶7 Blommer Chocolate Company’s (Blommer) factory stood two blocks south of Eychaner’s
property. Blommer initially opposed its factory’s inclusion in the PMD, raising concerns that
residents of a nearby planned residential development would find the smell, noise, and traffic
generated by the factory “intolerable.” Blommer proposed two solutions: extending the PMD
further south to provide a buffer between Blommer and the new residential development or not
including Blommer in the PMD to allow it to sell its property more easily if conflicts with the
residents forced it to relocate. Blommer also discussed with the City the possibility of acquiring
property to the north of its factory, which did not include Eychaner’s property, for a truck staging
area.
¶8 The City wanted to keep the Blommer factory, and the City’s plan commission spent
months discussing alternative plans with Blommer to make sure that happened. Eventually,
Blommer dropped its opposition in exchange for the City’s willingness to help Blommer expand
its industrial campus by acquiring nearby property to “create a buffer” between its operations and
the proposed residential development. The plan commission recommended that the city council
adopt the PMD. It did a few months later.
¶9 The City intended to fund the project though the River West Tax Increment Finance
Redevelopment Plan (River West TIF). The City retained a private firm that commissioned studies
and produced a 68-page report about the River West TIF. The report concluded:
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[T]ax-increment financing would induce private investment and arrest blighting factors in
the area. Because the area had not been subject to growth and reinvestment, the study
reasoned that property owners would not invest in their properties without tax-increment
financing. The study anticipated benefits, including: (i) stronger economic vitality; (ii)
increased construction and long-term employment opportunities; (iii) replacement of
inappropriate uses, blight, and vacant properties with viable, high-quality developments;
(iv) the elimination of physical impediments, such as roads in poor condition; (v) the
construction of public improvements to attract private investment; (vi) job-training services
to make the area more attractive to investors and employers; and (vii) opportunities for
minority- and women-owned businesses to share in the redevelopment.”
¶ 10 Although Eychaner’s property was not deemed blighted, the study stated that it met the
requirements of a “conservation area” under the Tax Increment Allocation Redevelopment Act (65
ILCS 5/11-74.4-1 et seq. (West 2006)) and, as a conservation area, “may become a blighted area”
because of (i) deterioration, (ii) code violations, (iii) excessive vacancies, (iv) lack of community
planning, and (v) lagging property values (id. § 11-74.4-3(b)). The City’s community development
commission recommended, and the city council adopted, the plan for the River West TIF.
¶ 11 A few months later, Blommer submitted a redevelopment proposal for its expanded
campus. Blommer proposed acquiring 4.2 acres of land surrounding its factory, including
Eychaner’s land. Initially, Blommer offered to buy Eychaner’s land, but he refused to sell. Then
the City notified Eychaner of its possible taking of his property with the intent of conveying it to
Blommer as part of its plan to expand its campus. After a public hearing, the city council passed
an ordinance authorizing the taking. The ordinance considered the taking necessary to achieve the
objectives of the River West TIF.
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¶ 12 Condemnation Proceedings
¶ 13 In August 2005, the City filed a complaint to condemn Eychaner’s property through
eminent domain. Eventually, the case proceeded to a jury trial on just compensation. The jury
returned a verdict of $2.5 million. Eychaner appealed, challenging the denial of his traverse and
the compensation award. To support his argument that the taking was unconstitutional, Eychaner
relied primarily on Southwestern Illinois Development Authority v. National City Environmental,
L.L.C., 199 Ill. 2d 225 (2002) (SWIDA). There, the Illinois Supreme Court invalidated the taking
of private property for an adjacent racetrack’s parking lot that had a “purely private benefit and
lack[ed] a showing of a supporting legislative purpose.” Id. at 240. The SWIDA court held that the
taking had “minimal public benefit” and that the “true beneficiaries *** are private businesses.”
Id. at 239-40.
¶ 14 Our opinion noted that the facts in SWIDA—significantly, a lack of a parking study or
economic plan—showed it to be a sweetheart deal and that SWIDA did not intend to benefit the
public. Eychaner, 2015 IL App (1st) 131833, ¶ 55. We acknowledged that “[r]ecognizing the
difference between a valid public use and a sham can be challenging. But a telling feature of sound
public use in the context of economic redevelopment is the existence of a well-developed, publicly
vetted, and thoughtful economic development plan.” Id. ¶ 71. That kind of plan was present in
Kelo v. City of New London, 545 U.S. 469 (2005) and People ex rel. Gutknecht v. City of Chicago,
3 Ill. 2d 539 (1954), but “absent in SWIDA.” Eychaner, 2015 IL App (1st) 131833, ¶ 71 (“SWIDA
did not conduct or commission a thorough study of the parking situation at [the racetrack]. Nor did
it formulate any economic plan requiring additional parking at the racetrack.” (Internal quotation
marks omitted.)). Id. ¶ 71.
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¶ 15 On the contrary, the plans showed the City considering, in good faith, the taking of
Eychaner’s land as part of a “carefully formulated” economic development plan that
“unquestionably serves a public purpose of preventing blight, promoting economic revitalization,
and protecting existing industry.” Id. ¶ 63. We concluded, “the use of eminent domain to expand
Blommer’s campus passes constitutional muster because it aligns with the goals of the City’s
economic development plan to retain existing industry, prevent conflicts between residential and
industrial use, and promote investment and revitalization in a conservation area.” Id. ¶ 78. We also
found the trial court erred in excluding certain evidence and remanded for a new trial on just
compensation. Id. ¶ 105.
¶ 16 The North Branch Framework
¶ 17 While on remand, the Chicago Plan Commission undertook a comprehensive review of 26
“industrial corridors” in the City to “address the modern realities of the city’s industrial
marketplace and its evolving role within the global economy.” The commission selected a 760-
acre area along the Chicago River, the North Branch, as the first industrial corridor for
comprehensive review. This area includes Eychaner’s property and the Bloomer factory. The
review process, dubbed the “North Branch Framework,” sought “to modernize existing land use
regulations in the corridor to more effectively promote economic growth and job creation through
the expansion of existing businesses and the attraction of new businesses, corporate headquarters
and companies that drive Chicago’s knowledge-based economy.” It proposed allowing mixed-use
development to “maximize[e] the North Branch as an economic engine and vital job center.”
¶ 18 The North Branch Framework proposed dividing the corridor into three distinct zones.
Eychaner’s property and the Blommer factory lie in the “South Sub-Area,” containing a mix of
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industrial and office uses and abutting the downtown (D) zoning district and high-density, mixed-
use properties. It proposed new land use regulations for the South Sub-Area that would provide
for “higher density office; retail and select residential uses,” while maintaining “[a]t least 50
percent of the corridor’s land *** for employment-oriented development.” To help implement its
goals and principles, the framework recommended replacing the existing zoning for the South Sub-
Area from PMD to “Downtown Service” (DS). DS zoning does not permit residential uses.
“[E]xisting legal industrial uses would be permitted to continue without impact,” and future zoning
amendments in the South Sub-area would be “limited to Downtown Mixed-Use (DX).” DX
includes multistory high-rise residential structures, which in recent years have become more
prevalent in the area.
¶ 19 To address the possibility that some companies would decide to expand or relocate, the
North Branch Framework proposed “allocating funding to provide the appropriate infrastructure
and related amenities to accommodate ongoing shifts as needed.” It recognized the importance of
retaining industrial uses within the City’s overall industrial corridor system and that “[l]and within
the corridors that transitions to nonmanufacturing uses is a loss to the overall system and should
entail compensation on behalf of the City’s industrial base.” A special fee to support the corridor
system citywide “will be recommended for development projects that diminish the amount of
corridor land that is used or designated for industry and related employment.”
¶ 20 Industrial Corridor System Fund Ordinance
¶ 21 After the plan commission issued its North Branch Framework, the City Council approved
an ordinance creating an industrial corridor system fund. The ordinance, titled the “Industrial
Corridor System Fund Ordinance,” established “ ‘[c]onversion areas’ *** within the industrial
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corridor system identified for potential zoning and/or other land use changes or modifications” and
“ ‘[r]eceiving corridors,” “in which the primary sources of jobs are in industrial use categories.”
When property within a “conversion area” is rezoned, the City collects a “conversion fee.”
Industrial users that relocate from conversion areas to replacement sites in receiving corridors are
exempted from paying the conversion fee to the City.
¶ 22 The ordinance’s purpose was “to mitigate the loss of industrial land and facilities in
conversion areas by generating funds for investment in receiving corridors in order to preserve and
enhance the city’s industrial base, support new and expanding industrial uses, and ensure a stable
future for manufacturing and industrial employment in Chicago.” The ordinance created a “North
Branch Industrial Corridor Conversion Area,” which included the Blommer factory and Eychaner
property, and repealed the PMD zoning and replaced it with DS zoning.
¶ 23 The Sale of Blommer
¶ 24 Before the second just compensation trial, Fuji Oil Holdings, Inc. (Fuji), announced it had
acquired all outstanding shares of Blommer for $750 million. Fuji said it intended to “[e]xpand
business in North America, the largest market in the chocolate industry,” and “maintain the
management structure of [Blommer] with the current management team.”
¶ 25 Second Just Compensation Trial
¶ 26 At the second just compensation trial, the City and Eychaner presented expert witnesses
who agreed that the highest and best use of the property would be a multistory high rise residential
structure with ancillary commercial use. The property would have to be rezoned because DS
zoning does not permit residential uses and the owner would have to pay a conversion fee, which
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would be used to assist other industrial properties in the area. The expert witnesses agreed approval
of the zoning change was reasonably probable.
¶ 27 The jury returned an award to Eychaner of $7.1 million. Eychaner filed a posttrial motion,
which did not challenge the fair compensation award but renewed his argument that the City’s
exercise of eminent domain in a conservation area in the name of redevelopment was
unconstitutional. Eychaner conceded that the trial court was bound by this court’s decision but
stated that he was “rais[ing] the issue again in order to preserve it for further judicial review in
higher courts.” Eychaner also sought reconsideration of the denial of his original traverse under
section 2-1202(b) of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-1202(b) (West 2018)), based on
changed circumstances. He asserted the taking no longer served a permissible public use since the
City had changed its plans for the area surrounding Eychaner’s property. Specifically, Eychaner
argued, “without the River West TIF Plan, there is no valid conservation plan—or any plan—on
which the Blommer redevelopment project and the taking of defendant’s property is based. It’s a
naked transfer of private property through the power of eminent domain to benefit a private party—
now Fuji Oil Holdings, Inc. It is a taking for private, not public use, and is thus barred in Illinois.”
Eychaner wanted the trial court to vacate the judgment entered on the jury verdict and either
reverse the ruling on the traverse or reconsider and reverse that ruling based on changed
circumstances and dismiss with prejudice.
¶ 28 The trial court denied the motion on the basis of our having remanded for the limited
purpose of a new trial on just compensation. As to changed circumstances based on the new plan,
the trial court found that, since all the evidence of purported changed circumstances was available
before the second trial, Eychaner could have filed a new traverse or alerted the court to his claim
of changed circumstances. The court also held that the City’s North Branch Framework adhered
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to the River West TIF’s goals of redeveloping a conservation area to promote the economic
revitalization of that conservation area and, thus, the taking continued to serve a constitutionally
permissible public use.
¶ 29 Analysis
¶ 30 Eychaner raises two arguments. First, he asserts the City has no right to take his property
and that our ruling allowing the taking to prevent future blight was wrong and in conflict with
supreme court precedent in SWIDA. Eychaner asks that we reverse that judgment and dismiss the
eminent domain proceeding with prejudice. Alternatively, Eychaner contends the trial court erred
in denying his motion to reconsider its denial of his traverse in light of the City’s new North Branch
Framework and asks that we reverse that denial and remand so the trial court can reconsider in
light of changed circumstances.
¶ 31 Law-of-the-Case Doctrine
¶ 32 As to Eychaner’s argument that we reverse our original decision allowing the taking, the
parties agree that the law-of-the-case doctrine applies; Eychaner asserts he raises the issue to
preserve it for review in the Illinois Supreme Court.
¶ 33 The law-of-the-case doctrine provides that issues presented and disposed of in an earlier
appeal are binding and will control in the circuit court on remand, as well as the appellate court in
a later appeal, unless the facts presented differ so much as to require a different interpretation. Bilut
v. Northwestern University, 296 Ill. App. 3d 42, 47 (1998). Absent substantially different facts, a
party will not be allowed to reargue issues already decided by the appellate court. A dissatisfied
party may file a petition for rehearing or petition for leave to appeal to the supreme court. Id. (citing
Sanders v. Shephard, 258 Ill. App. 3d 626, 633 (1994)).
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¶ 34 We addressed the constitutionality of the taking in Eychaner’s initial appeal and upheld it.
Eychaner, 2015 IL App (1st) 131833, ¶ 78. The law-of-the-case doctrine binds us to that decision,
so we affirm. Because we apply the law-of-the-case doctrine, we do not address Eychaner’s
arguments that our 2015 decision should be reversed.
¶ 35 Denial of Posttrial Motion
¶ 36 Eychaner next contends the trial court erred in refusing to reconsider its 2006 denial of the
traverse because the North Branch Framework has superseded the River West TIF, which this
court relied on to affirm the taking. Specifically, Eychaner argues inconsistency exists between the
North Branch Framework and the River West TIF and that the City no longer intends on preserving
industrial uses in the area. Eychaner adds that the City wants to move industrial uses out of the
area and replace them with multi-family residences. Eychaner contends that, under the North
Branch Framework, the City will relocate Blommer rather than expand its campus, which
constitutes a taking for private, not public, use. He considers this new evidence so conclusive that
it would probably change the result on reconsideration of the denial of the traverse. Eychaner
claims the trial court abused its discretion in ruling on the reconsideration.
¶ 37 We will not reverse a decision to grant or deny a motion for reconsideration absent an abuse
of discretion. Landeros v. Equity Property & Development, 321 Ill. App. 3d 57, 65 (2001). A
motion to reconsider brings to the court’s attention (i) newly discovered evidence unavailable at
the time of the hearing, (ii) changes in the law, or (iii) errors in the court’s application of the
existing law. O’Connor v. County of Cook, 337 Ill. App. 3d 902, 911 (2003). Illinois courts do not
favor posttrial motions based on newly discovered evidence and subjects them to close scrutiny.
Robbins v. Avara, 28 Ill. App. 3d 292, 295 (1975).
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¶ 38 A motion for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence requires establishing the new
evidence be (i) so conclusive it probably changes the judgment should a new trial be granted,
(ii) discovered after the trial, (iii) undiscoverable “before trial with the exercise of due diligence,”
(iv) material to the issue, and (v) not “merely cumulative to the evidence at trial.” Lannert v.
Ramirez, 214 Ill. App. 3d 1102, 1104 (1991).
¶ 39 Timeliness of Motion for Reconsideration
¶ 40 We agree with the trial court that Eychaner did not meet the elements required to grant a
motion for reconsideration based on newly discovered evidence. Eychaner met the fourth
requirement, as to materiality. But Eychaner failed to meet the other four requirements.
¶ 41 First, Eychaner failed to establish that the new evidence was discovered after trial. He knew
of the “changed circumstances”—the North Branch Framework—before the second just
compensation trial and had ample opportunity to bring the evidence to the court’s attention. The
City first publicly announced its North Branch Framework recommendations on June 6, 2016, and
adopted the implementing ordinance in July 2017. Fuji publicly announced its acquisition of
Blommer on November 19, 2018. As the trial court noted, some of the changes brought about by
the North Branch Framework, including zoning changes that would permit mixed-use residential
developments, had been presented at the just compensation jury trial. The circumstances plainly
had changed; both parties were aware of it, as was the trial court. If Eychaner had filed his motion
to reconsider beforehand and had prevailed, the parties and the court would have been spared the
cost and time of conducting what would have been an irrelevant four-day jury trial on just
compensation. Instead, Eychaner waited until after the trial to ask the court to again consider the
constitutionality of the taking based on evidence available well beforehand.
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¶ 42 Eychaner contends the trial court should have looked at whether the new evidence could
have been discovered before the 2006 condemnation hearing rather than the second just
compensation jury trial. Eychaner cites no cases to support this contention. He simply asserts that
the jury only had jurisdiction over the just compensation issue and could not have decided whether
the taking was constitutional under the City’s new North Branch Framework. That argument fails.
The trial judge, not the jury, possesses the authority to decide the constitutionality of the taking.
See City of Naperville v. Old Second National Bank of Aurora, 327 Ill. App. 3d 734, 739 (2002)
(issues raised on traverse and motion to dismiss are preliminary questions determined by trial court
without jury). But nothing restrained Eychaner from bringing a motion to reconsider or for a new
traverse based on the purportedly material change of circumstances, so the trial judge could have
addressed it before the jury trial on just compensation. Eychaner had opportunity between July
2017, when the City adopted an implementing ordinance for the North Branch Framework, and
December 2018, when the just compensation trial began, to argue that the taking was no longer
constitutional. He remained silent to his detriment.
¶ 43 We also reject the contention that by remanding for a jury trial on just compensation our
mandate prevented the trial court from reconsidering its denial of the traverse and motion to
dismiss in light of newly discovered evidence. As the trial court noted, the law-of-the-case doctrine
precludes Eychaner from rearguing issues this court decided. Bilut, 296 Ill. App. 3d at 47. But the
doctrine applies to issues of fact or matters concerning claims decided by the appellate court, not
issues of fact or matters concerning claims not decided by the appellate court. Zokoych v. Spalding,
84 Ill. App. 3d 661, 667 (1980). When we remanded in 2015, the city’s North Branch Framework
did not exist, and we could not address whether it affected the constitutionality of the taking, a
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question of fact. Nothing in our remand indicated that the trial court had to blindly follow our
mandate and hold a new jury trial on just compensation, undeterred by material new facts that
came to light after we ruled. See Bilut, 296 Ill. App. 3d at 47 (despite law-of-the-case doctrine,
dissatisfied party may file petition for rehearing based on new facts). Thus, Eychaner failed to
timely file his motion to reconsider or show that new evidence was discovered after trial.
¶ 44 Nor can Eychaner contend the evidence was undiscoverable before the just compensation
trial with the exercise of due diligence. The evidence of changed circumstances, as we have said,
was known to Eychaner before trial and partly presented to the jury. Thus, he failed to satisfy the
third and fifth Lannert requirements.
¶ 45 Changed Circumstances Did Not Warrant Reversal
¶ 46 Even if Eychaner could meet the other Lannert requirements, he failed to demonstrate the
new evidence would change the outcome. Eychaner notes that our decision affirming the trial
court’s denial of his traverse relied primarily on the City’s River West TIF, which showed (i) the
City had a “carefully formulated” economic development plan and (ii) the taking “unquestionably
serves a public purpose of preventing blight, promoting economic revitalization, and protecting
existing industry.” Eychaner, 2015 IL App (1st) 131833 ¶ 63. Eychaner asserts that the City’s
decision to adopt the new North Branch Framework supersedes the River West TIF; in other words,
the taking is no longer supported by the City’s current economic development plan, and so it is
nothing more than a naked transfer from Eychaner to Blommer in the name of economic
development.
¶ 47 The North Branch Framework, however, is not the sole expression of the City’s plan, and
it does not supersede the River West TIF, which remains in effect. The River West TIF was enacted
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by an ordinance that remains in effect, by its own terms, until 2024. Eychaner relies on what he
deems “express language in the North Branch Framework stating that all prior plans are
superseded.” But he either purposely or erroneously misstates the language; it has nothing to do
with the River West TIF. The North Branch Framework states, “At least seven plans and studies
have been completed since 2010 that provide recommendations which are relevant to the North
Branch Industrial Corridor and its surrounding areas.” It then identifies those specific seven plans.
None involve the River West TIF plan.
¶ 48 Moreover, the North Branch Framework and the River West TIF plan together carry out
the purpose of promoting the economic revitalization of a conservation area. As the North Branch
Framework states, its primary goal is to “maintain the north branch industrial corridor as an
important economic engine and vital job center within the city of Chicago.” It does so by
“moderniz[ing] existing land use regulations in the corridor to more effectively promote economic
growth and job creation through the expansion of existing businesses and the attraction of new
businesses, corporate headquarters and companies that drive Chicago’s knowledge-based
economy,” a goal consistent with that of the River West TIF to promote economic revitalization
and protect existing industry.
¶ 49 Further, the area around Eychaner’s property continues to qualify under the TIF Act as a
conservation area that runs the risk of blighting without intervention by the City. And, as we held,
the City “may use the power of eminent domain to prevent future blight in a conservation area
such as the River West TIF.” Id. ¶ 69. The City’s decision to change the zoning to allow broader
economic redevelopment beyond strict industrial uses does not render the plans unconstitutional.
As we held, “[t]he goals of the River West TIF—to reduce blighting factors, prevent blight, foster
the City’s industrial base, prevent conflicts between residential and industrial uses, and retain
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existing industry—all constitute valid public uses.” Id. ¶ 75. The City’s current plan to redevelop
the conservation area around Eychaner’s property seeks to “preserve the industrial character of the
corridor while also attracting innovation and technology-oriented businesses,” a valid public use.
¶ 50 Eychaner relies on Village of Skokie v. Gianoulis, 260 Ill. App. 3d 287 (1994), to argue
that the taking was an abuse of the City’s eminent domain power. In Gianoulis, the appellate court
invalidated a taking by the Village of Skokie because the defendant’s properties had not been
included in the Village’s original planning study or in the ordinance that originally authorized the
use of eminent domain as part of a redevelopment plan. Id. at 296. Later, when a developer
contacted the Village about an unsuccessful attempt at privately purchasing the property, the
Village passed an ordinance retroactively redefining the redevelopment project area to include the
defendants’ properties. Id. This court held that the Village lacked authority to take the properties
and abused its power because the properties had not been part of the redevelopment project area
identified in the ordinance authorizing the use of eminent domain and “[the Village] cannot merely
pass an ordinance and state therein that the lots are now included in the study and the plan.” Id. at
297.
¶ 51 Eychaner contends that, as in Gianoulis, the City’s decision to adopt the North Branch
Framework constituted a change in policy, approach, and planning: from conserving existing
industrial uses to relocating and replacing them with residential and commercial uses. We disagree.
Unlike the defendants in Gianoulis, Eychaner’s property has always been within the conservation
area identified by the River West TIF; the City has always planned for the area’s economic
redevelopment area. As the trial court stated in distinguishing Gianoulis, “[h]ere there was a broad
redevelopment plan implemented prior to the initial taking, and there was a broad redevelopment
plan implemented at the time of the second trial. Changed circumstances in the manner of new
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developments in the subject area, which warranted the City conduct a new comprehensive study
to determine what zoning best would promote its intention of economic revitalization of the
conservation area bolsters its public purpose, rather than show an abuse of power.” See id.
¶ 52 Also, Eychaner presented no evidence of changes to the plan. Instead, he asserts the City’s
current plan no longer supports the taking. Not so. Residential uses remain prohibited under the
current zoning, though the zoning went from PMD to DS. And Eychaner cites no evidence that
Blommer or Fuji intends to use the property for a residential purpose or a use inconsistent with the
redevelopment agreement or the River West TIF goals. Indeed, Eychaner acknowledges that both
the plans for the property to become part of Blommer factory and the Blommer redevelopment
agreement remain unchanged.
¶ 53 Further, the City’s decision to create a fund to pay industrial businesses to relocate out of
the area supports the goal of the River West TIF by reducing conflicts between residential and
industrial uses. Acquiring Eychaner’s property has been to allow Blommer to expand into a self-
enclosed campus, thereby reducing conflicts with neighboring uses, continuing operations, and
maintaining its workforce within the City—all part of the City’s larger plan to redevelop and
ensure the economic vitality of the area.
¶ 54 The City’s plans under the River West TIF, the redevelopment agreement, and the North
Branch Framework continue to “carry out the same purpose of promoting ‘the economic
revitalization of a conservation area.” Thus, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying
the motion to reconsider.
¶ 55 Affirmed.
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No. 1-19-1053
Cite as: City of Chicago v. Eychaner, 2020 IL App (1st) 191053
Decision Under Review: Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 05-L-5792;
the Hon. Rita M. Novak and the Hon. James M. McGing, Judges,
presiding.
Attorneys Thomas F. Geselbracht and Elizabeth L. Butler, of DLA Piper
for LLP (US), of Chicago, for appellant.
Appellant:
Attorneys Mark A. Flessner, Corporation Counsel, of Chicago (Benna
for Ruth Solomon, Myriam Zreczny Kasper, and Justin A.
Appellee: Houppert, Assistant Corporation Counsel, of counsel), for
appellee.
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