State of Illinois
90th General Assembly
Legislation

   [ Search ]   [ Legislation ]   [ Bill Summary ]
[ Home ]   [ Back ]   [ Bottom ]



90_SB1112

      New Act
          Creates the Regulatory Impacts Act.  Allows the owner  of
      property  to sue the State or any unit of local government or
      school district when the application of  any  statute,  rule,
      guideline,  or  policy  or the denial of any permit, license,
      authorization, or government permission causes  the  property
      to  diminish  in  value  50% or more.  Provides the owner may
      recover an amount equal to the diminution in value.    Allows
      any  person  who  has an interest that is or may be adversely
      affected by a statute, rule,  guideline,  or  policy  or  any
      provision  or  condition of a permit, license, authorization,
      or  governmental  permission  to  bring  a  civil  action  to
      invalidate  the  statute,  rule,  guideline,  or  policy   or
      provision or condition of the permit, license, authorization,
      or governmental permission.  Allows the court to award costs,
      including attorneys' fees, to a prevailing plaintiff.
                                                     SRS90S0047PMch
                                               SRS90S0047PMch
 1        AN ACT concerning regulatory impacts.
 2        Be  it  enacted  by  the People of the State of Illinois,
 3    represented in the General Assembly:
 4        Section 1. Short title.  This Act may  be  cited  as  the
 5    Regulatory Impacts Act.
 6        Section 5.  Definitions.  In this Act:
 7        "Diminution  in  value  of  50%  or  more"  means  a  50%
 8    reduction in the fair market value of the property subject to
 9    the  statute,  rule, guideline, or policy or to the denial of
10    any   permit,   license,   authorization,   or   governmental
11    permission.
12        "Inverse  condemnation"  means   a   suit   against   the
13    government  to  recover money damages equal to the diminution
14    in the fair market value of the property.
15        "Owner" means the owner  of  property  at  the  time  the
16    statute,  rule,  guideline, or policy was passed, or owner at
17    the  time  that  the  permit,  license,   authorization,   or
18    governmental permission was denied.
19        Section  10.   Dimunition  in  value.  The  owner  of any
20    property may sue the State or any unit of local government or
21    school district whenever the application of a statute,  rule,
22    guideline,  or  policy to a parcel of property, or the denial
23    of  any  permit,  license,  authorization,  or   governmental
24    permission  of  any  kind causes a diminution in value of the
25    property of 50% or more.
26        This suit may be filed in the circuit court and the owner
27    shall be entitled to a trial by jury.  In the suit, the owner
28    may recover either (1) a sum equal to the diminution in value
29    of the property and retain title to the property or  (2)  the
30    entire  fair  market  value  of  the  property  prior  to the
                            -2-                SRS90S0047PMch
 1    diminution in value of 50% or more and transfer title to  the
 2    government  upon  payment  of the fair market value.   If the
 3    statute, rule, guideline, or policy is rescinded, or  if  the
 4    permit, license, authorization, or governmental permission is
 5    granted,  prior  to  final  judgment, then the owner shall be
 6    entitled to recover in  the  pending  action  reasonable  and
 7    necessary  costs  incurred  to  that  date, together with any
 8    economic losses sustained by reason of the acts  giving  rise
 9    to the diminution in value.
10        No  compensation  shall be required by virtue of this Act
11    if the owner's use or proposed use of the property amounts to
12    a public nuisance  as  commonly  understood  and  defined  by
13    background  principals  of  nuisance  and  property law.  The
14    government bears the burden of proof  with  respect  to  this
15    affirmative defense.
16        Section  15.   Invalidation.   Any  person may commence a
17    civil action on his or her own behalf against  the  State  or
18    any unit of local government or school district to invalidate
19    any statute, rule, guideline, or policy, or to invalidate any
20    provision or condition of any permit, license, authorization,
21    or  governmental  permission,  that  does  not  substantially
22    advance  its  stated  purpose.   The circuit court shall have
23    exclusive jurisdiction over these actions, and these  actions
24    may be pleaded in the alternative in a complaint containing a
25    cause of action contained in Section 10.
26        "Person"  for  purposes of this Section means a person or
27    persons having an  interest  that  is  or  may  be  adversely
28    affected by the statute, rule, guideline, or policy or by the
29    provision or condition of any permit, license, authorization,
30    or governmental permission.
31        A  suit  for  invalidation shall be ripe for adjudication
32    upon the enactment of the statute, rule, guideline, or policy
33    or the imposition  of  any  provision  or  condition  of  any
                            -3-                SRS90S0047PMch
 1    permit, license, authorization, or governmental permission to
 2    any parcel of property.
 3        Section 20.  Application; statute of limitations.
 4        (a)  This  Act applies to statutes, rules, guidelines, or
 5    policies as well as to any  provision  or  condition  of  any
 6    permit, license, authorization, or governmental permission in
 7    effect  at  the  time of enactment of this Act or hereinafter
 8    enacted.
 9        (b)  The  statute  of  limitations  for  actions  brought
10    pursuant to this Act is 6 years from  the  enactment  of  any
11    statute,  rule,  guideline,  or  policy, or the denial of any
12    permit, license, authorization, or governmental permission by
13    the government.
14        Section 25.  Award of costs.  The court, in  issuing  any
15    final order in any action brought under this Act, shall award
16    costs,  including reasonable attorney fees, to any prevailing
17    or substantially prevailing plaintiff.
18        Section  30.   Constitutional  or  statutory  rights  not
19    restricted.  Nothing in this Act restricts any remedy or  any
20    right  that any person or class of persons may have under any
21    provision of the Illinois or United  States  Constitution  or
22    statutes or laws of this State or the United States.

[ Top ]