HINSDALE, Ill. (WLS) -- A couple in west suburban Hinsdale, Ill., has won a two-year legal battle over a sculpture of the Lady of Justice in their yard.Village officials tried to force them to remove the sculpture and fined them hundreds of thousands of dollars until a judge ruled the village's actions were unconstitutional.Curt Kmiecek's motto is "never accept defeat," which served him well in his life, from 30 years in the Air Force to his long marriage to a Civil Rights attorney."Things mean things, words mean things; that's Lady Justice," Kmiecek said.Lady Justice was once an old, dead ash tree which was brought to life by an artist with a chainsaw. The day the statue was completed two years ago, he had a catastrophic skydiving accident."As I come out of one form of my hospitalization I find out we got a notice from the village saying we're in violation of codes," Kmiecek said."The original letter said they were going to take it. Take it down. Or we had to take it down," said Dana Kurtz, Kmiecek's wife and attorney.While Kurtz filed a countersuit calling Hinsdale's ordinance unconstitutional, Kmiecek again refused to accept defeat."We came out here and got chained up with my power chair to [the statue]. I sat out for six hours on a cold, rainy day," he said.On Tuesday the scales of justice in DuPage County tipped in their favor."The court found the sign ordinance of the village is unconstitutional and allowed our counterclaim to stand," Kurtz said.The village released a statement on the ruling, saying:"First amendment freedoms and artistic expression is very important and should be protected," Kurtz said.So there she stands and there Lady Justice will legally stay.