Borchert v. Village of North Oaks

117 N.W.2d 396, 264 Minn. 32, 1962 Minn. LEXIS 825
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 11, 1962
Docket38,756
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 117 N.W.2d 396 (Borchert v. Village of North Oaks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Borchert v. Village of North Oaks, 117 N.W.2d 396, 264 Minn. 32, 1962 Minn. LEXIS 825 (Mich. 1962).

Opinion

Nelson, Justice.

Appeal by the village of North Oaks from a judgment of the District Court of Ramsey County which declares a village ordinance invalid.

Plaintiffs, John R. Borchert and James F. Lindsay, who are residents, homeowners, taxpayers, and legally qualified voters in the village, brought a class action for themselves and in behalf of all other taxpayers in the village under the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act, Minn. St. c. 555, to determine the validity of North Oaks Ordinance No. 15, as amended. (Reference to plaintiffs hereinafter will include all homeowners in whose behalf the action was brought.) The challenged ordinance limits and prescribes maximum speeds of vehicles driven in the village on “any highway, street, private road or road *33 way,” and prescribes other requirements to be observed by drivers using said roads.

North Oaks was duly organized and incorporated as a village in 1956 under Minn. St. c. 412. The village is unique in that only a few of its roads are public. The legal title to the tracts of real estate in the village owned by plaintiffs is derived from a common grantor, North Oaks Company, Inc. The deeds to this corporation and the individual conveyances by it to plaintiffs contain identical reservations, easements, and restrictions with respect to certain portions of the conveyed tracts to be used as private roads by, and only by, plaintiffs and their heirs, assignees, licensees, guests, and invitees. These restrictions, which apply to all the land in the village, contemplated the construction of a system of private roads which the corporation actually has constructed; give all homeowners general rights of access on and over such roads; proscribe their building or permitting roads or driveways into or across their premises to any public highway without the consent of the corporation; and reserve to it the power to make assessments against each owner of property in the area for road maintenance and similar expenses. The corporation could assign this power to North Oaks Homeowners’ Association, Inc., a nonprofit corporation, membership of which is confined to plaintiffs.

Based on a stipulation thereto .by the parties which was introduced in evidence, the court found the facts hereinafter stated.

Over 200 families own their residential property and are living in the village. The part of each conveyed tract reserved for private roads was laid out by the North Oaks Company, Inc., in order to provide the contemplated system of private roads. These roads have been paved, maintained, and improved by the North Oaks Homeowners’ Association, Inc., and the cost is being defrayed by proportionate assessments levied by the association against its members. The roads were never platted nor dedicated to the public and no public funds have been, or are being, expended by the village in their construction, maintenance, or improvement. The users of the private road system have ingress and egress thereto and therefrom at three separate locations in the village where the private roads connect with public streets *34 or highways. Gates at these points are controlled so as to admit only plaintiffs and their assigns, licensees, guests, and invitees; and a large sign at each entrance reads: “Trespassers Prohibited — Private Property.” Under a village ordinance making it a misdemeanor to trespass on private property, over 50 persons have been convicted of trespassing in cases where their only act was to drive an automobile on the private roads without permission. During the daylight hours the private roads are used by United States mail trucks, public school buses, tradesmen, and other licensees and invitees of plaintiffs, public traffic on the private roads averaging approximately 650 vehicles daily. At all other times the roads are used by plaintiffs, members- of their families, and their licensees and invitees driving vehicles of various kinds.

The council of the village enacted Ordinance No. 15 on August 14, 1958. Plaintiffs contend that this ordinance, as amended, is invalid and unenforceable for the following reasons:

“(a) The provisions of said Ordinance conflict and are inconsistent with the State-wide traffic regulatory scheme, purpose and the provisions of the Highway Traffic Regulation Act (Chapter 169, Minnesota Statutes), particularly Sections 169.02, 169.03, 169.05, 169.09 to 169.13, inclusive, 169.91, 169.95, 169.96 thereof.
“(b) Said Ordinance attempts to invade a field pre-empted by the State of Minnesota.
“(c) Said Village is not vested with legislative power to restrict or regulate the speed or other operation of vehicles driven on or using such private roads, such power having been retained or withdrawn by the State and not delegated to the Village.
“(d) The right and power to restrict or regulate the speed or other operation of vehicles driven on or using said private roads is not within the police power of said Village nor is said legislative power vested in the Defendant Village by Section 412.221, Minnesota Statutes, or any other statutory provision.”

Plaintiffs further contend that defendant is making use of village funds, and plans to do so increasingly, to defray the cost of purchasing road signs and providing police and other law-enforcement of *35 ficers to administer the ordinance. Plaintiffs assert that such use of village funds is unlawful.

The trial court found the ordinance invalid and unenforceable, setting forth its reasons in the following findings of fact:

“That the Highway Traffic Regulation Act (Chapter 169, Minnesota Statutes) is a comprehensive state-wide traffic regulatory scheme, and upon passage of this Statute, the State of Minnesota has entered exclusively in the field of traffic regulation on both public and private roads and thereby the State of Minnesota has pre-empted the authority and power of local political subdivisions in this field.
“That the existence and enforcement of the Village Ordinance No. 15 as amended relating to ‘private roads’ would conflict with the provisions of the Minnesota Highway Traffic Regulation Act (Chapter 169, Minnesota Statutes) and the Minnesota Drivers License Law (Chapter 171, Minnesota Statutes).
“That the State of Minnesota has not delegated the right and power to the defendant Village of North Oaks to restrict the speed or other operation of motor vehicles being driven on or using said private roads.
“That the power and right to restrict or regulate speed and other operation of motor vehicles on said private roads is not within the ‘police power’ of the Village, nor is such power vested in the said Village either under the common law or by Chapter 412, Minnesota Statutes.
“That the defendant Village of North Oaks is and was without authority to enact said Ordinance No. 15 as amended, or to legislate with reference to the restriction or regulation of speed or other operation of vehicles operating on or using said private road system within the defendant Village, and is and was without authority to administer or enforce such Ordinance or legislation or to use Village funds for that purpose.”

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Related

Holt v. City of Sauk Rapids
559 N.W.2d 444 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1997)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 N.W.2d 396, 264 Minn. 32, 1962 Minn. LEXIS 825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borchert-v-village-of-north-oaks-minn-1962.