City of Englewood v. Crabtree

404 P.2d 525, 157 Colo. 593
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJuly 19, 1965
DocketNo. 21695
StatusPublished

This text of 404 P.2d 525 (City of Englewood v. Crabtree) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Englewood v. Crabtree, 404 P.2d 525, 157 Colo. 593 (Colo. 1965).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Moore

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Plaintiffs in error were defendants in the trial court and defendants in error were plaintiffs. We will refer to the parties as they appeared in the district court.

The case involves the validity of a contract between the City of Englewood and the New Englewood Company under the terms of which the latter agreed to purchase land theretofore used for park and recreational purposes. The action also involves the validity of a rezoning of some 63 acres of land, including the park property, which was brought about in order that the land use contemplated by the purchaser would be validated.

The trial court found all of the issues, except one, in favor of the defendants who caused writ of error to issue directed to the one portion of the judgment which adversely affected them. The plaintiffs in their answer brief assign cross-error and seek reversal of the judgment of the trial court upholding the contract and the rezoning of the property. The issues which were orally argued at length and which are stressed in the briefs relate to the cross-errors which form the major controversy between the parties.

The City of Englewood is a home rule city operating under a charter. Section 72 of the charter provides that lands used by the city for park purposes shall not be sold or conveyed without majority vote of the people. A contract of sale between the defendant City of Englewood and the defendant New Englewood Company providing for the sale by the city of the downtown park area to New Englewood Company was submitted to a vote of the [596]*596qualified electors of Englewood at a special election held on April 7, 1964, as People’s Ordinance No. 1, Series of 1964. A majority of the voters approved this contract and the sale of the subject park land, which would become the site of an extensive shopping center complex.

The City of Englewood on August 3, 1964, passed Ordinance No. 16, Series of 1964, which provided for the rezoning of the subject park land and certain other adjoining lands from a residential to a commercial classification. A referendum petition was filed to refer Ordinance No. 16, Series of 1964, to a vote of the people. The city council thereupon called a special election to be held on November 3, 1964, to submit Ordinance No. 16 to a vote of the qualified electors of the city. At the same time the council determined to submit two related ordinances to a vote of the people at the same election. One of these proposed ordinances provided for vacation of streets, alleys and public ways on the subject land and the other proposed ordinance authorized the city to lease certain property adjacent to the subject land as a city hall.

On August 31, 1964, plaintiffs filed their complaint in the district court setting forth a number of grounds in opposition to the proposed shopping center complex. They also moved for a preliminary injunction enjoining the special election scheduled for November 3, 1964. At the hearing of this motion on October 6, 1964, the trial court entered a preliminary injunction staying the election until after April 7, 1965. This injunction was dissolved by order of this court in City of Englewood v. Save the Park Association, 155 Colo. 548, 395 P.2d 989.

The special election of November 3, 1964, resulted in a favorable vote on the three subject ordinances, thereby clearing the way for closing the contract and for construction of the proposed shopping center complex upon final determination of the questions involved in this case.

Some 8.3 acres of the park land covered by the contract are presently being operated as a golf course by the defendant Mountain View Golf Club, under the terms [597]*597of a 99-year lease. The lessee and the New Englewood Company have reached an agreement under which any interest of the Mountain View Golf Club in the 8.3 acres will be acquired by the New Englewood Company.

We will first give consideration to the questions raised by the cross-errors assigned by the plaintiffs by which they seek to invalidate the contract, prevent the construction of the shopping center complex which was overwhelmingly approved by the voters, and nullify the change in the zoning classification in the area. As grounds for reversal of the judgment it is argued:

“I. The election was held prematurely.

“II. Cities have no legal right to enter into long-term ‘tax-dodging’ agreements with commercial enterprises for the exploitation of surplus municipal real estate.

“ (a) The agreement with Mountain View is void.

“ (b) The agreement with New Englewood is void.

“III. Municipalities cannot lawfully sell public lands for a grossly inadequate consideration.

“ (a) The city is selling the fee to the golf course and not the reversion.

“(b) The city is standing by and permitting the defendant Mountain View to sell city-owned lands and pocket the proceeds therefrom.

“IV. If park property can be sold at all, the sale requires a vote of the taxpaying electors.

“V. The change of zoning from R-l-C to B-l was arbitrary and void.”

At this point we direct attention to certain findings entered by the trial court with relation to the several pronged attack of plaintiffs upon the validity of the 99-year lease of 8.3 acres to the golf club. This argument appears under point II (a) and points III (a) and (b) which we have quoted above from the Summary of Argument of the plaintiffs. Upon this phase of the case the trial court found, inter alia, as follows:

“Insofar as the Fourth Claim for Relief is concerned, the City through the contract with New Englewood Com[598]*598pany is divesting itself of the ownership of the 8.3 acres now leased by the Defendant Mountain View. If such leasing were improper it is now being corrected. If New Englewood Company wishes to pay the lessee some $300,000.00 for whatever leasehold interest the latter may have, that is a matter for its sole determination. There was no evidence to show that the sales price of $1,000,000.00 for the entire tract, including the 8.3 acres, is inadequate.”

We hold that these conclusions of the trial court are correct and are a complete answer to the full argument of plaintiffs which is presented in support of their contention that the lease to the golf club is invalid. We are not concerned here with a dispute between the lessor and the lessee involving the validity of the lease. Assuming for the purpose of argument that the lease is invalid (a question which we do not decide) the New Englewood Company would need only to secure a deed from the city and, as the fee owner, bring ejectment against the golf club. The plaintiffs are in no position to take advantage of the fact that the New Englewood Company is willing to pay a consideration to the golf club in order to acquire whatever interest the latter has under the 99-year lease. We are in complete agreement with the trial court in its conclusion that the evidence failed to show that the $1,000,000.00 sale price and the other agreements of the purchaser to reconvey a substantial area and to establish and maintain a parking area thereon, was inadequate.

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Related

California v. Central Pacific Railroad
127 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 1888)
City of Englewood v. Save the Park Association
395 P.2d 999 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1964)
State Ex Rel. Burns v. City of Livingston
395 P.2d 971 (Montana Supreme Court, 1964)
People ex rel. Moore v. Perkins
137 P. 55 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
404 P.2d 525, 157 Colo. 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-englewood-v-crabtree-colo-1965.