City of Tulsa v. Aaronson

1924 OK 849, 229 P. 596, 103 Okla. 159, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 273
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 7, 1924
Docket14083
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1924 OK 849 (City of Tulsa v. Aaronson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Tulsa v. Aaronson, 1924 OK 849, 229 P. 596, 103 Okla. 159, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 273 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion bv

PINKHAM. O.

This is an

appeal from a judgment rendered by the district court of Tulsa countv in an action instituted by L. E. Z. Aaronson, defendant in error, against the city of Tulsa, plaintiff in error.

The parties will be referred to herein as they appeared in the trial court.

The plaintiff sought to vacate blocks 17 and 18 of Sunset Park addition to the city of Tulsa under the provisions of sections 4482 an<j 4483, Comp. Stat. 1921. To the petition of the plaintiff responses were filed by the city of Tulsa and several property owners in Sunset. Park addition.

The cause came on for trial before the court on the 23rd day of February, 1922, and after the introduction of testimony the court rendered a judgment granting the application of the plaintiff vacating blocks 17 and 18 of Sunset Park addition from the city of Tulsa, effective as to the date of this application — December 10, 1921 — (saving to the defendant, city of Tulsa, the right’ to .enter upon said territory for the purpose of removing or using a lateral sewer constructed there by and at the expense of the city .of Tulsa.

The city of Tulsa filed its motion for a new trial, and the same was by the court overruled, and this appeal was duly lodged in this court. The individual property owners did not appeal.

It is contended by the defendant city that block 17 is a public park and cannot be taken out of the city limits by the petitioner. The argument is that the plaintiff is not entitled to the relief prayed for because block 17, comprising the larger portion of the tract proposed to be vacated, belonged to the city as a public park, and is not the property of the petitioner.

• It must be conceded that if the plaintiff did not own the blocks vacated, but it was public property, the judgment of the court vacating the same should be reversed.

The question of whether the city is the owner of' the property in controversy is the vital issue in the ease.

The following are the facts necessary to be considered in determining the question of whether the court erred in vacating the said blocks 17 and 18.

Section 4483, Comp. Stat. 1921, under which the plaintiff is seeking to vacate blocks 17 and 18 out; of Sunset Park addition, provides in part:

“If such application shall be for the vacation of the entire plat and no owner of any portion thereof shall appear and object to such vacation, the entire plat may be vacated, or if it shall appear that portions of such plat are not used or required for town or city purposes as platted the court may vacate such portion thereof as will not injur *160 iously affects the rights of owners of ather portions of such plat. If the application shall be by the owne or owners of a portion of such platted tract for the vacation of such portion only, and it shall appear that the portion desired to be vacated has never been actually used for town or city purposes, or that the platted streets or alleys on or across such portion have never been used b ythe public, or that the public has for more than five years abandoned such by nonuser, or that the same has been inciosed and occupied adversely to the public for more than five years, then the court may vacate such portion of said plat.”

It appears that the addition in question was surveyed, platted, and filed for record October 14, 1916.

Lots were sold from this plat and residences erected thereon, but no part of blocks 17 and 18 has been sold, occupied, or used by any one.

The record discloses that blocks 17 and IS are low-lying portions constituting the extreme southeast corner of the addition; that block 17, which constitutes the larger part of the tract sought to be vacated is a “mere hole in the ground, block 18 being substantially the eastern bank of the hole.”

It appears that this tract has not been improved in any way, and is not in its present condition suitable for building purposes, and it does not appear that these blocks have ever been used for city purposes.

The court found:

“That the vacation of the plat of Sunset Park so far as it includes blocks 17 and 18 will not injuriously affect the rights of the owners of the remaining portions of said plat and addition; that said blocks 17 and 18 are not occupied or improved, and that the streets laid out immediately adjacent to said blocks 17 and 18 have not been sold but are still owned by the petitioner.”

These findings of the court appear to be amply sustained by the evidence.

It further appears that at the time of the dedication of said addition by the plaintiff he marked the word “Park” on block 17 of the plat.

The plaintiff testified that he did not know what he would do with block 17, which, without being filled up at a very great expense, was unfit for building purposes, and that he had in contemplation making it a park, either public or private, but it was never dedicated as a park. It was suggested to him by the city park board — the official body in charge of the parks of the city of Tulsa — that it might be constructed into a lake surrounded with shrubbery and thus made attractive, and that the city water would be turned into it and the water thus kept fresh. With this purpose in view he made an agreement with the said park hoard to convey block 17 to the city on condition that the proposed improvement should be actually accomplished at the city’s expense.

A deed to the city of block 17 was placed in escrow with the Planters & Merchants Bank. It appears that the city, through its park board, cleaned out the brush and made some excavation in block 17. so as to make it larger and deeper, and started to build a dam on the block in question so as to maintain a lake, but never finished it and abandoned all further work, giving as the reason therefor that there were no funds for that purpose.

It further appears that the deed put in escrow with the bank, together with the escrow agreement, was lost, and that in this situation the city, through its mayor, caused a quit-claim deed to the block in question to be executed on October 17, 1919, to the plaintiff.

It further appears that by that time Sunset Park had been improved outside of the tract in controversy. A number of houses had been built on it or were in contemplation.

It further appears that after the city had abandoned the project of improving block 17 the plaintiff conceived the idea of taking it, together with block- 18, out of the addition as not in keeping- with the remaining portion of it and putting it to some other use, such as joining it to property on the south, outside of the city limits, which the plaintiff contemplated platting at some future date.

In this the plaintiff was simply exercising his rights under the statute (section 4483, supra).

It is earnestly urged by the defendant city in its brief that block 17, having been marked on the official plat “Park”, the plaintiff was estopped to assert the contrary, and cites authorities in support of its contention.

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Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 849, 229 P. 596, 103 Okla. 159, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-tulsa-v-aaronson-okla-1924.