Collins v. Wayland

127 P.2d 716, 59 Ariz. 340, 1942 Ariz. LEXIS 177
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1942
DocketCivil No. 4427.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 127 P.2d 716 (Collins v. Wayland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins v. Wayland, 127 P.2d 716, 59 Ariz. 340, 1942 Ariz. LEXIS 177 (Ark. 1942).

Opinion

ROSS, J.

— The principal question for decision is whether a 20-foot strip running north and south through Block 1, Churchill’s Addition to the City of Phoenix, between Van Burén and Polk Streets, is a public alley or is privately owned.

The appellees W. R. Wayland, Fred G. Holmes, Consolidated Motors, Inc., the City of Phoenix and C. Claude Dye insist that such strip,is and was a public alley, dedicated to the public use, whereas appellants James Dean Collins, Hattie L. Mosher and Julia C. Collins, claim title to said strip is in them or one of them. The trial court found the issues thus made in favor of the appellees and entered judgment accordingly. The appellants have appealed from such judgment.

The question reached the courts when on May 18, 1938, Wayland and Holmes, owners of Lots 9, 10, 11 and 12 in said Block 1, began the construction of a building thereon and made application to the City of Phoenix for permission to make sewer connections with the city’s sewer extending north and south through said Block 1. Appellant James Dean Collins there *342 upon brought this action (in which he claims title to said 20-foot alley), to restrain appellees Wayland and Holmes from making the sewer connection sought. After a hearing, the court authorized said appellees to make the sewer connection with the city’s sewer system and, upon a final hearing, made such authority permanent, and the question is did the court under the facts and circumstances commit error.

There are several collateral and procedural questions that require some attention later on. We now consider whether the court’s decision, to the effect that the 20-foot strip through Block 1 was or had been dedicated to the public, was justified under the evidence. Preliminary to that question, will state the appellants, after a strenuous effort to avoid proceeding with the trial, although the ease had been pending more than two years, left the court room and were not present during the trial and did not introduce any evidence whatever to sustain their contention that the 20-foot alleyway had not been dedicated to the public.

In Collins v. Collins, 46 Ariz. 485, 52 Pac. (2d) 1169, this court found the fact to be that although James Dean Collins held the legal title to the real property in question, the beneficial title and interest in such property was in appellant Hattie L. Mosher. We therefore, in consideration of the case, proceed on the idea that James Dean Collins, a resident of the state of Washington, is only a nominal party, the real party in interest being the appellant Mosher.

Act No. 75, Session Laws 1893, approved April 12, 1893, so far as material, reads:

“Section 1. That any incorporated city now existing in this Territory may extend, enlarge and increase its corporate limits in the manner following:
“That on presentation of a petition in writing, signed by the owners of not less than one-half (in *343 value) of the property in any territory contiguous to any duly incorporated city in this Territory (as shown by the last assessment of said property) and not embraced within its limits, the Common Council of said city may, by ordinance annex such territory to said city, upon filing a copy of such ordinance with an accurate map of the territory annexed, duly certified by the Mayor of said city, in the office of the County Recorder, in the county where the annexed territory is situated and have the same recorded therein.”

In pursuance of the terms of said section 1, the Common Council of Phoenix, on February 27, 1895, enacted Ordinance No. 192, by which it “annexed to, made a part of, and included within the corporate limits of the City of Phoenix . . . for all purposes whatsoever” what is known as Churchill Addition to the City of Phoenix, which includes, as shown by the map and plat filed therewith, Block 1 of said Churchill Addition. This map shows a 20-foot alley starting with the north line of Van Burén Street and extending thence northerly through Blocks 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 to Garfield Street.

All the evidence is to the effect that the property owners, including appellants and their predecessors, facing the alley in said Block 1, for many years, when making connections with the sewer running through the middle of said block, obtained from the City of Phoenix permission to make connections therewith and that the present contentions of appellants were asserted only.in connection with the city’s efforts to make necessary improvements, or to enforce its lien for taxes, or in an effort to defeat the collection of county and state taxes. The owners of said Block 1, on February 27, 1895, when it was incorporated into the city by ordinance, raised no objection thereto and such order became final and binding upon property owners in said block.

*344 The proceedings annexing snch territory to the city appear to be regular and in conformity with the law as it existed at the time. The delineation of the alley through Block 1 on the “accurate map of the territory annexed” (section 1, Act. No. 75, Session Laws 1893, supra) is a dedication to the public as much as the streets shown on such map.

Prior to the above order of annexation, on, to wit, January 10, 1888, there was filed and recorded in the office of the County Recorder of Maricopa county a plat of a survey of Churchill Addition, of which said Block 1 was a part, and on said plat a 20-foot alleyway through said block was shown. While said plat or map was not authenticated as the statutes at that time required, it was certainly admissible as evidence of an intention of the owners of lots therein to dedicate to the public the streets and alleys delineated thereon. On such map or plat is shown a 20-foot alleyway extending through the center of said Block 1 from Van Burén Street north to Garfield Street, and an admission by the proponents thereof and those in privity, that said 20 feet was being dedicated to a public use. So, we see that said 20-foot strip, running north and south through the center of said Block 1, for over fifty years has been treated and regarded as a public alley.

In 1912 the City of Phoenix constructed a sewer system costing $400,000 and, according to a plat or map thereof on record in the Water Department of the city, a 20-foot strip (the same 20 feet dedicated in 1888 and 1895) is shown as a public alleyway. At this time the city took possession of and constructed in such alleyway a sewer, with which appellants and other property owners, by permission of the city, have since made sewer connections.

The evidence of the dedication of the 20-foot strip in said Block 1 to the public as an alleyway and *345 that such dedication was accepted by the public by actual occupancy and use is practically undisputed. This alleyway was not listed by its former owners, including Hattie L. Mosher, for county taxes from at least 1914 to 1940. In 1929, on demand of Mosher, the city assessor listed the alley to her but since that year, although it has been assessed to her, she has not paid the taxes except for the year 1937. At that time the public owned the alley and of course forfeited no rights therein through the unauthorized act of the city assessor taken at the instigation of Mosher.

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Bluebook (online)
127 P.2d 716, 59 Ariz. 340, 1942 Ariz. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-wayland-ariz-1942.