Erro v. City of Santa Barbara

11 P.2d 890, 123 Cal. App. 508, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 998
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 18, 1932
DocketDocket No. 8000.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 11 P.2d 890 (Erro v. City of Santa Barbara) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Erro v. City of Santa Barbara, 11 P.2d 890, 123 Cal. App. 508, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 998 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

NOURSE, P. J.

The plaintiffs seek by this action to have the proceedings of the city council of the City of Santa Barbara for the opening of an alleyway declared void and to restrain the defendants from taking further proceedings to that end. Plaintiffs had judgment and the defendants appeal upon typewritten transcripts.

The proceedings taken under the Street Opening Act were designed to declare public an existing private alley 20 feet in width and about 315 feet in length, commencing on the northeasterly line of Chapala Street in block 142 and running at right angles northeasterly to the end of lot 21. The complaint alleged; and the trial court found, that all the lands belonging to the plaintiffs and lying northerly and northeasterly of the proposed alley have a perpetual easement or right of way to the existing private alley and that all the other lands included in said assessment district and lying to the south of said alley did not have any right to the use of the existing alley. By a decree of partition in the estate of Orella the Superior Court in Santa Barbara County on October 10, 1914, adjudged the plaintiffs in this action to have an easement and the right to use a certain alley designated as ‘ Caesar alley” appurtenant to the lots therein distributed to the plaintiffs and their predecessor, which alley is found in the proceedings here under review to be a way of the uniform width of 20 feet commencing at Chapala Street and running northeasterly to the end of lot 21 and then north *510 erly at the same uniform width to the southerly line of Figueroa Street. After the entry of this decree the owners of lot 12, which is south of said alley, and which is one of the lots included in said assessment district, commenced the construction of a building on said lot and commenced the use of said private alley as a means of ingress to and egress from the rear of the building erected on that lot. The plaintiffs in this proceeding thereupon commenced an action in equity against the owners of lot 12 and by decree of the superior court it was adjudged that these plaintiffs had the sole and exclusive right to the use of said alley and the defendants therein were perpetually restrained from using the same or setting up any claim thereto. It is alleged in the action now before us, and the trial court so found, that immediately following the entry of the latter decree the owners of lot 12, in conjunction with the owners of lots 5, 7 and 11, procured the institution of the proceedings before the city council for the formation of said assessment district and the opening of a portion of this alleyway to public use. (It should here be noted that the street opening proceedings contemplate the opening of that portion of the alleyway which adjoins the properties of the defendants and which are designated as lots 5, 7, and 11 and 12. It does not include that portion of the alley running from Figueroa Street southerly to the rear of lot 21.) When the proceedings were instituted before the city council all the plaintiffs herein, who are the owners of lots fronting on Figueroa Street and running back to the proposed public alley, and the plaintiffs, who are the owners of lots fronting on State Street and running back to that portion of the private alley which runs from Figueroa Street and to the rear of lot 21, joined in protest to the city council stating as grounds of their protest that they were the owners and had the sole right to use the entire alley running from Chapala Street through to Figueroa Street; that the proposed assessment district was confined to the properties of these plaintiffs 'and to the four lots south of the proposed alley heretofore mentioned; that the proposed assessment district was of no possible public benefit to the protestants, but that the proposed district was for the sole private benefit of the owners of lots 5, 7, 11 and 12. This protest was denied and the proceedings progressed to the filing of a com *511 inissioner’s report wherein and whereby the owners of those lots facing on Figueroa Street and running back to the proposed alley were listed as having an ownership in the land to be taken and were assessed for benefits for the proposed improvement; the owners of all the lots facing on State Street and running back to that portion of the private alleyway which was not taken for public use were listed as having no interest or property in the land taken, but were assessed for benefits for the proposed public improvement and the same action was taken as to the owners of lots 5, 7, 11 and 12.

In the action now under review the trial court found that the proceedings leading to the opening of the public alley were void because they were not instituted for a public purpose, but were instituted solely for the use and benefit of the owners of lots 5, 7, 11 and 12; that none of the property of the plaintiffs in said assessment district could be benefited by the opening of said alley; that the alley could not be used as a thoroughfare except in conjunction with the private alley created by the decree of partition in the Orella estate and assigned to these plaintiffs in private ownership; that all the plaintiffs herein have by the terms of said decree a private alley and a right to use the same over all the premises defined in the proceedings before the city council; and that these proceedings are void as to these plaintiffs because they contemplate the taking of private property for a public purpose without due process of law and without compensation made to the oivners of the property to be taken.

On this appeal the appellants raise but two points, first, that the complaint does not state a cause of action, and second, that the evidence is insufficient to support the findings of fact. On the first point they argue that the complaint is insufficient because it fails to allege that the proceedings before the city council were the result of fraud, collusion or a gross abuse of discretion. It is true that the complaint does not use the word “fraud” in any of its allegations, and collusion between the city council and the owners of the lots to be benefited by the proceedings is not alleged in express terms, but it cannot be said that the facts pleaded do not present a case of gross abuse of discretion amounting to legal fraud. If the complaint states a *512 cause of action in equity for any one of the plaintiffs' it is sufficient against a general demui-.'er. We have endeavored to point out in the foregoing statement of facts that the complaint alleged and the trial court found it to be a fact that the owners of all those lots facing on State Street and running back to the portion of the private alleyway which is not proposed to be taken were assessed for benefits for the opening to the public of that portion of the alley which does not adjoin their properties. (Lot 21 excepted.) Thus lot 1, facing on State Street with a width of 21.6 feet on State Street and a depth of 125 feet on Figueroa Street, is assessed for benefits in the opening of the alley which runs from Chapala Street down to the end of lot 21, the nearest portion of the proposed alleyway being more than 100 feet distant from any portion of this lot 1. Lots 16 to 20, inclusive, all facing on State Street, do not adjoin the proposed alleyway and the owners of those lots could have no possible use of the alleyway except through the approach over the portion of the private alley which is not taken in these proceedings.

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Bluebook (online)
11 P.2d 890, 123 Cal. App. 508, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erro-v-city-of-santa-barbara-calctapp-1932.