Hillerege v. City of Scottsbluff

83 N.W.2d 76, 164 Neb. 560, 1957 Neb. LEXIS 165
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1957
Docket34074
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 83 N.W.2d 76 (Hillerege v. City of Scottsbluff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hillerege v. City of Scottsbluff, 83 N.W.2d 76, 164 Neb. 560, 1957 Neb. LEXIS 165 (Neb. 1957).

Opinion

Boslaugh, J.

Appellant by this action seeks an injunction preventing appellees from erecting any structures which will interfere with the use of described parking areas of appellant unless and until appellees establish the right to do so by due process of law, and preventing appellees from giving effect to a designated contract made by them concerning the regulation of parking in the street adjacent to the front of described properties owned by appellant.

The appellant states three causes of action which are in substance the following:

The first relates she is the owner of specifically described real estate in Scottsbluff on which prior to the year 1955 she constructed extensive and valuable improvements, a portion of which is a paved parking area where customers using the improvements may park their motor vehicles thereon and off of the right-of-way of the public streets. The property is in the condition it has been since before the year 1955. The parking area is of value to the appellant and the described premises, and the loss of the use of the parking *563 area would greatly depreciate the value of the entire premises. Appellees will, unless enjoined by the court, erect structures on the right-of-way of a public street adjoining the parking area, designed, intended, and adequate to make it impractical and impossible to use the parking area. The structures will deprive the appellant of the use of her property without due process of law and will cause her irreparable damage. She has no adequate remedy at law.

The second states appellant is the owner of described real estate in Scottsbluff on which are valuable improvements and in front of which there is and has been for many years an area provided and used' for parking motor vehicles. The parking area is of value to the premises and the other improvements thereon. Appellees intend to and will, unless enjoined by the court, construct structures upon the right-of-way of a public street in front of and adjacent to the parking area, designed, intended, and adequate to make it impractical and impossible to use the parking area. The structures will deprive appellant of the use of her property without due process of law and will cause her irreparable damage. She has no adequate remedy at law.

The third claims appellant is the owner of the premises described in the preceding causes of action. The freedom to park motor vehicles on the street adjacent to the premises is of great value to the appellant. Appellees made and executed an instrument in writing on or about August 11, 1955, by which they mutually agreed that parking in the street in front of the premises of appellant should be adjacent to and parallel with the curb and no nearer than 14 feet of the center line of the street. The city bound itself to cooperate fully with the state in the matter of on-street parking at said places; and if the state should require definite regulations other than those in effect, the city agreed to cooperate fully with the state and to pass an ordinance containing and making effective such measures as may be required *564 by the state. Appellees consider the instrument to be a valid and binding contract and they intend to carry out its provisions. The instrument purported to be authorized by a resolution of the council of the city. It does not appear in the minutes of the proceedings of the council and the instrument has not been published as required by law. The instrument is an attempted illegal delegation of legislative action by the city and is an attempt to create an ordinance without compliance with statutory mandates precedent to the passage and effectiveness of an ordinance. It is unconstitutional and void and its enforcement would deprive appellant of her property without due process of law.

The State of Nebraska, Department of Roads and Irrigation, hereafter referred to as State, denied all claims made by appellant and alleged the following: Appellees made an agreement July 13, 1955, for the widening and improvement of the portion of Twenty-seventh Street of the city of Scottsbluff, referred to hereafter as city, beginning at its intersection with Avenue A and. extending westerly to the intersection of Twenty-seventh Street with State Highway No. 87, a copy of which agreement is exhibited as a part of the answer. The city and the State executed the instrument on August 11, 1955, referred to by appellant in her third cause of action, and it is a binding contract between the parties. The city regulates traffic and parking upon its streets and sidewalks. It determines the width of the paved surface, the location and dimension of curbs, and the location and width of sidewalks within the city on its street rights-of-way. Appellant has no vested interest in or property right to- the flow of traffic of Twenty-seventh Street.

The city denied all allegations of appellant except those as to the class and status of the city, the ownership of the real estate in the city as alleged by appellant, and the execution of the instrument referred to by appellant as having been made and entered into by *565 appellees. The city alleged it regulates traffic and parking upon the streets and sidewalks and that it determines the width of the paved surface, the location and dimension of curbs, and the location and width of sidewalks within the city on its street rights-of-way.

The reply of appellant was a denial and a claim that the action contemplated by appellees discriminates against appellant in attempting to deny her use of the streets which is permitted to other persons similarly situated.

The parties agree that Seottsbluff, Nebraska, is a city of the first class with a population of less than 40,000 inhabitants; that it is not a home rule city; and that appellant is the owner of Lots 13 and 14, Block 2, Beatty Tracts, an addition to the city of Seottsbluff, designated herein as Tract 1, and Tract No. 24, Goos Tracts, an addition to the city of Seottsbluff, spoken of herein as Tract 2.

The district court found that: The real estate of appellant abuts Twenty-seventh Street, is improved, and is used for business purposes. Prior to 1955 appellant paved the area of the real estate described in the first cause of action northward from the north line of the sidewalk to the south boundary of Twenty-seventh Street, and customers transacting business on the premises parked motor vehicles partly on that pavement and partly on Twenty-seventh Street but not upon the paved portion of the street. A similar use was made of the real estate involved in the second cause of action except no part of it has been paved. There are no barrier curbs in front of the real estate of appellant. The city adopted an ordinance August 4, 1953, creating an improvement district for widening and improving a portion of Twenty-seventh Street beginning at Avenue A and continuing westward past the real estate of appellant. The ordinance was duly published. Plans and specifications for the project were approved by resolution of the city council and they provide for con *566 struction of barrier curbs in front of the premises of appellant. These change the method by which persons operating vehicles have access from Twenty-seventh Street to each of the properties of appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
83 N.W.2d 76, 164 Neb. 560, 1957 Neb. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hillerege-v-city-of-scottsbluff-neb-1957.