Lewis J. Richardson and Laurel Richardson v. Board of Commissioners of Owen County

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 30, 2012
Docket60A01-1106-PL-228
StatusPublished

This text of Lewis J. Richardson and Laurel Richardson v. Board of Commissioners of Owen County (Lewis J. Richardson and Laurel Richardson v. Board of Commissioners of Owen County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis J. Richardson and Laurel Richardson v. Board of Commissioners of Owen County, (Ind. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

FILED Mar 30 2012, 9:38 am FOR PUBLICATION CLERK of the supreme court, court of appeals and tax court

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:

RUSSELL L. BROWN RICHARD W. LORENZ MICHAEL P. MAXWELL Hickam & Lorenz, PC Clark, Quinn, Moses, Scott & Grahn, LLP. Indianapolis, Indiana Indianapolis, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

LEWIS J. RICHARDSON, and ) LAUREL RICHARDSON, ) ) Appellants-Petitioners, ) ) vs. ) No. 60A01-1106-PL-228 ) BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF ) OWEN COUNTY, ) ) Appellee-Respondent. )

APPEAL FROM THE OWEN CIRCUIT COURT The Honorable Teresa D. Harper, Special Judge Cause No. 60C01-0909-PL-567

March 30, 3012

OPINION–FOR PUBLICATION

BAKER, Judge Today we consider whether the petitioners were aggrieved parties and had

standing to challenge the County Commissioners’ decision to vacate a portion of a

roadway that provided an access to a cemetery where their daughter was buried. We hold

that the petitioners did not suffer a special or unique injury above that which the general

public sustained. Moreover, the evidence established that there were alternate entrances

to the cemetery so the petitioners were not hindered within the meaning of the statute

from gaining access to their daughter’s grave. Thus, the petitioners were not entitled to

challenge the County Commissioners’ decision to vacate a portion of the roadway.

Appellants-petitioners Lewis and Laurel Richardson (collectively, the

Richardsons), appeal the trial court’s judgment that vacated a portion of a roadway, in

favor of the Board of Commissioners of Owen County (Commissioners). More

particularly, the Richardsons maintain that the trial court erred in determining that they

were not aggrieved parties and, therefore, could not appeal the vacation ordinance under

Indiana Code section 36-7-3-12(f).

We conclude that because the Richardsons are not abutting landowners to the

vacated roadway, the trial court correctly determined that they lacked standing as an

aggrieved party to remonstrate against the vacation of the roadway. In other words, the

Richardsons have failed to demonstrate that they have sustained an injury that is unique

or special to them.

Thus, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

FACTS

2 The Richardsons own burial rights for ten plots in Splinter Ridge Cemetery

(Cemetery) in Owen County. Their daughter, Kirsten, is at the Cemetery.

Sometime in 2009, the Richardsons requested that the Cemetery be placed on the

list of historic cemeteries. The Cemetery is located along the east side of Splinter Ridge

Road (Splinter Ridge), which was, or is, a county road that appeared on the county maps

and records for years. The records that the County maintained initially reflected that

Splinter Ridge ran from Vandalia or Chapman Road in a southerly direction to a point

known as Patricksburg Road.

However, as early as 1937, the road map that was submitted into evidence showed

that Splinter Ridge appeared as a solid line, which meant there was a continuously

maintained county road from Patricksburg Road to Fish Creek or about one third of its

original length. The remainder of Splinter Ridge appeared as a dotted line, meaning that

the county roadbed had been abandoned for the rest of the way north to Vandalia.

In 1997 or 1998, Junior Sips had inherited a large portion of the property just north

of the Cemetery on both sides of Splinter Ridge. At some point, without the permission

of any county authority, Sips installed a gate across Splinter Ridge just north of the

property line to the Cemetery.

On May 1, 2009, Sips and Danzer Forest Land, Inc., (Danzer), as owners of all the

property adjacent to a portion of Splinter Ridge, filed a petition to permanently vacate the

adjacent portion of the road. It is undisputed that Sips and Danzer were the only

3 landowners abutting the portion of the road sought to be vacated. In relevant part, the

petition requested

4. [That the] roadway be permanently vacated as the same was in fact abandoned by [the] county approximately 60 plus years ago and has not been maintained by the County during that entire period of time and has not been used by the public as a roadway for the same period of time. In fact said roadway has generally disappeared and is not at all visible in many portions of the area petitioners are requesting be formally vacated.

5. The formal vacation of said section of roadway is in the public and economic interest of Owen County . . . in that it would not interfere with the flow of traffic as it has existed for the past 60 plus years, the clearing of timber, grading and reestablishment of a roadbed would be necessary for the road to actually be used by the public. ... 7. The formal vacation of the roadway would not change the circumstances of any other landowner aside from the petitioner or negatively impact the traffic flow and pattern of transportation in Owen County from what it has been for the past 60 plus years.

Appellants’ App. p. 105-06.

Thereafter, the Richardsons filed a request with the Commissioners, asking for the

removal of the gate that Sips had installed, and that overgrown portions of the road be

repaired. At the Commissioners’ meeting on May 4, 2009, the Richardsons presented

argument about the importance of reopening the entire length of Splinter Ridge because

of their ownership in the Cemetery plots. The Sips’s attorney then addressed the

Commissioners regarding the pending application to vacate a portion of Splinter Ridge

and presented Sips’s testimony in response to the Richardsons’ request.

The evidence established that Sips, who was born in 1939, remembered the road

being an unimproved path when he was approximately ten years old. The County had not

4 maintained the road since around 1950, and Sips testified that he and his family had

graded it and placed gravel on it for decades. The only house located on the road was

Sips’s father’s former residence, which had not been occupied since the late 1990s. Sips

testified that the road was impassable in much of its length north of the Cemetery.

Moreover, a bridge over a nearby creek was no longer there.

Sips reported that there were at least two alternate routes to access the Cemetery.

In fact, Sips stated that no one had accessed the Cemetery by way of Splinter Ridge for

decades because a portion of it had been abandoned and overgrown. Various exhibits

were presented to the Commissioners showing the roadway existing on a 1937 highway

map and later maps showing the dotted line where the roadbed used to exist in 1950,

1972, and 2002. At the conclusion of the meeting, the Commissioners took the matter

under advisement.

The petition to vacate was placed on the Commissioners’ May 18th meeting

agenda. At that meeting, Sips’s counsel again offered to reiterate the evidence that was

presented at the earlier meeting in response to the Richardsons’ request. The

Commissioners implicitly agreed to incorporate the prior evidence by reference and

asked no further questions. Sips’s counsel pointed out at the meeting that both parties

had previously presented evidence that between 1950 and 1980, Splinter Ridge had

completely dropped off the county road system.

The evidence established that the Richardsons were not landowners who abutted

the road requested to be vacated. The Richardsons then presented evidence and argument

5 against the petition to vacate.

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Lewis J. Richardson and Laurel Richardson v. Board of Commissioners of Owen County, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-j-richardson-and-laurel-richardson-v-board-o-indctapp-2012.