Ogar v. City of Haines

51 P.3d 333, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 102, 2002 WL 1587221
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 19, 2002
DocketS-9812
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 51 P.3d 333 (Ogar v. City of Haines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ogar v. City of Haines, 51 P.3d 333, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 102, 2002 WL 1587221 (Ala. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Did a city’s prior failures to require property owners to remove structures that violated its right-of-way and setback requirements equitably estop the city from requiring the current landowner to remove them? Because the city asserted no “position by conduct or word,” a necessary element for equitable estoppel was absent. We therefore affirm the grant of summary judgment for the city. We also affirm the superior court’s award of attorney’s fees against the landowner.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

This appeal concerns claims Phyllis Ogar brought against the City of Haines in 1999, but it originates in the city’s dealings with the prior owners of Ogar’s land.

*334 In June 1989 Gloria and Larry Schmidt asked the City of Haines to vacate a ten-foot portion of Pyramid Drive, a dedicated right-of-way owned by the city. Pyramid Drive bordered the Schmidts’ property on the east. The city council approved the vacation. To complete the vacation, the Schmidts were to have the land surveyed and replatted by a registered land surveyor, and were to pay the city the current value of the vacated land. Because the Schmidts failed to take these steps, the vacation was not completed. In July 1990 the Schmidts nonetheless applied for a land use permit to build a residential garage. They submitted with their permit application a hand drawing of the proposed garage, the existing garage, and their house. The drawing indicated that the new garage would be set back forty feet from F.A.A. Road on the north and ten feet from the Pyramid Drive right-of-way on the east. The planning commission approved the permit (Permit No. 90-25) that same month. The Schmidts then built the garage, but instead of sitting ten feet from the Pyramid Drive right-of-way as depicted in the drawing, the garage encroached on the city’s right-of-way by 20.8 feet. The city did not inspect the property before or after the garage was built and did not require an as-built survey.

Phyllis Ogar claimed that she and her late husband purchased the Schmidts’ property without knowing of the encroachment. Neither the city nor Ogar became aware of the encroachment until 1997, when a neighbor reported that Ogar was clearing wood from the right-of-way, and the city investigated. Ogar applied then for a thirty-foot vacation of the right-of-way to accommodate the garage, a ten-foot overhang extension on the garage, and a fuel tank beside the garage. The city administrator recommended the vacation, noting that the right-of-way had limited use because one part of Pyramid Drive narrowed to thirty feet, but recommended that the city retain the rest of Pyramid Drive as a possible utility right-of-way. He informed the planning commission that the vacation would not restrict access to other properties.

In August 1998 the city planning commission conducted a hearing on Ogar’s vacation application. Ogar requested the vacation to allow compliance with the city’s land use code and to obtain clear title to her property, which she argued was encumbered by the encroachment. Members of the community spoke out against the vacation during the hearing. Members of the community had submitted a petition and letters to the planning commission earlier that month to oppose granting any new vacation of rights-of-way.

The commission approved a fifteen-foot vacation and a setback variance for Ogar to accommodate the garage for which the Schmidts had obtained the permit; but the city required Ogar to remove the ten-foot overhang and the fuel tank, have the property replatted by a surveyor, submit the plat to the city, and pay the current value of the vacated property. 1 The city referred to the overhang as “the removable shed” because members of the community stated at the hearing that the Schmidts had bolted it to the permanent garage, making it easily removable. The city decided to reimburse Ogar for the property taxes she paid to the Haines Borough for the ten-foot vacation the borough mistakenly earned on its tax rolls after the city approved the Schmidts’ request for vacation in 1989. Ogar satisfied the survey, replat, and payment requirements in March 1999. But the overhang and fuel tank remain. When Ogar removes those improvements, the city will obtain the new plat from the surveyor for signing and recording.

In her original 1998 complaint, Ogar sought specific performance from Larry Schmidt to purchase sufficient land from the city to unencumber the property and meet all city zoning ordinances. She alternatively sought damages to compensate for that purchase and for the difference between the value of the property Ogar believed she was purchasing and its actual value when she *335 purchased it. Ogar amended the complaint to join the city in January 1999.

Her amended complaint alleged that the city was negligent in failing to correct the encroachment because the city failed to inspect the property in conjunction with Permit No. 90-25. Ogar asked the superior court to equitably estop the city from requiring her to remove the overhang and the fuel tank and “from trying to collect any money from [her].” Ogar also sought an order to vacate enough of the right-of-way to bring her garage into compliance with zoning and setback requirements.

The city moved to dismiss the claims under Alaska Civil Rule 12(b)(6) and alternatively sought summary judgment under Alaska Civil Rule 56(b). The superior court granted the city’s summary judgment motion, holding that the city’s failure to assert its rights to the right-of-way was not sufficient to establish elements necessary for equitable estop-pel. The superior court awarded the city attorney’s fees of $3,573.50, twenty percent of the city’s reasonable, actual fees.

Ogar appeals the grant of summary judgment and the award of attorney’s fees.

III. DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. 2 Because the conclusion that equitable estoppel does not apply is a question of law, we review that conclusion de novo. 3 We review an award of attorney’s fees for abuse of discretion, reversing only if the award was “arbitrary, capricious, manifestly unreasonable, or ... stem[med] from an improper motive.” 4

B. The Trial Court Did Not Err in Granting Summary Judgment to the City on the Issue of Equitable Es-touuel.

A party claiming equitable estoppel must prove four necessary elements: “(1) assertion of a position by conduct or word, .(2) reasonable reliance thereon, ... (3) resulting prejudice, ... [and (4) ] the estoppel will be enforced only to the extent that justice so requires.” 5

We hold that the city made no assertions of position to Ogar or her predecessors sufficient to satisfy the first element.

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Bluebook (online)
51 P.3d 333, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 102, 2002 WL 1587221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogar-v-city-of-haines-alaska-2002.