Reese v. De Mund

245 P.2d 284, 74 Ariz. 140, 1952 Ariz. LEXIS 179
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1952
Docket5471
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 245 P.2d 284 (Reese v. De Mund) 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
Reese v. De Mund, 245 P.2d 284, 74 Ariz. 140, 1952 Ariz. LEXIS 179 (Ark. 1952).

Opinions

BARRY, Superior Court Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the superior court dismissing the amended complaint of appellants, hereinafter called plaintiffs, and from a judgment entered pursuant thereto in favor of appellees, hereinafter called defendants. The motion to dismiss was based upon the ground that the complaint did not state a claim .against defendants or either of them.

The complaint alleges in substance that plaintiff Reese is the owner of certain lots in Blocks 10, 11 and 13 of Naehr’s Addition to the city of Phoenix; that plaintiff First National Life Insurance Company, a corporation, owns lots in Blocks 11 and 14, .and that defendants DeMund own Block 12 thereof. Block 13 lies immediately south ■of Block 12. Block 11 lies immediately west of Block 12; Block 10 immediately west of Block 11, and Block 14 immediately south of Block 11, Washington Street runs east and west between Blocks 12 and 13, and Blocks 11 and 14.

The original plat of Neahr’s Addition was recorded in the office of the county recorder of Maricopa County on March 6, 1880, and a resurvey thereof was recorded in said office on September 29, 1897. This plat dedicated to the public all streets and alleys therein, including an alley running east and west bisecting Blocks 10, 11, and 12, which was duly accepted by the city of Phoenix

That on or about May 10, 1950, the defendant Phoenix City Council enacted an ordinance which purported to abandon that portion of the above-described alley lying and being within the boundaries of Block 12, supra, and authorized and directed the city manager to convey the land lying within the boundaries of the alley to defendants DeMund, and that pursuant thereto such deed was executed and delivered to said defendants.

It is claimed in the first assignment of error that this conveyance is null and void for the reason that the abandonment and closing of such alley was not done for the public good or welfare nor connected in any manner therewith.

The first question to be determined under this assignment is whether or not plaintiffs are proper parties to raise such a question.

The courts have taken three different views with respect to the right of a property owner to object to a vacation of a street or alley described in a plat and [142]*142dedicated to public use. There is the “broad” view, sometimes called the “unity” rule, which is to the effect that all persons who have acquired land in the subdivision subsequent to its dedication and pursuant to the plat acquire a private easement in all of the streets and alleys shown on such plat. This rule has been explicitly rejected by the Supreme Court of Arizona in Thorne v. Clanton, 10 Ariz. 94, 85 P. 1061. There is also the “intermediate” view, sometimes called the “beneficial” or the “complete enjoyment” rule, which holds that the extent of the grantee’s private right of user in streets and alleys shown on a plat, to which by reference his conveyance was made, is limited to such streets and alleys as are reasonably or materially beneficial to him, and of which the deprivation would reduce the value of his lot. This is the view adopted by this court in Thorpe v. Clanton, supra, and adhered to in the recent case of Drane v. Avery, 72 Ariz. 100, 231 P.2d 444. Besides these there is the “narrow” view, sometimes referred to as the “necessary” rule, that the private right of way of user accruing to a grantee, to whom the conveyance is made •by reference to a map or plat on which the streets and alleys are laid out, is limited to the abutting street and such others as are necessary to give the grantee access to a public highway. With this last rule, impliedly disapproved by this court, we are not concerned.

-If, therefore, plaintiffs, have any standing in court, it is by virtue of the so-called “intermediate” view, which as stated, is the doctrine adhered to in this state. The city council of the city of Phoenix in vacating and abandoning the alley in question acted in a legislative capacity, and the court cannot question the wisdom or discretion or advisability of its action except for fraud or other illegality or absence of jurisdiction to abandon.

The charter of the city of Phoenix, chapter IV, section 2, subparagraph 49, authorized the city council

“* * * by proper odinance or resolution to accept dedications of streets, avenues, alleys, public places, squares, parks and playgrounds, and vacate such dedication; to vacate and abandon and close up any street, avenue, alley, public square or place, park or playground, as in the judgment of the Council should be vacated and closed, and permit the closing of the same against public use; to make proper conveyance of such streets, avenues, alleys, grounds, parks and places to the persons entitled thereto, or make such disposition of the same as may be proper.”

The ordinance abandoning the alley in-question and directing the city manager to-issue a deed to defendants DeMund recites in its preamble:

.“Whereas, in .the judgment of the City Council of the City of Phoenix it is to'the best interests of the public [143]*143that all of that certain alley in Block 12, Neahr’s Addition, an addition to the City of Phoenix, according to the plat of record in the office of the County Recorder of Maricopa County, Arizona, in Book 2 of Maps, Page 61 thereof, extending from the east line of 8th Avenue to the west line of 7th Avenue, be vacated and closed against the public use, and that the area of land so vacated be conveyed to the owners of the land adjacent thereto, reserving, however, to the City of Phoenix a right of ingress and egress to the sewer line thereunder.”

It is the general rule, and the one recognized by both Thorpe v. Clanton, supra, and Drane v. Avery, supra, that in the absence of absolute illegality a property owner may not complain of the act of a municipality in abandoning a street unless he shows some special damage resulting to him from such action.

Therefore, in our opinion assignment of error number 1 is not well taken, as the action of the council was within its declared powers.

The second assignment of error is that the court erred in dismissing the amended complaint for the reason that it showed on its face that both plaintiffs and ■defendants DeMund and Worman or their predecessors acquired the properties with reference- to the plats above mentioned, and •that by reason thereof the plaintiffs are the owners of a private easement through the alley in Block 12, and that by the closing of said alley and the consequent loss of such private easement plaintiffs has suffered special damage, and for the further reason that the defendant city of Phoenix purported to vacate the alley and deed the same to defendants, DeMund without consideration either to the City or to plaintiffs.

The amended complaint alleges that plaintiffs have suffered special damage by reason of -the vacation in that the sewer line which serves their property, together with their gas and utility lines, are located in the alley being abandoned, and also- that' their property has been, and is being depreciated in value because of the closing of the same. The question, therefore, before the court is whether or not this allegation standing alone is sufficient to entitle plaintiffs to be heard upon the merits in the action.

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Related

Palmer v. City of Phoenix
393 P.3d 938 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2017)
Uvodich v. Arizona Board of Regents
453 P.2d 229 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1969)
Reese v. De Mund
251 P.2d 887 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 P.2d 284, 74 Ariz. 140, 1952 Ariz. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reese-v-de-mund-ariz-1952.