Snyder v. City of South Pasadena

53 Cal. App. 3d 1051, 126 Cal. Rptr. 320, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1635
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 23, 1975
DocketCiv. 43297
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 53 Cal. App. 3d 1051 (Snyder v. City of South Pasadena) 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
Snyder v. City of South Pasadena, 53 Cal. App. 3d 1051, 126 Cal. Rptr. 320, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1635 (Cal. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

Opinion

ASHBY, J.

This is an action filed by Arthur K. Snyder, Councilman of the Fourteenth District of the City of Los Angeles, on behalf of residents of said district, and by the City of Los Angeles seeking an injunction to restrain the City of South Pasadena from “closing” or barricading a certain street in the City of South Pasadena, on the ground that such action is not authorized by law. A preliminary injunction was granted. After a court trial based upon the stipulation of the parties that the matter be submitted upon documentary evidence, the trial court entered judgment for South Pasadena and dissolved the preliminary injunction. This appeal followed.

In the 1950’s and 1960’s the Community Redevelopment Agency of South Pasadena planned and developed a residential community known as Altos de Monterey, located in the southwest comer of South Pasadena, bordering the City of Los Angeles. Previously this area was generally undeveloped, owing largely to the fact that in the early 1900’s it had been subdivided in a manner having no regard for the area’s steep hills and valleys. South of the South Pasadena-Los Angeles boundary, in the City of Los Angeles, was Van Home Avenue, a winding relatively narrow residential street which terminated at the city line. A few unpaved dirt roads continued from the terminus of Van Home Avenue into the Monterey Hills of South Pasadena to provide access to a few *1054 houses which had been built there, but did not provide a means of through travel to any other streets.

Pursuant to the master plan of the Community Redevelopment Agency, the street in controversy, Via del Rey, was built, extending in a winding pattern for approximately 1.25 miles from the terminus of Van Horne Avenue at the South Pasadena-Los Angeles boundary northward to Monterey Road in South Pasadena. Via del Rey was designed to be 60 feet in width and to serve as a “traffic collector street” to collect traffic from the other streets in the Altos de Monterey and to provide the principal avenue of ingress and egress for the eventual residents. It was never intended to be a major by-pass street or thoroughfare. The Altos de Monterey consists entirely of single family residences with the exception of an elementary school on Via del Rey. Approximately 150 of the 637 residential lots abut Via del Rey, with residential driveways at intervals of 60 to 100 feet.

In 1968 Los Angeles announced plans to widen and improve Van Home Avenue between the South Pasadena-Los Angeles boundary and Huntington Drive in Los Angeles, approximately .6 mile to the south. South Pasadena objected to the proposed improvement of Van Home, stating that it would create a situation which would turn Via del Rey into a major thoroughfare through a prime residential area. 1 Nevertheless, in 1971 Los Angeles spent over $256,000 in gasoline tax funds to improve Van Horne to Huntington Drive.

Thirteen hundred to fifteen hundred vehicles daily cross the Los Angeles-South Pasadena border at the confluence of Via del Rey and Van Horne Avenue. Some of this traffic originates from outside the immediate vicinity and uses the streets as a thoroughfare between Huntington Drive and Monterey Road. Excessive auto traffic became a matter of concern to the residents of the Altos. South Pasadena tried several methods of controlling the traffic, such as stop signs, reduced speed limits, and increased traffic surveillance, but none of these measures proved effective.

*1055 On November 7, 1973, after notice by publication and posting, at a regular meeting of the City Council of South Pasadena, a hearing was held on the proposed closure of Via del Rey. The city council approved a motion to close Via del Rey at Camino Verde, the first intersection with Via del Rey north of the South Pasadena-Los Angeles boundary and within the City of South Pasadena. The city council’s findings were memorialized in resolution number 5139, as amended by resolution 5151, as follows:

“(a) That Via del Rey is no longer needed and never has been needed as a conveyor of through traffic, rather such street is needed and has always been intended to serve as a collector of residential and related traffic in the Altos de Monterey community of this City, and the carriage of substantial through traffic is inconsistent with and inimical to that intended use in that such traffic detracts from the peace, safety and livability of the residential environment of said community;
“(b) That if Via del Rey is not closed to through traffic, a substantial and increasing volume of such traffic may be expected to use Via del Rey solely as a through street. Such volume of through traffic is in excess of the volume of incidental through traffic foreseen when Via del Rey was designed, and is inimical to the fine residential environment which it has always been a public purpose of this City to establish and foster in Altos de Monterey;
“(c) That at the time of the subdivision of the ‘Altos’, a commitment was made by this City Council to close Via del Rey to through traffic as soon as practicable;
“(d) That Via del Rey is a residential street of quality homes now carrying an excessive volume of auto traffic;
“(e) That such excessive traffic is replete with hazard, noise, pollution, speed, accidents and other ramifications inimical to the peace, safety and welfare of the neighborhood in and around Via del Rey and Camino Verde;
“(f) That such problems have caused a diminution of property values in such area;
“(g) That such traffic is not primarily caused by residents but rather as a through way and shortcut for people living substantial distances from this residential area;
*1056 “(h) That the closure of Via del Rey at Camino Verde would substantially reduce the police problems at such area without damaging any property owner or without requiring excessive circuitry of travel by the public; and
“(i) That such closure of Via del Rey would be a proper exercise of the police power.
“Now, Therefore, Be And It Is Hereby Resolved, and heretofore has been resolved that Via del Rey shall be closed for all vehicular traffic at Camino Verde until such time as traffic flow, volume, and hazard shall indicate to this City Council that such street may be again opened without risk or diminution of property values.”

Since a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction were issued, the plan has not yet been put into effect, and South Pasadena has voluntarily refrained from closing, the street pending this appeal. The exact nature of the “closing” is not made clear in the record, but we gather that the plan is to install barricades or curbs across Via del Rey at Camino Verde effectively blocking traffic between the major portion of Via del Rey and Van Horne Avenue. Apparently Via del Rey is to remain open between the barricade and Monterey Road to the north.

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Bluebook (online)
53 Cal. App. 3d 1051, 126 Cal. Rptr. 320, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-city-of-south-pasadena-calctapp-1975.