Tempe v. Sussex

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedJune 13, 2019
Docket1 CA-CV 18-0149
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tempe v. Sussex (Tempe v. Sussex) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tempe v. Sussex, (Ark. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION. UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.

IN THE ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION ONE

CITY OF TEMPE, Plaintiff/Appellee,

v.

STEVEN SUSSEX, et al., Defendants/Appellants.

No. 1 CA-CV 18-0149 FILED 6-13-2019

Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County No. CV 2016-007626 The Honorable Karen A. Mullins, Judge

AFFIRMED

COUNSEL

Tempe City Attorney’s Office, Tempe By Shelley D. Cutts, Judith R. Baumann Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee

Wilenchik & Bartness PC, Phoenix By John D. Wilenchik Co-Counsel for Defendants/Appellants

Farley Robinson & Larsen, Phoenix By Gregory A. Robinson Co-Counsel for Defendants/Appellants TEMPE v. SUSSEX, et al. Decision of the Court

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Judge Jennifer B. Campbell delivered the decision of the Court, in which Presiding Judge Paul J. McMurdie and Judge Randall M. Howe joined.

C A M P B E L L, Judge:

¶1 Steven and Virginia Sussex appeal the superior court’s order granting summary judgment for the City of Tempe on its claim of ejectment and denying summary judgment on their counterclaims for declaratory judgment and inverse eminent domain or conversion. Because the City has demonstrated it has a valid subsisting interest in the contested property and the Sussexes have demonstrated none, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶2 This appeal arises from a longstanding dispute over a parcel of land, complete with a more than century-old adobe house, on West 1st Street in Tempe (“the Property”). The relevant history began in the 18th century, when the United States government conducted a federal survey of the public domain that divided the vast expanse of territorial lands into a grid-like pattern of townships, each containing 36 approximately one- square-mile sections. See, e.g., Timothy M. Hogan & Joy E. Herr-Cardillo, 100 Years of Keeping the Trust: The Historic Role of the Judiciary in Protecting Arizona’s State Land Trust, 44 Ariz. St. L.J. 589, 589-90 (2012). A center section of each township, Section 16, was reserved in trust for school funding. Id. at 590. By the 19th century, the federal government began disposing of huge tracts of unsettled Western territory to people and enterprises that would put the land to productive uses—homesteaders and railroads chief among them. See, e.g., Rebecca W. Watson & Nora Pincus, Public Land Legal Basics, 36 E. Min. L. Found. § 5.02[2][b] (2015).

¶3 To further incentivize the expansion of railroad lines, the federal government passed several laws granting railroad companies various interests in sections of land running along the lines they constructed. See id. One such law, the General Railroad Right-of-Way Act of 1875, granted railroad companies rights-of-way through the public domain to build rail lines and to use and occupy adjacent lands for operational purposes and to build railway stations. See, e.g., 73B C.J.S. Public Lands § 227 (2019).

2 TEMPE v. SUSSEX, et al. Decision of the Court

¶4 During this land-disposition era, the federal government adopted a policy of making large land grants directly to new state governments for their use as a revenue source to support public education and other public institutions. See, e.g., Hogan, 44 Ariz. St. L.J. at 589-90. When the United States Congress conferred statehood on Arizona in 1910, it gave the new state about nine million acres of federal land—including the lands designated by the federal survey—to be held in trust for the support of the common schools. Gladden Farms, Inc. v. State, 129 Ariz. 516, 518 (1981); Arizona-New Mexico Enabling Act §§ 24, 25 (1910) (the “Enabling Act”). Conscious of past frauds and abuses in other states, Congress incorporated strict language in the Enabling Act and included a requirement that “[s]aid lands shall not be sold . . . except to the highest and best bidder at a public auction . . . .” Gladden Farms, 129 Ariz. at 518; Enabling Act § 28.

¶5 These historical forces all contributed to the current dispute over the Property, which sits on one of the Section 16 plots designated by the federal survey. The Property has long been the subject of the competing claims of the Union Pacific Railroad Company, the State of Arizona, the City of Tempe, and the Property’s current occupant the Sussexes, who are descendants of a family of early Arizonan settlers.

¶6 The Union Pacific Railroad Company, through its predecessors in interest (together, “Union Pacific”), claimed to have been granted exclusive use and occupancy rights to the Property through the General Railroad Right-of-Way Act of 1875. Claiming that its interest was tantamount to a fee estate, Union Pacific maintained that any interest in the property the federal government granted to the State via the Enabling Act was subject to the prior conveyance to Union Pacific. Although the exact nature of Union Pacific’s interest was not resolved through litigation, Union Pacific and the Arizona State Land Department (the “Land Department”) eventually settled their dispute in 2002. The settlement agreement contained no conclusion or admission by the Land Department concerning “the rights, estate or interests granted by the United States to Union Pacific or any other entity under the 1875 Act,” but Union Pacific agreed to relinquish any and all claims it may have had in the Property as against the Land Department. In accordance with the agreement, the Land Department executed a quitclaim deed conveying the Property to Union Pacific in exchange for a payment of $1,050,000. Union Pacific then conveyed the Property to the City of Tempe through a series of quitclaim deeds—the first executed in 2002, the second in 2005—in exchange for a payment of over $1,554,000.

3 TEMPE v. SUSSEX, et al. Decision of the Court

¶7 Even as these developments were taking place, the Property was being physically occupied by the Sussexes. They contend that Steven Sussex’s ancestors settled on the Property well before Arizona achieved statehood and have been occupying it ever since. In 1892, Steven Sussex’s great-grandfather purchased the adobe house from another settler, but no deed was ever recorded. In 1967, Steven Sussex’s grandmother transferred whatever rights she had in the Property to him. The Sussexes have since maintained a “gate” around the Property and at various intervals allowed family members to live on the Property, ran a business from the Property, and stored vehicles and other items on the Property.

¶8 In 2015, following the City of Tempe’s demand that they vacate the Property, the Sussexes brought an action against the City seeking to quiet title by claiming they had acquired the Property through adverse possession. See Sussex v. City of Tempe, 1 CA-CV 16-0207, 2017 WL 772434 at ¶¶ 2-4 (Ariz. App. Feb. 28, 2017) (mem. decision). The superior court granted the City’s motion to dismiss and this court ultimately affirmed, concluding that the Sussexes could not obtain the Property from the City via adverse possession. Id. at ¶¶ 6, 15. As a municipality, the City was exempt from the relevant statute of limitations and therefore immune to the Sussexes’ adverse possession claim. Id. at ¶ 15.

¶9 In May 2016, the City filed a complaint to eject the Sussexes from the Property pursuant to Arizona Revised Statutes (“A.R.S.”) § 12- 1251, alleging it had a valid subsisting interest in the Property as both the legal and record owner. The Sussexes answered and counterclaimed for inverse eminent domain or conversion and for a declaratory judgment stating that the City had no title in the Property.

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Bluebook (online)
Tempe v. Sussex, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tempe-v-sussex-arizctapp-2019.