Webber v. City of Scottsbluff

188 N.W.2d 814, 188 N.W.2d 214, 187 Neb. 282, 1971 Neb. LEXIS 600
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 23, 1971
Docket37858
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 188 N.W.2d 814 (Webber v. City of Scottsbluff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webber v. City of Scottsbluff, 188 N.W.2d 814, 188 N.W.2d 214, 187 Neb. 282, 1971 Neb. LEXIS 600 (Neb. 1971).

Opinion

Clinton, J.

This is an action for a declaratory judgment to have an annexation ordinance of the City of Scottsbluff declared void. The land which is the subject of the annexation is a 43-acre tract owned by the plaintiffs. The date of passage and approval of the annexation ordinance was June 29, 1967. The district court found generally for the defendant City and dismissed the petition of the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs appeal. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

The plaintiffs make the following claims: (1) The tract annexed was not urban or suburban in character but was agricultural and rural and was therefore not subject to annexation; (2) the annexation ordinance was not validly enacted nor was its enactment proved by competent evidence; and (3) the defendant City failed to comply with the .provisions of section 31-766, R. R. S. 1943, relative to the change of boundaries of the City and the rural fire protection district in which the annexed territory was included and that the annexation was void- for this reason. Some of these contentions involve subsidiary claims of error in the judgment of the trial court and these will be treated later in the opinion *284 in connection with the assignment of error to which they pertain.

The evidence shows that the tract in question is trapezoidal in shape but approaches a rectangle of the following approximate dimensions, to wit, 1,015 feet in width and about 1,500 feet in average depth. The record establishes that on the date of the passage and approval of the ordinance, the following uses existed: A shopping center occupied an area of 175 by 425 feet in the southwest corner of the property. The southeast corner was occupied by a large furniture store and a farm supply store with a separate office building for the supply store and a separate heating plant for the furniture store. Approximately two-thirds of the way northerly on the east boundary was a furniture warehouse. Near it and slightly further north was an empty caretaker’s residence. In the northeast corner of the tract was the residence of the plaintiffs, an unused chicken house, a shelter for horses, and a barn. The owner kept three horses as a hobby and to show and to pull a wagon to make furniture deliveries as advertising for the 'store. The barn also housed furniture delivery trucks. North of the shopping center about one-third of the way along the west boundary of the tract was a small metal building, the use of which is not shown. On the tract was a 50,000-gallon water tower with well, well house, and water distribution system by means of which water was furnished to the buildings and businesses on the tract. The remainder of the 43 acres was unoccupied and pasture crop was raised thereon for the horses.

All the southern and eastern boundaries' and the south approximately 1,400 feet of the western boundary were contiguous to existing city limits at the time of annexation. The tract was abutted on the south by a city street and on the west by a paved street or road for its full length. The area immediately south of the tract was commercially developed. The area immediately to the west was platted and developed residentially. On *285 the east side of the tract a strip 150 feet wide was occupied by a church and a National Guard armory. Further east were platted tracts used for ball diamonds, and still further east was a high school with accompanying facilities. Immediately to the north of the tract was a highway and beyond that a tract of land used for farming. Further to the northeast and north were platted residential areas partially developed but not included within the city limits. Also located to the north were medical offices and a site for a developing hospital. To the northwest and separated by undeveloped land were a hospital and an access street, both of which were included within the city limits.

City water mains were located adjacent to the tract. A city sewer crossed the tract from east to west about 730 feet from the southern boundary on an easement provided by the plaintiffs.

The record fully supports the implicit finding of the trial court that the tract in question was urban or suburban in character and not agricultural land rural in character. Plumfield Nurseries, Inc. v. Dodge County, 184 Neb. 346, 167 N. W. 2d 560; Voss v. City of Grand Island, 186 Neb. 232, 182 N. W. 2d 427; Sullivan v. City of Omaha, 183 Neb. 511, 162 N. W. 2d 227.

The plaintiffs contend the annexation ordinance was not validly enacted nor proved by competent evidence because the ordinance does not appear in toto in the minutes of the various meetings pertaining to its adoption.

The record shows that the annexation ordinance bears title as follows:

“An ordinance of the City of Scottsbluff, Nebraska finding that a certain tract of land situated in the Southeast Quarter (SE%) of Section Fourteen (14), Township Twenty-two (22) North, Range Fifty-five (55) West of the Sixth Principal Meridian, in Scotts Bluff County, Nebraska, contiguous and adjacent to the corporate limits of the City, is urban or suburban in character and not *286 agricultural land which is rural in character; re-annexing to, and re-including within the corporate limits of, the City such tract of land; providing that the inhabitants shall be entitled to the rights and privileges, and be subject to the laws, ordinances, rules and regulations of the City, and receive substantially the benefits as other inhabitants thereof; repealing ordinance No. 1555 and all conflicting ordinances and parts of ordinances but saving existing rights, claims, causes of action and defenses of the City; separating and saving provisions not declared invalid; and providing for recording and publication of the ordinance, and for its effective date.”

The record, as evidenced by minutes duly certified by the city clerk, shows that at a meeting of the city council of the City of Scottsbluff on June 26, 1967, an ordinance, the title of which was as above set forth, was introduced by a member of the council. The minutes of that meeting further state: “. . . and the ordinance was fully and distinctly read. Thereupon Councilman Wallace moved that the ordinance be designated as Ordinance No. 1650, that the title thereof be approved and that the ordinance be made a part of the records in the office of the City Clerk, which motion was seconded by Councilman Thomas.” The minutes then show that the vote on the motion was called and recorded and the motion was, by the mayor, declared to have been carried. Certified copies of minutes of the council of a meeting held on June 28, 1967, show the following: “Ordinance No. 1650, which had been fully and distinctly read at the regular meeting of the City Council held on June 26, 1967, was fully and distinctly read a second time.”

■ Minutes of the meeting of the 'city council on June ■29, 1967, show' the following:' “Councilman Kramer moved that the statutory rule requiting ordinances to'be •fully and distinctly read oh three different days be'dispensed 'with, in the cáse of Ordinance No: 1650, which motion’was 'seconded "by Councilman MeKibbon. 'The *287 Yeas and Nays were called, the vote was as follows: ‘YEAS’ Thomas, Kramer, McKibbon, Wallace. ‘NAYS’ None. Absent: Donahue.

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Related

Millard Rural Fire Protection District No. 1 v. City of Omaha
409 N.W.2d 574 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 N.W.2d 814, 188 N.W.2d 214, 187 Neb. 282, 1971 Neb. LEXIS 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webber-v-city-of-scottsbluff-neb-1971.