Witham v. City of Lincoln

250 N.W. 247, 125 Neb. 366, 1933 Neb. LEXIS 211
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1933
DocketNo. 28708
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 250 N.W. 247 (Witham v. City of Lincoln) 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
Witham v. City of Lincoln, 250 N.W. 247, 125 Neb. 366, 1933 Neb. LEXIS 211 (Neb. 1933).

Opinion

Paine, J.

This is an action in equity, wherein Blanche H. Witham, plaintiff and appellee, seeks to have certain real estate owned by her detached from the city of Lincoln, defendant and appellant.

In her petition, filed August 15, 1929, plaintiff alleges that she is the owner of a certain tract of land, which, for the purposes of this opinion, may be said to lie on the north side of East 0 street, immediately west of Seventieth street, which land the city of Lincoln has recently annexed by ordinance. Plaintiff alleges that said land is agricultural and farming land. The land is not subdivided into lots, nor have any streets or alleys been located thereon, nor is the land in any way benefited by [367]*367being included within the corporate limits of the city of Lincoln. That the purpose of the city in annexing said lands is to raise revenue to construct a water-main through the same to furnish water to and for the use of the Veterans’ Hospital, near the plaintiff’s land, and plaintiff prays that her land may be adjudged not suitable for city purpose, and be taken out of the city, and relieved from the control and management of the city.

The answer of the city of Lincoln admits that it is a municipal corporation, operating under a Home Rule Charter adopted November 14, 1917. That on July 29, 1929, ■ an ordinance, No. 3061, extended the corporate limits of the city of Lincoln from Fifty-eighth street to Seventieth street, thereby including the real estate of plaintiff lying on East 0 street. That 0 street was paved by the state of Nebraska to Seventieth street, without expense to the plaintiff, and that a large water-main running east on 0 street to Seventieth street will supply abutting property for domestic and industrial purposes. That immediately east of Seventieth street, and just south of 0 street, the United States Government has erected the Veterans’ Hospital. The city alleges that the real estate of the plaintiff is strictly urban in character, and has a distinct unity of interest with the older portions of the city, and has been materially benefited by annexation thereto. That plaintiff cannot collaterally and indirectly attack the validity of ordinance No. 3061, annexing the said property, but that only the state of Nebraska can question the same, and that plaintiff has an. adequate remedy at law; and asks that plaintiff’s petition be dismissed. To this answer a reply was filed by the plaintiff.

Upon trial of the issues, nearly 500 pages of evidence were taken, and 35 exhibits introduced, including four large airplane photographs, showing the land in question, as well as the surrounding lands. The evidence discloses that the ordinance, No. 3061, annexed a narrow strip of land, reaching for nearly a mile east of Cotner boulevard, [368]*368and running along 0 street to Seventieth street, but extending only 400 feet on either side of 0 street.

The plaintiff’s land lies on the north side of 0 street, and at the extreme east end of the strip annexed. It is a part of an ordinary farm of 99 acres, and was planted to corn and wheat by the plaintiff’s husband. There are no improvements or buildings of any kind on the part of the plaintiff’s land which is annexed to the city.

Edward C. Witham, the husband of plaintiff, admitted that the street was paved in front of their land without expense to the plaintiff; that there was motor service by bus of the city street railway in front of their property; that there was natural gas service, and that a sanitary sewer had been constructed through their land, all without cost to the plaintiff. He admitted that he made no objection to the building of the 8-inch water-main along 0 street, and. that the plaintiff would not now object if the water-main had been built free of cost to her, as were all of the other city improvements mentioned. The plaintiff has not used gas, electricity, nor water upon the farm, and does not desire the same. That the assessments against plaintiff’s land, because of the construction of the water-line to the Veterans’ Hospital, will amount to above $2,000. That a number of witnesses, familiar with the situation, testified in favor of the plaintiff to the effect that the land is, and always has been, ordinary farm land. That no benefits resulted from its annexation to the city, and that it would simply result in heavy burdens of city taxes for the water-main and other special assessments. That the land sometimes is flooded from a creek running through it, known as Dead Man’s Run.

Frank D. Eager testified that, as vice-president of the Chamber of Commerce of Lincoln, he personally submitted the proposal of the Chamber to the U. S. Veterans’ Bureau to get the hospital located in Lincoln, and that proposal stated that a city water-main would be extended to the southwest corner of the proposed site of the hospital at Seventieth and A streets, free of cost, but that [369]*369the original plan to get water to the Veterans’ Hospital via A street was changed, and the water-main leading to the Veterans’ Hospital was finally located in East 0 street.

Charles G. Beck, manager of the U. S. Veterans’ Hospital, testified that the total construction cost to date had been $1,167,904, which did not include the cost of the real estate, of $92,000.

The evidence further discloses that a civil engineer employed by the Sanitary Sewer District built the sewer which follows Dead Man’s Run, and that it is only used by the Veterans’ Hospital, and that there was no request for sewer from private owners. Harvey Rathbone, Charles Stuart, J. H. Humpe, and Frank D. Eager, all engaged in the real estate or investment business, together with some others, testified that the plaintiff’s land was urban in character, but the majority of these witnesses admitted that they were speculating upon future possibilities of the growth of the city, rather than upon the actual condition today of the land annexed.

The trial judge made a personal inspection of the premises, and in his decree held that the plaintiff’s real estate had been used for many years as farm land, and for no other purpose; that no part of the land had ever been platted into lots or blocks, and that it is in no wise urban property, but is solely agricultural land, which will not at the present time be benefited by being annexed to the city; that the object of the defendant city in passing said ordinance and annexing said lands, or attempting to do so, was to raise revenue, and that such annexation was at the time, and is now, destructive to the value of the land and confiscatory of the property of the plaintiff. The trial court further found that it was beyond the power of the city of Lincoln to annex said land, and that its attempt so to do was wrongful and without authority of law, and found generally for the plaintiff, and that the ordinance passed, annexing said land, was of no force or effect, and that said land be considered as out[370]*370side of the boundaries of the city, and that the taxes levied or assessed upon said land be declared invalid and no lien upon the property.

In the motion for a new trial, the city set out many grounds therefor, which may be summarized as alleging misconduct on the part of the plaintiff; accident and surprise, which ordinary prudence of the city could not have guarded against; that the decree was not sustained by sufficient evidence, and is contrary to law; and in the assignments of error the constitutionality of sections 15-104 and 15-105, Comp. St.

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Bluebook (online)
250 N.W. 247, 125 Neb. 366, 1933 Neb. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/witham-v-city-of-lincoln-neb-1933.