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Kemp v. Seattle

The Supreme Court of Washington
Sep 25, 1928
149 Wn. 197 (Wash. 1928)

Summary

nonabutting property owner had no right to complain of loss of view because he had no vested right, in contrast to an abutting property owner who is entitled to egress and ingress, light, air, and view and is entitled to damages for any material diminution of these rights

Summary of this case from Fame Developers, Ltd. v. City of Bainbridge Island

Opinion

No. 21216. Department Two.

September 25, 1928.

MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS (357) — STREETS — VACATION — RIGHTS OF ABUTTERS — ACCESS. Property owners cannot restrain the vacation of a portion of a street on which they do not abut unless they suffer peculiar damages not common to the public.

SAME (356) — STREETS — VACATION — RIGHTS OF ABUTTERS — RIGHTS TO LIGHT AND AIR. Property owners cannot, with reference to light and air, complain of the vacation of a portion of the street upon which their property does not abut.

SAME (357) — STREETS — RIGHTS OF ABUTTERS — ACCESS AND USE. A property owner is entitled to the use of the whole of a street upon which his property abuts.

SAME (356) — STREETS — ABUTTERS — WHAT CONSTITUTES. Since property abuts on a street where there is no intervening land, lots the west boundary of which coincides with the east boundary of B street abut thereon, but do not abut on a cross street to the west, the east end of which coincides with the west boundary of B street.

SAME (349) — STREETS — VACATION — ESTOPPEL OF CITY. A city, by assessing lots for a local improvement, is not estopped to vacate a portion of the streets within the improvement.

Appeal from a judgment of the superior court for King county, Kinne, J., entered January 21, 1928, upon findings in favor of the defendant, in an action to restrain the vacation of a street, tried to the court. Affirmed.

G. Ward Kemp, for appellant.

Thomas J.L. Kennedy and J. Ambler Newton, for respondent.


This action was brought to restrain the defendant city, acting through its city council, from vacating a portion of a certain street. The cause was tried to the court without a jury and resulted in a judgment dismissing the action, from which the plaintiff appeals.

The facts are these: The plat of the Pontius Second Addition to the city of Seattle was filed for record March 1, 1882. Through this plat from east to west, one of the streets is East John street. The plat of Crawford's Addition to the city of Seattle was filed for record March 29, 1882. On the west side of this plat was a street now known as Boylston Avenue North. On the north side of the plat, was a street designated East John street. The south line of East John street to the east of Boylston Avenue North is some feet north of the north line of East John Street to the west of Boylston Avenue North. The result was at this point a jog in East John Street.

The appellant owns lots 9 and 10 in Crawford's Addition, the latter lot being the northwest lot of the plat. The west line of these lots coincides with the east line of Boylston Avenue North. They are directly across the street to the east from the east end of East John Street which is west of Boylston Avenue North. The east end of this street coincides with the west line of Boylston Avenue North.

Without mentioning the dates, the city has laid out and constructed what is called Olive Way, which comes from the southwest, crosses East John street west of Boylston Avenue North, takes a portion of appellant's lot 10 and a portion of the property across the street. Olive Way is one of the principal thoroughfares leading from the business section of the city to the residence district to the east. The city is proposing to vacate the south twenty feet of East John street to the west of Boylston Avenue North and to the east of Olive Way. To this, the appellant objects because it will interfere with the view which his property now has to the west.

The question is whether appellant's property abuts upon the east end of East John street, which coincides with the west boundary line of Boylston Avenue North, which is a street twenty-six feet wide.

[1] A property owner whose property does not abut upon a portion of a street which it is proposed to vacate or which is obstructed has no right of action to restrain the vacation or prevent the obstruction unless the access to his property is interfered with and he suffers a special or peculiar damage differing in kind from that of the general public. In Freeman v. Centralia, 67 Wn. 142, 120 P. 886, Ann. Cas. 1913D 786, it was said:

"It is contended that appellants have a right to the use of the streets upon which their property abuts for its entire length, and are entitled to compensation as abutting owners, if any part of the street is vacated. Authority upon the particular proposition advanced is divided; but this court has, in several cases, aligned itself with the great majority of American courts in holding that a property owner does not come within the rule of compensation unless his property abuts upon or touches that part of the street which is actually vacated, or a special or peculiar damage is made to appear; or, to state the proposition in its elementary form, unless his injury differs in kind rather than in degree from that suffered by the general public."

The cases of Ponischil v. Hoquiam Sash etc. Co., 41 Wn. 303, 83 P. 316, and Mottman v. Olympia, 45 Wn. 361, 88 P. 579, are to the same effect.

[2] With reference to light and air, the rule is that a property owner whose property does not abut upon the portion of the street or alley sought to be vacated has no right to complain because of the shutting off of light and air from his property. In Taft v. Washington Mutual Sav. Bank, 127 Wn. 503, 221 P. 604, after an extensive review of the authorities, it was said:

"Under the above authorities, we conclude that the correct rule is that only those directly abutting on the portion of the street or alley vacated, or alleged to be obstructed, or those whose rights of access are substantially affected, have such a special interest as to enable them to maintain an action. The further rule, deducible from our own cases and the authorities generally, is that owners of property abutting on a street or alley have no vested right in such street or alley except to the extent that their access may not be unreasonably restricted or substantially affected. Owners who do not abut, such as respondents here, and whose access is not destroyed or substantially affected, have no vested rights which are substantially affected."

In that case, a non-abutting property owner sought to prevent the vacation of a portion of an alley because it would interfere with the light and air coming to his property. It was there distinctly held that the plaintiff's property not abutting upon the portion of the alley vacated, he had no right to complain.

[3] If the complaining owner's property abuts upon the portion of the street sought to be vacated or obstructed he has a right to restrain such vacation or obstruction because, as said in Fry v. O'Leary, 141 Wn. 465, 252 P. 111,

". . . he is entitled to use the whole thereof for egress and ingress, light, air and view, and for any substantial or material diminution of any of these rights he is entitled to recover in damages."

In that case the property of the plaintiff abutted upon the portion of the street sought to be vacated. In this respect it differs from the Taft case where, as pointed out, the complaining owner's property did not abut upon the portion of the alley sought to be vacated. The Fry case in no sense conflicts with or overrules the Taft case, and under the latter case, a non-abutting property owner cannot complain of the shutting off of light and air from his property. View, of course, must be classed with light and air and not with ingress or egress.

[4] This brings us to the question as to whether the appellant's property abuts upon the east end of East John street. Property is said to abut upon a street or highway when there is no intervening land between it and such street or highway. In Kneebs v. Sioux City, 156 Iowa 607, 137 N.W. 944, it is said:

"It is abutting property when there is no intervening land between it and the street."

Likewise, in Millan v. City of Chariton, 145 Iowa 648, 124 N.W. 766, it is said:

"By the term `abutting property' is meant that between which and the improvement there is no intervening land."

When property abuts, the lot line and street line are in common. In Northern Pacific R. Co. v. Douglas County, 145 Wis. 288, 130 N.W. 246, it is said:

"It is also quite plain that `abutting' and `adjacent' were not used synonymously. One was to characterize any parcel of real estate having a street and lot line in common. The other was to characterize one not in part bounded by a street line."

From the facts stated, it appears in the case now before us that the west line of the appellant's lots coincides with the east boundary line of Boylston Avenue North. The east end of East John street, which is in question, coincides with the west line of Boylston Avenue North. Boylston Avenue North, a street twenty-six feet wide, lies between the east end of East John street and the west marginal line of the appellant's property. It follows, therefore, that lots 9 and 10 of Crawford's Addition abut upon Boylston Avenue North, but do not abut upon the east end of East John street which is across that avenue to the west.

It is said, however, that since the city laid out and constructed Olive Way a different situation is presented, and that the appellant's property abuts upon all that portion of East John street which is to the east of Olive Way. When Olive Way was laid out and constructed, it in no manner interfered with East John street other than to cross it. East John street remained a street just as it had prior to that time. The two streets, it is true, intersect and in that intersection both cover the same ground. The fact that Olive Way crosses East John street does not destroy or make the place of crossing something else than East John street. It becomes the intersection of the two streets.

[5] Something has been said about the city being estopped because the appellant's property has, from time to time, been assessed for the improvement of East John street as well as Olive Way, but we see no basis for an estoppel. If the city, by assessing lots for a local improvement, thereby estopped itself from vacating any of the streets which were within the improvement, it would be possible for a property owner, in a district a number of blocks from the proposed vacation, if it should subsequently be desired to vacate one or more of the streets, to object to such vacation, and this regardless of whether ingress or egress, light, air or view were interfered with. The city by assessing the appellant's property for the improvement did not estop itself from vacating the portion of East John street now in question.

The judgment will be affirmed.

ASKREN, BEALS, and HOLCOMB, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

Kemp v. Seattle

The Supreme Court of Washington
Sep 25, 1928
149 Wn. 197 (Wash. 1928)

nonabutting property owner had no right to complain of loss of view because he had no vested right, in contrast to an abutting property owner who is entitled to egress and ingress, light, air, and view and is entitled to damages for any material diminution of these rights

Summary of this case from Fame Developers, Ltd. v. City of Bainbridge Island
Case details for

Kemp v. Seattle

Case Details

Full title:G. WARD KEMP, Appellant, v. THE CITY OF SEATTLE, Respondent

Court:The Supreme Court of Washington

Date published: Sep 25, 1928

Citations

149 Wn. 197 (Wash. 1928)
149 Wash. 197
270 P. 431

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