Town of Elmore v. Town of Coosada
Town of Elmore v. Town of Coosada
Opinion
The Town of Elmore appeals the trial court's summary judgment holding its annexation invalid because it lacked the requisite consent of the landowners whose property was being annexed. The Town of Elmore also appeals the trial court's summary judgment dismissing its counter-claim challenging an annexation by the Town of Coosada as improper. We affirm.
Property owners along Politic Road and Mercer Road then petitioned the Commission *Page 1098
to annex their properties into the Town of Elmore. Pursuant to §
After the Elmore annexation, the Town of Coosada petitioned the Elmore Circuit Court for a judgment declaring that annexation invalid. The Town of Coosada claimed that Elmore County did not own Politic Road and Mercer Road and that, therefore, the Commission could not give the necessary consent for their annexation. Because, the Town of Coosada argued, the Town of Elmore had not obtained the required consent from the actual property owners, its annexation of portions of Politic Road and Mercer Road and consequently of the adjoining property was invalid. The Town of Coosada also claimed that the Elmore annexation was improper because, it says, portions of Politic Road and Mercer Road that were annexed are within the Town of Coosada's police jurisdiction and across the equidistant line between the Town of Coosada and the Town of Elmore. The Town of Coosada moved for a summary judgment.
The trial court allowed Elmore County to intervene as a plaintiff. Although the Commission had previously given its consent to the annexation, it now agreed with the Town of Coosada that the Elmore annexation was invalid. Elmore County argued to the trial court that the Town of Elmore's action was impermissible because it had not obtained consent from the owner or owners of the land it annexed; it had obtained only the Commission's consent, and Elmore County conceded that it did not own the land.
In response to the Town of Coosada's summary-judgment motion, the Town *Page 1099 of Elmore argued that when the Commission consented to the annexation of portions of Politic Road and Mercer Road, Elmore County owned the roadways. The Town of Elmore claimed that Elmore County had obtained that ownership by prescription, because citizens of Elmore County had been using those roadways for more than 20 years. The Town of Elmore submitted affidavits of its citizens establishing that they had used those roadways for well over the 20-year period required for dedicating a public road by prescription.4
The Town of Elmore also moved for a summary judgment. It argued that the Town of Coosada's claim was moot because, even assuming the Elmore annexation was invalid, the Town of Elmore had properly re-annexed most of the same properties by an annexation proceeding in 2003. The Town of Elmore claimed that, in the 2003 annexation, it obtained consent of the owners of the property along Politic Road and Mercer Road and achieved contiguity with the corporate limits of the Town of Elmore without the use of Politic and Mercer Roads. However, the Town of Elmore acknowledged that its 2003 re-annexation did not include two of the properties it attempted to annex in 2002.
The trial court determined that Elmore County did not own the land under Politic Road and Mercer Road and therefore could not have granted the Town of Elmore the authority to annex portions of those roadways. Instead, the annexation required the consent of the fee-simple landowners who owned the property to the center of the roadways. The trial court also found:
"[The Town of Elmore] is correct in suggesting that this issue [is] now moot if the Town of Elmore has since annexed the roads correctly pursuant to Ala. Code [1975,] § 11-12-21. However, the Court has received no evidence that this has been done. Because of this, there is no genuine issue of material fact present [as to whether the property was properly annexed in 2003]."
The trial court entered a summary judgment in favor of the Town of Coosada and Elmore County, thus rendering the Elmore annexation invalid.
The property annexed by the Town of Coosada that the Town of Elmore challenges in its counterclaim had been owned by Ell Cowling and Carrie Cowling ("the Cowling property"). After Ell's death, Thomas P. Gilliland was appointed the personal representative of his estate. Carrie requested that Gilliland sign, along with her, a petition to annex the Cowling property into the Town of Coosada. Gilliland, as the personal representative of Ell's estate, and Carrie signed the petition. Based on that consent, the Town of Coosada passed ordinance no. 97-150 annexing the Cowling property into the Town of Coosada. The Town of Elmore argued *Page 1100 that, in order for the Town of Coosada to have properly annexed the Cowling property, it would have had to have obtained the consent of Ell's heirs instead of the consent of the personal representative.
The Town of Coosada moved for a summary judgment; it argued that the Town of Elmore's counterclaim was barred by the two-year limitations period in §
The trial court entered a summary judgment in favor of the Town of Coosada on the Town of Elmore's counterclaim. Thus, the trial court determined that the Town of Coosada's annexation of the Cowling property is valid.
The Town of Elmore appeals both the trial court's summary judgment declaring the Elmore annexation invalid and the summary judgment declaring the Coosada annexation valid.
This Court has stated that in analyzing mootness we consider "`whether decision of a once living dispute continues to be justified by a sufficient prospect that the decision will have an impact on the parties.'" Hornsby v. Sessions,
The Town of Coosada sought a judgment declaring the Elmore annexation invalid. If the Town of Elmore had already properly re-annexed the properties in question, then the validity of the Elmore annexation would be moot; however, as both parties point out, the 2003 annexation did not include at least two of the properties purportedly annexed in 2002. Therefore, even if the Town of Coosada's claim is moot as to the properties the Town of Elmore says it re-annexed in 2003, the Town of Coosada's claim remains a "live controversy" regarding the property the Town of Elmore did not attempt to re-annex in 2003. Moreover, the Town of Elmore has not shown that this case is moot, because it has not shown that the 2003 annexation was valid. Thus, we cannot conclude that the Town of Coosada's claim is moot. *Page 1101
The trial court found that Elmore County did not own Politic Road and Mercer Road when the Commission purported to give its consent for the Town of Elmore to annex portions of those roads in 2002. The trial court found that the Commission's consent to the annexation did not comply with §
The Town of Elmore argues that Elmore County had acquired ownership of Politic Road and Mercer Road by prescription, because, it argues, citizens of Elmore County had used Politic Road and Mercer Road for more than 20 years. This Court has held that, when a road is used by the public for 20 years, it becomes a "public road by prescription." See note 4. The Town of Coosada argues, however, that Elmore County had obtained only a prescriptive easement in the roadways, while the property owners on either side of Politic Road and Mercer Road maintained ownership of the roadways, up to their center lines. The Town of Coosada points to Purvis v. Busey,
The Purvis case, cited both by the Town of Coosada and by the trial court in its summary-judgment order, stands for the proposition that a property owner on either side of a roadway retains ownership of the roadway up to the center line in spite of a prescriptive easement obtained by the public. In this case, even if the public has acquired some right by the public use of the roadways for more than 20 years, that right is only the right to use Politic Road and Mercer Road. Elmore County has not, by virtue of the public's use, acquired ownership of the underlying roadways.
The Town of Elmore purportedly annexed the roadways in question in compliance with the requirements of §
"all of the owners of property located and contained within an area contiguous to the corporate limits of any incorporated municipality . . . shall sign and file a written petition [requesting annexation of their property] with the city clerk. . . ."
As discussed above, Elmore County had only an easement in the annexed roadways; Elmore County was not the "owner" of Politic Road and Mercer Road. Therefore, Elmore County could not consent to the Elmore annexation insofar as it purported to annex portions of Politic Road and Mercer Road.6 Thus, the Elmore annexation was improper. *Page 1102
"`It is axiomatic that a party must have standing to challenge the validity of an annexation ordinance. This Court has held that "[o]ne has standing to bring his complaint into court `if his stake in the resolution of that complaint assumes the proportions necessary to ensure that he will vigorously present his case.'"'"
(Quoting Johnson v. Rice,
The Town of Coosada concedes that "[h]ad the Town of Elmore been in existence at the time said Ordinance was passed there is no question that [the annexation] would have affected its police jurisdiction." Town of Coosada's brief, p. 24. However, because the Town of Elmore did not exist until four months after the annexation took place, the Town of Coosada argues, the Town of Elmore could not have been injured by the annexation. We recently reiterated in Carey v. Howard,
"Mootness is a time dimension of standing. See In re Allison G.,
276 Conn. 146 ,156 ,883 A.2d 1226 ,1231 (2005) ('One commentator has described mootness as "the doctrine of standing set in a time frame: [t]he requisite personal interest that must exist at the commencement of the litigation (standing) must continue throughout [the litigation's] existence (mootness)."')."
Therefore, to determine whether the Town of Elmore has standing to challenge the Coosada annexation, we must determine whether the Town of Elmore suffered an injury from the Coosada annexation "at the commencement of the litigation."Pharmacia Corp.,
The Town of Coosada concedes that the Coosada annexation "would have" affected the Town of Elmore's interests at the time of annexation, had it been incorporated at that time. Whether the Town of Elmore was affected at the time the annexation occurred or later, after it was incorporated, those same interests presumably were affected when the Town of Elmore filed its counterclaim against the Town of Coosada. In any event, the Town of Coosada offers no evidence or argument to the contrary. Therefore, the Town of Elmore has the requisite standing to prosecute this claim.
The Town of Elmore argues that the Coosada annexation is invalid because, it argues, the consent obtained from the personal representative of Ell's estate was insufficient under §
In support of its argument that the personal representative of Ell's estate could not consent to the annexation, the Town of Elmore cites §§
Section
"The power over title of an absolute owner is conceived to embrace all possible transactions, except those expressly mentioned in Sections
43-2-843 and43-2-844 , which might result in a conveyance or encumbrance of assets, or in a change of rights of possession."
The Town of Elmore asserts that the Coosada annexation subjected the property in Ell's estate to new zoning restrictions and that this change in zoning restrictions effected a "change of character" in the property. However, the Town of Elmore provides no authority for the proposition that zoning restrictions affect the "character of property; therefore, we do not consider it.7
The broad language of the statute gives a personal representative the same authority to conduct the business of the estate as the decedent would have had. This authority is intended to "embrace all possible transactions" that fall outside the scope of the specific powers enumerated in §
For the foregoing reasons, we cannot agree with the Town of Elmore that the trial court erred in entering a summary judgment in favor of the Town of Coosada.
AFFIRMED.
NABERS, C.J., and LYONS, HARWOOD, WOODALL, STUART, SMITH, BOLIN, and PARKER, JJ., concur.
"Whenever all of the owners of property located and contained within an area contiguous to the corporate limits of any incorporated municipality located in the state of Alabama and such property does not lie within the corporate limits or police jurisdiction of any other municipality, shall sign and file a written petition with the city clerk of such municipality requesting that such property or territory be annexed to the said municipality, and the governing body of such municipality adopts an ordinance assenting to the annexation of said property to such municipality, the corporate limits of said municipality shall be extended . . . so as to embrace and include such property. . . ."
"Every annexation undertaken prior to May 1, 1998, under any statutory procedure for annexation by any municipality and which the annexation procedure has been completed, notwithstanding any irregularity or defect in the procedure, is ratified and confirmed and given effect in all respects as if all provisions of law relating to the annexation proceeding had been duly and legally complied with."
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Town of Elmore v. Town of Coosada and Elmore County.
- Cited By
- 7 cases
- Status
- Published