Frandsen v. Mayer

Decision Date07 December 1967
Docket NumberNo. 8333,8333
Citation155 N.W.2d 294
PartiesKenneth FRANDSEN and Nettie Frandsen, Plaintiffs and Respondents, v. Reinie MAYER and City of Jamestown, a municipal corporation, Defendants andAppellants.
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court

Syllabus by the Court

1. The platting of townsites and additions thereto is governed by N.D.C.C. Chapter 40--50.

2. A county auditor's plat made under N.D.C.C. § 57--02--39 is for taxation purposes only, and is not a platting pursuant to N.D.C.C. Chapter 40--50.

3. An auditor's plat is made for taxation purposes for the convenience of the tax officials in describing the property on the tax rolls and does not confer rights in or transfer title to land.

4. No one except the owner of an unlimited estate or an estate in fee simple, or someone by him expressly authorized, can make a dedication of land.

5. Signs, billboards, and similar advertisements, when placed on private lands, are held not to be nuisances per se where they are safely and substantially constructed, maintained in a clean and sightly manner, and carry no objectionable advertisements.

6. A public nuisance is one which at the same time affects an entire community or neighborhood or any considerable number of persons, although the extent of the annoyance or damage inflicted upon the individuals may be unequal. N.D.C.C. § 42--01--06.

7. A private person may maintain an action for a public nuisance if it is specially injurious to himself or his property, but not otherwise. N.D.C.C. § 42--01--08.

Mackenzie & Jungroth, Jamestown, for appellant Reinie Mayer.

Hijellum, Weiss, Nerison & Jukkala, Jamestown, for appellant City of Jamestown.

Duffy & Haughland, Devils Lake, for respondents.

KNUDSON, Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment enjoining the defendant Mayer from maintaining a commercial sign on property adjacent to the plaintiffs' property. The defendants demand a trial de novo.

The facts can be summarized briefly. On March 2, 1959, the defendant Mayer entered into an oral agreement with the City of Jamestown whereby he agreed to give a strip of land 20 feet by 549 feet to the city for street purposes, and in consideration thereof the city agreed to permit the defendant to keep and maintain an advertising sign he had had on the strip of for several years. This strip of land was used by Mayer as an access road from his property to Highway No. 10, and was adjacent to the Frandsen property. Several years prior to this, Mayer had sold the Frandsen tract to them by metes and bounds. The Frandsen tract fronted on and had direct access to Highway No. 10.

The street was laid out, graded and curbed, but was not paved. The sign remained in place, with the curb curving outward slightly into the street to go around the sign, as only a few feet of the Mayer strip of land lay on the street side of the curb--most of the Mayer strip of land lying between the curb and the Frandsen property.

Mayer's sign remained in place until 1964, when the plaintiffs removed it. On June 12, 1964, Mayer and the City Council of Jamestown entered into a written agreement, reducing to writing the 1959 oral agreement. Mayer's sign was then re-erected in the same place it had occupied before the plaintiffs removed it.

The plaintiffs brought this action in July of 1964 alleging that they are the owners of Lot 18 of Auditor's Plat No. 3 to the City of Jamestown and the boulevard adjacent thereto; that the City of Jamestown had an ordinance prohibiting commercial signs on boulevards; that defendants proposed the erection of a commercial sign on the boulevard owned by the plaintiffs; and that the erection of the sign would constitute both a public and a private nuisance, and prayed that Mayer be permanently enjoined from erecting ormaintaining a sign upon such boulevard. The defendant answered by way of general denial and alleging that he was the owner of the boulevard; that he had donated this property to the city on the condition that he be allowed to maintain a sign on it; and that an agreement was entered into to this effect. He also counter-claimed alleging that the plaintiffs had willfully and maliciously ripped down his original sign and that he was thereby damaged in the sum of $300 for the sign, $1,000 for loss of profits from his business, and $5,000 for punitive damages.

The plaintiffs amended their complaint to include the City of Jamestown as defendant. In addition to the allegations contained in the original complaint, they alleged that the defendants had erected the sign after the commencement of this action pursuant to a purported agreement with the City of Jamestown giving consent to the erection of such sign, the city agreeing to pay one-half of the cost of such erection, and that the erection of such sign obstructed the view of the plaintiffs' motel and constituted both a public and a private nuisance. The city answered by way of general denial, but admitted that it had an ordinance prohibiting the erection of signs except such as are erected by the city under lawful authority of or at the direction of the city, but that the sign involved came under the exception to that ordinance.

The case was tried to the court without a jury. The court enjoined the defendants from maintaining the sign, and dismissed Mayer's counterclaim. The court held that the agreement between the City of Jamestown and Mayer and discriminatory and invalid and that the defendant's sign constituted a public and a private nuisance.

The plaintiffs' claim is based on the presumption that, as abutting owners, they own the fee to the center of the street.

An owner of land bounded by a road or street is presumed to own to the center of the way, but the contrary may be shown.

North Dakota Century Code § 47--01--16.

In support of their contention the plaintiffs introduced in evidence an uncertified engineer's sketch of a plat of the area entitled 'A Portion of Auditor's Plat No. 3, Jamestown, North Dakota,' showing the disputed area to be adjacent to plaintiffs' Lot 18.

We said in Great Lakes Pipe Line Co. v. City of Grand Forks, 142 N.W.2d 126 (N.D.1966), that the platting of municipalities is governed by N.D.C.C. Chapter 40--50, and that a county auditor's plat made under N.D.C.C. § 57--02--39 is for taxation purposes only, and is not a platting pursuant to N.D.C.C. Chapter 40--50.

An auditor's plat is made for taxation purposes for the convenience of the tax officials in describing the property on the tax rolls and does not confer rights in or transfer title to land.

Not only is there a failure in the record to show a plat prepared in compliance with Chapter 40--50, but there is also a failure to show that the owner or owners of the fee simple title of the land have caused a plat to be made, and the streets and public ways dedicated thereby.

It may be stated as a general rule that no one except the owner of an unlimited estate or an estate in fee simple, or someone by him expressly authorized, can make a dedication of land. * * *

26 C.J.S. Dedication § 7, p. 405.

There is evidence in this case of an agreement with the City whereby Mayer agreed to convey the strip of land to be dedicated for street purposes, reserving the right to keep his commercial sign in place on the strip of land. For this purpose he was to convey the strip of land to the Jamestown National Bank, but the record is silent as to what the Bank was to do or what it did to carry out the agreement. There is nothing in the record of a platting made by it. So far as the record shows, if it shows anything at all, the title to the strip of land is still in Mayer. The testimony of Mayer is very vague and uncertain about the kind of instrument he gave relating to the transfer of the strip of land, and to whom. He said he did not give a...

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3 cases
  • Moran v. Moran
    • United States
    • North Dakota Supreme Court
    • June 9, 1972
    ...v. Patocka, 49 N.D. 1119, 194 N.W. 691 (1923). We cannot consider evidence not contained in the statement of the case. Frandsen v. Mayer, 155 N.W.2d 294, 299 (N.D.1967). Since the contention of defendant casts reflection upon counsel for plaintiff, we have considered the contents of this le......
  • Coolen v. State, 41670
    • United States
    • Minnesota Supreme Court
    • July 17, 1970
  • Hale v. Ward Cnty.
    • United States
    • North Dakota Supreme Court
    • June 24, 2014
    ...property, but not otherwise. [¶ 15] We thus consider the meaning of “specially injurious” in N.D.C.C. § 42–01–08. In Frandsen v. Mayer, 155 N.W.2d 294, 295–99 (N.D.1967), this Court discussed whether a billboard sign constituted a private or a public nuisance in the context of a trial de no......

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