Laserfiche WebLink
RELEVANT LINKS: <br />League of Minnesota Cities Information Memo: 4/27/2017 <br />Vacation of City Streets Page 9 <br />III. Vacation of platted lands upon court order <br />A. Introduction <br />Minn. scat. § 505.14. <br />Minnesota Statutes provide an additional method for vacation of platted <br />streets, alleys or public grounds through the court system rather than <br />through petition to the city council. It is difficult to imagine any <br />circumstances under which a city would itself utilize this procedure to <br />vacate a street under its exclusive jurisdiction. However, cities may need to <br />familiarize themselves with this procedure in the instance where a member <br />of the public chooses to pursue a court-ordered vacation (as opposed to a <br />petition to the city council). <br />It is important to note that these provisions may be inapplicable in certain <br />charter cities. The statute explicitly states that the district court cannot <br />vacate or alter a platted street dedicated to the public use in any city <br />organized under a charter or special law that provides a method of <br />procedure for vacation by the municipal authorities of the city. <br />B. Procedure for obtaining a court-ordered <br />vacation <br />Minn. stat. § 505.14. <br />A person seeking vacation of a platted street may use either the provisions <br />Petition of Krebs, 6 N.W.2d <br />803 (Minn. 1942). <br />discussed previously for a petition to the city for a vacation or may choose <br />to apply directly to the district court for a vacation. Petitioners are not <br />required to petition the city for the vacation first, before approaching the <br />courts. <br />A petitioner seeking a vacation from the district court must provide <br />Batinich v. Harvey, 277 <br />personal notice of the petition to the mayor of the city where the street to <br />N.W.2d 355 (Minn., 1979). <br />be vacated is situated. The petitioner must also provide additional personal <br />and published notice to land owners within the platted area and to the <br />commissioner of Natural Resources, if the land terminates at, abuts upon, <br />or is adjacent to any public water. <br />Upon proper petition and notice, the district court has broad power to <br />"vacate or alter all or any part, of the plat, and adjudge the title to all <br />streets, alleys, and public grounds to be in the persons entitled thereto." In <br />addition, the district court may determine damages and award <br />compensation to all persons owning or occupying land affected by the <br />proposed vacation. <br />When the lands to be vacated are "streets or alleys connecting separate <br />plats or lying between blocks or lots or providing access for the public to <br />Application ofAvant-Garde, <br />any public water," the court cannot grant the vacation unless the facts <br />Inc., 481 N.W.2d 379 <br />(Minn.Ct.App.1992). <br />indicate that the land to be vacated is "useless for the purpose for which it <br />was laid out." <br />League of Minnesota Cities Information Memo: 4/27/2017 <br />Vacation of City Streets Page 9 <br />