Aylmore v. Hamilton

133 P. 1027, 74 Wash. 433, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 2074
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 23, 1913
DocketNo. 11358
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 133 P. 1027 (Aylmore v. Hamilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aylmore v. Hamilton, 133 P. 1027, 74 Wash. 433, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 2074 (Wash. 1913).

Opinion

Morris, J.

— It is sought in this action to restrain the sale of an issue of $3,000,000 of King county road bonds, the case coming here on an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment sustaining a demurrer to his complaint. The facts, so far as necessary to be stated for a proper understanding of the question submitted, are these:

On September 30, 1912, the county commissioners of King county passed a resolution submitting to the qualified electors of King county the question of whether or not bonds in a [434]*434sum not exceeding three million dollars should he issued for strictly road purposes. Pursuant to this resolution, an election was duly held, and the proposition carried by the requisite majority. The county commissioners thereupon issued the bonds and passed a resolution providing for their sale, when this suit was commenced seeking to enjoin said sale.

No question is raised as to the validity of any of the proceedings prior to the election; and while the complaint alleges a number of reasons why the election and bonds should be held invalid, the main contention, and in fact the only one discussed in the briefs or upon the argument, is that the bonds are invalid because of the fact that, included in the proposition submitted which called for but one affirmative or negative vote, were twenty-seven different roads and fifteen bridges in various parts of the county, it being contended in this connection that each of these roads and bridges is a several and distinct purpose in no way related to each other, thus bringing this case squarely within the rule announced by this court in Blaine v. Seattle, 62 Wash. 445, 114 Pac. 164, Ann. Cas. 1912 D. 315, where it was held that a proposition to issue bonds for sites for fire houses, for the construction of fire houses, a site for a city stable, a combined fire house and dock, a police sub-station, an isolation hospital, a bridge, on Spokane avenue, and a bridge on Westlake avenue, were eight several and distinct propositions and that their submission as one proposition in such a manner that the voter was compelled to vote for or against all of them, was invalid.

The respondent, on the other hand, contends that the ruling of the lower court should be affirmed upon the authority of Blaine v. Hamilton, 64 Wash. 353, 116 Pac. 1076, 35 L. R. A. (N. S.) 577, where it was held that an election to authorize a bond issue was valid where the proposition requiring one affirmative or negative vote included, (1) the excavation of a canal connecting Salmon Bay and Lake Washington, (2) the deepening of the Duwamish river, (3) the diver[435]*435sion of the waters of Cedar river into Lake Washington, and (4) the erection of wharves or docks in aid or furtherance of these improvements, and that these purposes were so related as in fact to constitute one general project for the creation of a great harbor and utilization and uniting of the waters in and about it.

With this latter view, we are in full accord. Each of these Blame cases finds support in two distinct and well recognized rules. The first is that where different questions are submitted, when such questions or their subjects and purposes are not naturally related or connected in such a way as to require but one affirmative or negative vote, the proceeding is invalid. It was accordingly held in the first Blame case that the eight propositions, there submitted as one, were so distinct, unrelated and independent that they could not be united or joined as one. The second Blame case finds its support in the other rule, that where several parts of a proposition submitted as one and calling for but one affirmative or negative vote are so related, united and dependent as to form but one rounded whole, such submission is valid; and it was accordingly held that, it appearing that the four questions submitted in that case were in aid of one general scheme — the creation of a great harbor at the city of Seattle and the utilizing of all adjacent waters for that purpose — the method of submission there employed was proper. We again had occasion to review these two rules in Tulloch v. Seattle, 69 Wash. 178, 124 Pac. 481, where a like question was submitted involving the validity of the bonds issued by the city of Seattle for municipal street railway purposes, and it was there held that the submission of a bond issue was not illegal as combining several distinct and unrelated objects where the bonds were to be used for the purchase of existing street railways, or in the alternative for the construction of parallel lines, in the discretion of the municipal officers; since the two purposes were natural related parts of but one object— the acquiring of a municipal street railway. We there dis[436]*436cussed these Blame cases, and pointed out the distinction between them and drew from them the two rules above advanced in saying that,

“Separate, distinct and independent purposes or objects may not be joined in one proposition for submission to the voter. United, related and dependent objects, that together form one general scheme or plan, may be united and submitted as one. No better illustrations of the application of these two principles may be found than in Blaine v. Seattle falling within the first rule, and Blaine v. Hamilton falling within the second rule.”

With this recent discussion and announcement of the law, it only remains to refer to the facts as clearly bringing this case within the second rule, and within that line of cases to which Blaine v. Hamilton and Tulloch v. Seattle belong. The proposition submitted embraced but one subject; a comprehensive system of county roads. The fact that it is comprehensive does not destroy its unity. It is one subject composed of many parts, each bearing its relation to the whole and each bearing its relation to every other part. Employing the test suggested in the Hamilton case, “Are the several parts of the project so related that united they form but one rounded whole,” the facts present a clear case. The whole is the county highway. The several parts are the different roads that together form that highway. Because one of these roads is on Mercer Island separated from the mainland by the waters of Lake Washington, another on Vashon Island separated from its companion parts by the waters of Puget Sound, does not destroy the unity of the system nor make these roads several and distinct projects. They may be several distinct parts of one project, but they all unite to form but one project and that a comprehensive county highway that will furnish a beneficial access to all portions of the county.

In Oakland v. Thompson, 151 Cal. 572, 91 Pac. 387, a like question was presented. The city of Oakland sought to acquire several detached pieces of land in different portions [437]*437of the city for public parks, and submitted it to the voters as one proposition. This method was questioned under a contention that each piece of land should have been submitted as a several and distinct proposition. The court, in passing upon this contention, held that, where the scheme had in contemplation the acquisition of several distinct parcels of land widely separated, to be converted into separate parks, it was but a single scheme and the purpose a single purpose.

A like ruling may be found in State ex rel. Horsley v. Carbon County, 38 Utah 563, 114 Pac. 522, where the county submitted a proposition to issue bonds to build roads and bridges in the county, as one proposition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 P. 1027, 74 Wash. 433, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 2074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aylmore-v-hamilton-wash-1913.