Board of Com'rs of Cherokee County v. Hatfield

1926 OK 513, 247 P. 77, 121 Okla. 28, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 38
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 1, 1926
Docket17418
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1926 OK 513 (Board of Com'rs of Cherokee County v. Hatfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Com'rs of Cherokee County v. Hatfield, 1926 OK 513, 247 P. 77, 121 Okla. 28, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 38 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

HARRISON, J.

This appeal is from the judgment of the district court sustaining an appeal from an order of the board of county commissioners of Cherokee colunty. Said board, assuming to act under authority of chapter 65, S. L. 1925, passed a resolution and order changing the boundaries of the commissioners’ districts of said county, and the county attorney upon petition of O. A. Hatfield et al. appealed from said Order to the district court. The board challenged the right of' appeal; contending that the order redistricting the county was purely 'ministerial anjd therefore not appealable. The defendants in error contended that such Order was of the nature of a judicial order and therefore appealable. Defendants in error contended, also, that said chapter 65 w;as intended only to clarify tha meaning of section 5776, C. S-. 1921, and was retro *29 active in effect, and 'therefore gave county commissioners no authority to change the commissioners’ districts of said county.

The respective contentions of the parties may be more clearly stated as follows:

The board of cctanty commissioners contended that said act of 1925 was purely amendatory and prospective, therefore giving th'.an authority to redistrict their county, and iurther contended that the order redistricting the cctunty was purely ministerial and therefore not appealable. On the other Land, Hatfield et al. contended that said act was intended only to clarify or construe section 5776, C. S. 1921, to mean that the county commissioners could not change their districts oftener than once every three years, and that the districts having been changed more than once within the preceding period of three years, and the order changing the districts being a quasi judicial act, and being in violation of daid section 5776, as clarified by said chapter 65, was appealable and shcluld be set aside by the district court on the ground of its illegality.

The district court held, in effeiet, that the order of! the board cif commissioners was an appealable one/, but that such order was made in violation of said section 5776 as •clarified by said chapter 65,‘ and was ille<gal.

It is stipulated by attorneys for .the respective parties that there are but two primé issues in this proceeding, viz.: (1) Whether the order of the board of county commissioners was quasi judicial and appealable or purer ly ministerial and not appealable. (2) Whether said chapter 65, S. L. 1925, was intended only to clarify the meaning of said section 5776, and therefore retroactive, or whether said chapter 65 was merely amendatol-y and prospective.

A review of the history of this statute may throw some light upon the issues involved. The pertinent portion of said section 5776, O. S. 1921, is as iollows:

“Each counity shall be divided by the board of county commissioners into three compact districts, as equal in population as possible, numbered respectively one, two and three, and subject to alteration at least once in three years, and one commissioner shall be elected from each of said districts by the voters of the district, as heretofore provided.”

The above section of statute was section 2 of the act passed by the territorial Legislature, which took effect December 25, 1890, and was section 1798 of the territorial Statutes 1890, and has been in force without change in language or meaning in the territory and the state since December 25, 1890, except that in the Revised Statutes 1910, section 1588, codifiers left out the words “elected under this act,” which had been in the statutes since the adoption of the Statutes of 1890.

But in said chapter 65, S. L. 1925, the Language in the old statute, to wit, “and subject to alteration at least once in three years,” was changed to read, “and subject to? alteration not more than once in three years.” Out of this change in statutes, the controversy herein arose.

Perhaps the more logical method of disposing of the two issues, which the parties have protperly stipulated to be the decisive issues involved, would be to determine, first, whether the order of the 'board of commissioners was, an appealtaible one.

The courts have held that no! appeal lies from a purely ministerial act made obligatory by law, and have attempted to draw a clear line between what is termed- “quasi judicial” acts and “ministerial” acts. See In re Ccurthouse of Okmulgee Co., 58 Okla. 683, 161 Pac. 200; Ter. v. Neville, 10 Okla. 79, 60 Pac. 790; School Dist. 7 v. Cunningham, 51 Okla. 201, 151 Pac. 633; Parker v. Board of Com., 41 Okla. 723, 139 Pac. 981, and authorities cited in above cases. Also Words and Phrases, vol. 4. First Series, 3857; vol. 2, Second Series, 1259 and 1261, and authorities cited. But section 5834, C. S. 1921, expressly confers thei right of appeal upon any person aggrieved by any decision of the bdard of county commissioners, to the district court, in the following language, to wit:

“From all decisions of the board of commissioners upon matters properly before them, theire shaDll be allowed an appeal to the district court by any persons aggrieved, including .the county by its county attorney. * * *”

This secticb was amended by chapter 43, S. L. 1923, but the above language conferring the right of appeal from all decisions of the board of commissioners was deft intact. It willl be observed that the statute says: “From all decisions * * * there shall be allowed an appeal to the district court by any persons aggrieved.” In view of this language, we feel that the courts have no power to take away thei right of appeal of any person aggrieved by a decision of the board of county commissioners; hence it is useless to- search for the exact line between “qualsi judicial” acts and “purely ministerial” acts. The statute says “there shall *30 be allowed an appeal by any person aggrieved.” This would necessarily imply that an issue of some kind must be properly before the board and be decided by the board, and whenever such is the case and the board decides such issue, then an aggrieved party has the right of appeal to the district court and the courts cannot deprive hian of such right without disregarding an express statute'. As a matter of course, in the exercise of duties expressly prescribed by statute, such as keeping their records, recording their orders, keeping the calendar of claims, and correctly keeping all such records as are prescribed by statute to be kept, and no one is aggrieved or complains of the method in which such records are kept or such purely ministerial 'acts performed, then there is no purpose in an appeal, lm ons is aggrieved, no one desires to appeal. But in the matter before us thé county commission-eirs not only decided in favor of redistricting the county over the objections of the appealing parries, but in their own judgment they construed a statute amd assumed to exercise authority to redistrict the county under the construction whitish they placed upon chapter 65, S. L. 1925. This decision not only required a construction of a statute which at that time had not been otherwise judicially construed, but their order of redistricting necessarily carried with it the mandate that the county shall be redistricted, and is necessarily judicial in its nature. The defendants in error contest not only the justness of the order, but the, legality thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 513, 247 P. 77, 121 Okla. 28, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-comrs-of-cherokee-county-v-hatfield-okla-1926.