BOARD OF COUNTY COMM'RS OF MARSHALL CO. v. Snellgrove
This text of 1967 OK 108 (BOARD OF COUNTY COMM'RS OF MARSHALL CO. v. Snellgrove) 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.
Opinion
The BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF MARSHALL COUNTY, Oklahoma, Ed Benton, Chairman of the Board of County Commissioners of Marshall County, Oklahoma, the County Excise Board of Marshall County, Oklahoma, and F.L. Lewis, Chairman of the County Excise Board of Marshall County, Oklahoma, Plaintiffs in Error,
v.
Willie Bert SNELLGROVE, County Clerk, James M. Splawn, Sheriff, George L. Sneed, County Judge, John A. Butler, County Attorney, Edith S. Hill, Court Clerk, Ruth Harrell, County Treasurer, Diana Everett, County Tax Assessor, all of Marshall County, Oklahoma, Defendants in Error.
Supreme Court of Oklahoma.
Reuel W. Little, Madill, Chas. Nesbitt, Atty. Gen., for plaintiffs in error.
Welch & Minter, Joseph O. Minter, Don Welch, Jr., Madill, for defendants in error.
*273 JACKSON, Chief Justice.
In the trial court, plaintiffs, the County Clerk and County Sheriff of Marshall County, Oklahoma, filed a petition for a writ of mandamus directed to the Board of County Commissioners and the County *274 Excise Board, and the respective members thereof, requiring them to perform the acts necessary to effectuate salary increases for the plaintiff officials pursuant to the terms of 19 O.S. 1965 Supp. § 180.63b. Other elected county officials were later joined as parties. After judgment for plaintiffs, defendants appeal.
This section of the statute, providing extra salary and extra duties for the elected county officials named therein, by its terms applies only to counties "* * * having both a Federal flood control impoundment and a Federal forest reserve therein * * *". It was stipulated in the trial court that there is in Marshall County a Federal flood control impoundment.
In this court, defendants argue, among other things, that plaintiffs failed to prove that there is a Federal forest reserve in Marshall County. Defendants also argue that § 180.63b is unconstitutional for various reasons. However, in the view we take, it is unnecessary for us to reach the constitutional question.
Over the objection of defendants that it was not the best evidence, the court permitted the plaintiff County Clerk to testify that there is a Federal forest reserve in the northeast part of Marshall County. However, on cross examination he testified that he knew of no records in his office describing a Federal forest reserve but that "evidently" there "must be" a forest reserve in Marshall County. He further testified that "* * * this has always in our own minds been designated as a Forest Reserve out there" (emphasis supplied).
Mr. B, a County Commissioner, testified that he knew of no designation of lands in Marshall County by the President, or by the Department of the Interior, or the Department of Agriculture, as a Federal forest reserve; that there were no signs in that part of the county saying "Federal forest reserve"; and that the signs he had observed in the area said "Wildlife Game Refuge" and "Beware Fish and Wildlife Refuge".
A Marshall County abstractor testified that he kept an index of instruments filed, and microfilms of the instruments themselves, and that in the course of his business he had never seen an instrument describing or designating property as a Federal forest reserve. He said that in the northeastern part of the county the federal government had taken a rather large area of land and that it was "land condemned for the lake". He was not familiar with several federal statutes cited in a Declaration of Taking and Petition for Condemnation, about which he was questioned, as authority for the taking. Two of these were general federal statutes on the subject of condemnation of land; a third one was the federal statute authorizing the "Denison Reservoir on Red River in Texas and Oklahoma" (Lake Texhoma) for flood control purposes. 52 Stat. 1215.
In the briefs, plaintiffs cite separate dictionary definitions of the words "forest" and "reserve" and conclude that "* * * if there is a tract of woodland in Marshall County owned by the United States Government and held and reserved for a particular purpose, it comes within the definition of a `forest reserve' or `Federal forest reserve' as used in * * *" 19 O.S. 1965 Supp. § 180.63b. Under this view, any tract of woodland held by the United States for any purpose would constitute a "Federal forest reserve".
We are unable to agree that the phrase is to be so loosely defined. We think that in using the phrase "Federal forest reserve" in 19 O.S. 1965 Supp. § 180.63b, supra, and "Forest Reserves" in 62 O.S. 1961, § 326, the Legislature could only have had in mind forest reserves as designated in Federal statutes.
Federal forest reserves were first authorized by the Act of Congress of March 3, 1891, 26 Stat. 1103. Section 24 of this Act, now codified as the first paragraph of 16 U.S.C.A. § 471, authorized the creation of "forest reservations" by the President by public proclamation. In this statute, as in later related and amendatory *275 statutes, the phrases "forest reserves", "forest reservations" and "public reserves" were used interchangeably in the same context. See, for instance, the Act of Congress of June 4, 1897, 30 Stat. 34, 36.
In the Act of Congress of March 4, 1907, 34 Stat. 1269, a general appropriation bill for the Department of Agriculture, Congress provided, among other things, that forest reserves "* * * shall be known hereafter as national forests". In statutes enacted since that time, Congress has generally used the term "national forests" in referring to federal forest reserves, and compilers of the various editions of the United States Code authorized by law have generally substituted "national forests" for "forest reserves" and similar phrases in codifying the statutes enacted before 1907 which are still in effect. Compare, for instance, Section 24 of the Act of Congress of March 3, 1891, 26 Stat. 1103, with the first paragraph of 16 U.S.C.A. § 471; and compare Section 1 of the Act of Congress of June 4, 1897, 30 Stat. 34, 36, with its "successor" in the United States Code, 16 U.S.C.A. § 473. Even so, Congress has on occasion reverted to the older terminology in statutes relating to the national forests. See the Act of Congress of June 15, 1926, 44 Stat. 745, now codified as 16 U.S.C.A. § 471a, and referring to a "forest reservation".
From the above, and particularly in view of the quoted language from the Act of Congress of March 4, 1907, 34 Stat. 1269, it is clear that, in federal law, "forest reserves", "forest reservations" and "national forests" are synonymous terms. Such being true, the concession of counsel for plaintiffs in argument to the trial court in the instant case that "Certainly there is no National Forest in Marshall County" is significant.
Federal statutes relating to the establishment and administration of federal forest reserves, or national forests, are now codified as Chapter 2, entitled "The National Forests", of Title 16 of the United States Code. See 16 U.S.C.A. § 471 et seq.
Under Sec. 471, national forests are created by public proclamation of the President. In past years, under various reorganizations of the executive branch of the federal government, national forests have been administered through several different agencies or departments of the federal government, principally the Department of the Interior and the Department of Agriculture. See historical note following 16 U.S.C.A. § 474.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1967 OK 108, 428 P.2d 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-county-commrs-of-marshall-co-v-snellgrove-okla-1967.