Bridal v. Cottonwood Creek Conservancy District No. II

1965 OK 105, 405 P.2d 17
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 29, 1965
Docket40716
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1965 OK 105 (Bridal v. Cottonwood Creek Conservancy District No. II) 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
Bridal v. Cottonwood Creek Conservancy District No. II, 1965 OK 105, 405 P.2d 17 (Okla. 1965).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This case involves the creation, and certain operations, of Cottonwood Creek Conservancy District No. 11, which will hereinafter be referred to merely as the “District”.

As described in its petition for creation that was filed in this court in November, 1957, the District was to include lands in Cottonwood Creek’s watershed that are located in Canadian, as well as Logan, Oklahoma and Kingfisher Counties. One of the parties signing the petition was the plaintiff in error, Helen Hilpirt, hereinafter referred to by surname only. She resides, and owns land, in Oklahoma County, as well as in the Logan County part of Cottonwood Creek’s watershed. As to that part of the proposed district land that is located within the city limits of Guthrie, the Mayor of said City, rather than the owners of said property, signed the petition.

After this court, pursuant to a provision of this State’s Conservancy Act (Tit. 82 O. S.1951, § 542, as amended, S.L., 1957, pgs. 555 & 556) determined by its order of November 12, 1957, that the District Court of Logan County was the most convenient district court for the hearing of the petition, it was filed in that court. Notice of said petition was given by publication in newspapers published in all four of the counties into which the proposed district was to extend, those of Oklahoma County being published at Edmond, Oklahoma.

Thereafter, in January, 1958, more than 25% of the owners of the Canadian County land embraced in the proposed district filed a pleading entitled “OBJECTION AND PROTEST TO THE ORGANIZATION AND INCORPORATION OF SAID DISTRICT”.

At the hearing held January 10, 1958, on the petition, and the protest, no evidence was introduced as to what percentage of the landowners of any of the counties in *22 the proposed district had signed the petition for its establishment, the court accepting, in lieu thereof, an oral statement made in open court and in the presence of some of the protesting landowners, by one of the attorneys for the proponents. When, during the testimony of the second witness sworn, a Mr. Specht, it appeared and was conceded, that the owners of more than 25% of the Canadian County land had signed the objection and protest, the court ruled this was sufficient to keep Canadian County from being included in the proposed conservancy district. When, upon a motion made by a representative of the Canadian County owners, said owners’ protest to the creation of the district were dismissed as to the other counties included in the district petitioned for, the court said:

“Now, that leaves Kingfisher, Oklahoma and Logan Counties and there is no protest in writing on file.
“Now, * * * the Court is going to interpret the Act * * * as to mean * * * that the Court has authority to form the district as it applied to three counties and let the one out that has protested. But I am frankly going to state that some attorneys and other courts might disagree with me on this, * * *. But * * *, after reading the Act from one end to the other, * * * I interpret it that the Court does have authority to create the district less that county that has filed a protest, and that will be the order of the Court and the district is ordered created as Conservancy District No. 11 of the State of Oklahoma.” (Emphasis added).

Thereupon, by journal entry dated the same day (January 10, 1958) the court entered its order sustaining the protest as to Canadian County land by striking said land from the proposed District and from the petition for its creation, and creating a conservancy district out of the Logan, Kingfisher and Oklahoma County lands described in said petition. The order also gave said district its present corporate name, designated Guthrie for the location of its office and principal place of business, and appointed C. E. Tribble of Logan County, Connie White of Kingfisher County, and C. E. Bretz, a civil engineer of Oklahoma County, as directors of said Conservancy District.

After the court had subsequently made several deletions of Oklahoma County land from the District, upon motions of said District Corporation’s Board of Directors, C. E. Tribble (who had been elected president of said Board) on December 6, 1962, filed in the District Court proceedings, an application for approval of “PLAN FOR WORKS OF IMPROVEMENT” for the District, a copy of said Works Plan being attached to said application. Pursuant to, and upon the filing of, said application, the court, on the same day, ordered said application set for hearing on January 15, 1963; and a notice of said hearing, issued by the Clerk of the Court, was filed in .the proceedings on December 11th. Among other things, the notice stated that all persons desiring to do so, might inspect the Works Plan on file in the Clerk’s office, and that all objections to it had to be in writing, and filed in said Clerk’s office, before 10:00 o’clock A. M., on January 15, 1963. There is evidence that this notice was published in El Reno, Guthrie, and Edmond newspapers once each week, for three consecutive weeks, beginning December 13, 1962, and, on the basis of uncontradicted representations in the briefs, we take it that it was also published in Kingfisher County.

Thereafter, on January 7, 1963, plaintiffs in error, John Bridal and Mrs. Roger Murphy, filed in the conservancy district proceedings a motion (on behalf of themselves and “other landowners within the proposed district similarly situated * * * ”) for a continuance of the hearing in order to allow them “to file written protests and to present objections to the approval * * * of the Works Plan and specifications.” This motion was overruled on January 11, 1963, and an exception allowed.

*23 Thereafter, on January IS, 1963, Messrs. Stone and Specht joined other owners of Canadian County land in filing a pleading entitled: “OBJECTION”; the owners of land in other counties, including Hilpirt, filed various protests to the Works Plan and Specifications; and Bridal and Mrs. Murphy joined in a separate filing entitled: “PROTEST”, in which they asserted, in fourteen separately numbered paragraphs, various objections to the Plan and proceedings. In the first of these paragraphs, said protestants charged that the Works Plan and Specifications constituted a “complete deviation from the policies and purposes for which Conservancy District No. 11 was formed, and are contrary to the provisions of Title 82 Oklahoma Statutes Annotated S31, et seq., and constitute a fraud upon the landowners within the proposed district who were induced to support, or not to object, to the original formation of Conservancy District No. 11.”

The proceedings next came before the court the same day at a pre-trial conference at which Stone’s motion, in so far as it asked that the Canadian County land be removed from the Works Plan, was found to be moot, and said motion, in so far as it pertained to striking said Plan, was overruled; and hearing on the Plan’s approval was postponed to February 11, 1963. At another pre-trial conference on the latter date, the hearing ivas again postponed until March 19, 1963, partly because it appeared that the protestants hadn’t had "sufficient time to make a detailed investigation of the proposd Plan.”

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Bluebook (online)
1965 OK 105, 405 P.2d 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bridal-v-cottonwood-creek-conservancy-district-no-ii-okla-1965.