Brodie v. City of Missoula

468 P.2d 778, 155 Mont. 185, 1970 Mont. LEXIS 354
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 1970
Docket11578
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 468 P.2d 778 (Brodie v. City of Missoula) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brodie v. City of Missoula, 468 P.2d 778, 155 Mont. 185, 1970 Mont. LEXIS 354 (Mo. 1970).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HASWELL

delivered the Opinion of the-Court.

The City of Missoula, on its own initiative and over the pro *187 test of plaintiff property owners, annexed into the city their 30 acre tract of land entirely surrounded by the city. Plaintiff property owners sought a writ of mandate to set aside the annexation, but the district court of Missoula county, Hon. B. Gardner Brownlee, district judge, entered an order and judgment quashing the alternative writ thereby denying the requested relief. From this order and judgment, plaintiff property owners appeal.

Plaintiffs are Stephen D. Brodie and James Lee who jointly own the annexed 30 acre tract. This land lies south of 39th street just beyond the High Peaks area of the city. It is entirely surrounded by the city of Missoula, and is surveyed but unplatted. Plaintiffs also own another 120 acres immediately south of the annexed tract and separated from it only by two 20 foot rights-of-way and a 10 acre tract for park purposes all of which are owned by and within the city of Missoula. Plaintiffs acquired the entire 150 acres in September 1963, and since that time it has been orally “leased” successively to two different persons who have used it for grazing of livestock and haying. At the time of annexation the entire 150 acres was fenced with the lower 30 acres separated by a gate. The annexed 30 acres have been used exclusively for grazing horses and cattle since 1963, when plaintiffs acquired it.

Defendants are the city of Missoula, its mayor, city clerk, and councilmen. On May 13, 1968, the city council passed Resolution No. 2822, a resolution of intention by the city of Missoula to annex into the city the 30 acre tract of land referred to above. These proceedings were taken pursuant to section 11-403(1), R.C.M.1947, Missoula being a city of the first class. In general terms this statute purports to authorize a city of the first class to annex surveyed but unplatted tracts of land entirely surrounded by the city irrespective of any objection by “resident freeholders”; but also provides that if the land is used for agricultural or other specified purposes it cannot be annexed in this manner. The notice of intention to annex was published *188 and a time was set for a public hearing of the proposed annexation. Plaintiffs timely filed their written protest to the proposed annexation, setting forth various legal objections. Nonetheless,, thereafter the tract was annexed to the city of Missoula.

On July 1, 1968 plaintiffs filed their application for a writ of mandate in the district court of Missoula county to annul the annexation and to enjoin defendants from taking any steps to enforce it. Broadly speaking, plaintiffs contended the ahnexation was illegal because (1) the city did not comply with the ■requirements of the annexation statute, section 11-403(1), R.C.M.1947, (2) the annexation statute itself is unconstitutional under specified sections of the state and federal constitutions, and (3) the land was used for agricultural purposes exempting-it from annexation under section 11-403(1).

An alternative writ was issued returnable July 15. Prior to-that date, defendants made their return requesting that the alternative writ be quashed and dissolved. Speaking in general terms, the return admitted the steps the city had taken, denied they were illegal, and claimed a valid annexation of the 30 acre-tract in question.

The matter came on for hearing on July 15 and 16, evidence-was received on behalf of all parties, and at the conclusion thereof Judge Brownlee granted the defendants’ motion to quash the alternative writ-. A written order and judgment to that effect was entered the following day. Thereafter plaintiffs moved in writing to amend the court’s findings contained in the judgment and to amend the judgment accordingly. Parenthetically we observe that the district court did not enter any findings, confining itself to entry of the judgment alone. At any rate-after denial of such motion to amend, plaintiffs filed this appeal from the judgment ■ 1

Plaintiffs list 13 issues for review upon appeal; defendants list 6. For clarity we condense and Summarize the'basic, controlling issues in this manner: (1) Did the annexation violate the-exemption on agricultural lands? (2) Can Missoula annex the: *189 subject lands (a) without first filing a certificate of survey, or (b) without an affirmative showing of reasonable justification? .(3) Does the annexation statute violate federal and state constitutional provisions.? We have purposely omitted the issue raised by defendants concerning the use of a writ of mandate as a remedy as we choose to decide this case on the merits rather than on procedural grounds.

At the outset before discussing the issues upon this appeal, we here set out the pertinent parts of the annexation statute under which the city of Missoula proceeded, that statute being section 11-403,(1), R.C.M.1947, as amended:

“<f .* =>f any unplatted land that has been surveyed and for which a certificate of survey has been filed * * * and which * *! * unplatted land shall be contiguous to any incorporated city of the first class, may be embraced within the ■corporate limits thereof * * * in the following manner: When, in the judgment of any city council of a city of the first ■class, expressed by a resolution duly # * * passed * * * it will be to the best interest of such city and the inhabitants •of any * # * [such] unplatted land * * * that the boundaries of such city shall be extended, so as to include the same within the corporate limits thereof, the city clerk * * * shall forthwith cause to be published in the newspaper * * * •a notice * * * that such resolution has been duly * * * passed, and that for a period of twenty (20) days after the first publication of such notice, such city clerk will receive expressions of approval or disapproval, in writing, of the proposed [annexation], from resident freeholders of the territory proposed to be [annexed]. The clerk shall, at the next regular meeting of the city council * * * after the expiration of said twenty (20) days, lay before the same all communications in writing by him so received for its consideration, and if, after considering the same, such council shall duly * * * pass and adopt a resolution to that effect, the boundaries of such city * * shall be extended so as to * * * include such *190 * * * unplatted land * * *; and further provided, that such resolution shall not be adopted by' such council if disapproved, in writing, by a majority of the resident freeholders- * * * of the territory proposed to be embraced * * if.
“Provided also, that cities of the first class may include as part' of such city any * * * unplatted tract * * * of land that is wholly surrounded by such city upon passing a resolution advertising and upon passing a further resolution or following such advertising, all in the manner aforesaid, and such land shall be annexed, if so resolved, whether or not a majority of the resident freeholders, if any, of the land to be annexed object; provided, however, that land used for agricultural [purposes] * * * shall not be annexed under this provision. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
468 P.2d 778, 155 Mont. 185, 1970 Mont. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brodie-v-city-of-missoula-mont-1970.