Carol Poole v. City of Pearl, Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 2002
Docket2002-AN-02139-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Carol Poole v. City of Pearl, Mississippi (Carol Poole v. City of Pearl, Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carol Poole v. City of Pearl, Mississippi, (Mich. 2002).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2002-AN-02139-SCT

IN THE MATTER OF THE EXTENSION OF THE BOUNDARIES OF THE CITY OF PEARL, MISSISSIPPI: CAROL POOLE, ROBERT PITTS, ET AL.

v.

CITY OF PEARL, MISSISSIPPI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/27/2002 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JAMES LAMAR ROBERTS, JR. COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: RANKIN COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANTS: JAMES H. HERRING ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: JERRY L. MILLS JAMES A. BOBO NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - MUNICIPAL BOUNDARIES & ANNEXATION DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 08/11/2005 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

DICKINSON, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Today, we review yet another vigorously contested annexation effort by one of our

municipalities. Perhaps no area of the law generates more emotional participation by members

of the public. The idea of having one’s home, property and family forced into a city, subjecting

the land to city taxes and the family to city ordinances, is quite distasteful to many, particularly

those who feel they have no say in the matter under our current law. ¶2. In this case, both Rankin County chancellors recused. The Honorable James L. Roberts,

Jr., was appointed as a special chancellor to hear the case. Finding the requirements of law had

been met, Special Chancellor Roberts approved the annexation. The Objectors have appealed.

INTRODUCTION

¶3. In the case before us, counsel for the City of Pearl reminds us that the chancery court,

following this Court’s precedent, found the annexation to be reasonable. Counsel for some

of the Objectors urges this Court to “change the course” of annexation by adding the

requirement of an affirmative vote by a majority of the citizens living in the proposed

annexation area. This, according to the Objectors, would more closely level the playing field

where cities spend large sums of taxpayer dollars to hire lawyers and experts to establish the

“reasonableness” of a proposed annexation, while objectors are frequently relegated to bake

sales and car washes to raise funds to battle annexation.

¶4. Annexation is an exercise of legislative not judicial power.1 This Court stated almost

eighty years ago:

Municipal corporations are now, as they have always been in this state, purely creatures of legislative will; governed, and the extent of their powers limited, by express grants; invested, for purposes of public convenience, with certain expressed delegations of governmental power; their granted powers subject at all times to be enlarged or diminished; . . . their powers, their rights, their corporate existence, dependent entirely upon legislative discretion, . . . Unless expressly limited by constitutional provision, the legislative department has absolute power over municipalities.

Gully v. Williams Bros., Inc., 182 Miss. 119, 180 So. 400, 405-06 (Miss. 1938).

1 Matter of the Boundaries of City of Jackson, 551 So.2d 861, 863 (Miss. 1989) (“Annexation is a legislative affair.”)

2 ¶5. There is no uniform method of annexation recognized in the various states. In some

states, direct legislative action is required to enlarge or reduce a municipality’s boundary lines.

In other states, the legislature statutorily mandates certain conditions for annexation, leaving

the final decision to the local governing boards. In many of these circumstances, the process

of annexation is begun by a “petition of voters, taxable inhabitants, residents, or the like, and

to be submitted to a vote of designated electors.” 2 McQuillin Mun. Corp. § 7.14 (3rd ed.).

Still another method of annexation allows for a petition to the courts to instigate annexation.

Ultimately, granting to municipalities the substantive right to annex unincorporated areas is a

power reserved exclusively to the state legislatures.

Annexation in Mississippi

¶6. Since 1892, the Mississippi Legislature has provided that our courts must determine

the reasonableness of a municipality’s desire to expand or reduce its boundaries. 1892 Miss.

Laws ch. 66, § 3. Annexation statutes in Mississippi have been fairly consistent since 1892.

Our current statute, adopted on April 18, 1950, provides that a chancellor, rather than a jury,

must determine that “reasonable public and municipal services will be rendered in the annexed

territory within a reasonable time,” and that the proposed annexation is “reasonable and is

required by the public convenience and necessity.” Miss. Code Ann. § 21-1-33.

¶7. The chancery courts (hearing annexation cases) and this Court (reviewing the appeals

of many of those cases) encounter the recurring thunderous objection of many living in a

proposed annexation area who believe they should be allowed to vote before being taken into

a city. A frequent argument presented is that persons who purchased property out in the county

to escape “city living” should not have their decision rendered null and void without a vote.

3 ¶8. Every year since 1997, approximately twelve bills or resolutions have been proposed

in the Legislature on the subject of annexation. In the 2005 regular session of the Mississippi

Legislature, eleven separate bills, including a proposed constitutional amendment, were

introduced to radically change annexation procedures. See House Bills 187, 216, 292, 483,

643, 761, 783, 796, 1169; House Concurrent Resolution 32; and Senate Bill 2889. Most of

the bills sought to abolish the current method of annexation (having a chancellor approve an

annexation’s reasonableness) and replace it with an election to determine the reasonableness

of an annexation. Several bills required an approval vote in the territory the municipality

sought to annex. Some of the bills required a simple majority vote of the qualified electors

residing in the proposed annexation area. One bill required a majority vote in both the city and

the proposed annexation area, while still another bill required approval of 60% of the qualified

electors residing in the proposed annexation area. One member of the House of

Representatives proposed a constitutional amendment which would have required a majority

vote in a special election. All eleven bills died in committee, leaving intact and unchanged the

statute enacted in 1950.

¶9. Thus, accepting as we must the Legislature’s exclusive authority to make and change the

law; and accepting as we must our limitation to interpret and apply the laws passed by the

Legislature, we now proceed to decide this case, not unmindful of the substantial public dissent

to our current law; but ever mindful that such dissent is more properly communicated to

members of the Legislature than to the chancellors and Justices on this Court.

BACKGROUND FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

4 ¶10. On July 19, 2000, the City of Pearl filed its petition in the Rankin County Chancery

Court, seeking to annex approximately 2.2 square miles. The proposed annexation area

(“PAA”) is bounded on the west by Jackson Municipal Airport, on the east by the City of

Brandon, on the north by City of Flowood, and on the south by the City of Pearl. Because the

PAA included property within the jurisdiction of the Jackson Municipal Airport Authority

(“Airport Authority”), an objection was filed by both the Airport Authority and the City of

Jackson. This objection culminated in a joint motion for summary judgment, seeking

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Carol Poole v. City of Pearl, Mississippi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carol-poole-v-city-of-pearl-mississippi-miss-2002.