Central Electric & Gas Company v. City Of Stromsburg

289 F.2d 217, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 4879
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 7, 1961
Docket16585
StatusPublished

This text of 289 F.2d 217 (Central Electric & Gas Company v. City Of Stromsburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Electric & Gas Company v. City Of Stromsburg, 289 F.2d 217, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 4879 (8th Cir. 1961).

Opinion

289 F.2d 217

CENTRAL ELECTRIC & GAS COMPANY, a corporation, Appellant,
v.
CITY OF STROMSBURG, NEBRASKA, a municipal corporation, and the Court of Condemnation composed of Edmund Nuss, John M. Dierks, and Dayton R. Mounts, Appellees.

No. 16585.

United States Court of Appeals Eighth Circuit.

April 7, 1961.

Warren K. Dalton, Lincoln, Neb., for appellant. Lloyd J. Marti and Marti, O'Gara, Dalton & Sheldon, Lincoln, Neb., on brief, for appellant.

Thomas M. Davies, Lincoln, Neb., for appellees. Richard H. Williams, of Davies & Williams, Lincoln, Neb., and J. T. Stanton, Stromsburg, Neb., on brief, for appellees.

Before SANBORN, VAN OOSTERHOUT and MATTHES, Circuit Judges.

SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal by the Central Electric & Gas Company from a judgment dismissing its complaint in an action to enjoin the City of Stromsburg and other defendants from taking further proceedings for the condemnation of the plaintiff's gas distribution system, which serves that City. The condemnation proceedings were instituted by the City on March 13, 1956, when the City Council adopted an ordinance providing for the submission to the electors of the City, at a general municipal election to be held on April 3, 1956, of the question whether or not the plaintiff's local gas distribution system should be acquired by the City through the exercise of the power of eminent domain. The ordinance became effective pursuant to Sec. 17-613, R.R.S. Neb.1943, on March 22, 1956. The ordinance provided that a notice of election be published not less than ten nor more than twenty days before the election at which the question of acquisition was to be voted on. Notice of the election was published in a Stromsburg newspaper on March 15 and March 22, 1956.

At the election a majority of the electors voted in favor of acquiring the gas distribution system. The results of the election were certified to the Supreme Court of Nebraska, which appointed a Court of Condemnation to appraise plaintiff's property. That court met on May 26, 1956, and fixed the time for the parties to plead in the proceeding for the appraisal of the plaintiff's distribution system.

The instant action was commenced on July 16, 1956, jurisdiction being based on diversity of citizenship and amount in controversy. The plaintiff challenged the legality of the City's condemnation proceedings under Nebraska law. It contended in the District Court, and contends here, that

"The notice given to the electors of [the] City, of the submission of the question of acquisition of Central's distribution system by condemnation, at the general election above referred to, was insufficient under the law of the State of Nebraska.";

and that

"The description of plaintiff's property to be condemned, contained in the question presented to the electors on the ballot at such election, was insufficient under the law of the State of Nebraska."

Judge Delehant, who presided at the trial of this case, wrote an opinion1 in which every issue raised was carefully and painstakingly stated, explored and answered. He pointed out that primarily involved was Section 19-701, R.S.Neb. 1943, 1959 Cumulative Supplement, which specifies the procedure whereby a municipality of Nebraska may acquire a gas distribution system such as that in suit. The statute provides for the submission of the question of acquisition at an election and that "the duly constituted authorities of any such city * * * shall have the power to submit such question or proposition, in the usual manner, to the qualified electors of any such city * * * at any general city * * * election * * *." (Italics supplied.) The trial court, in ruling that the notice of the election as given was adequate, made the following statement:

"And, first, the court encounters the question of the manner and duration of the giving of notice of the election. Admittedly, section 19-701, supra, [R.S.Neb.1943, 1959 Cum.Supp.] defines neither the medium nor the duration of notice. In the single matter of the medium of notice, certainly nothing could be, or is, insisted upon more austere than the publication of notice of the election in a legal newspaper, published and of general circulation in the City of Stromsburg. That was admittedly done in respect of the election in controversy. But the question of the duration of the publication of such notice remains. The cited statute does not declare how many times or for what period such notice shall be published. Plaintiff argues that a notice of such an election ought to be published (presumably in each issue of the newspaper) for four weeks or for thirty days. And its reasoning proceeds somewhat in this fashion. It first recognizes that section 19-701, supra, defines no period at all for notice. Then, resorting to section 19-704, [R.S.Neb.1943, Reissue of 1954] quoted above, it observes that provision is made in that section that, in the event of a favorable vote upon condemnation within the thought of section 19-701, and in circumstances defined in section 19-704 `the city * * * authorities, without vote of the people, shall have the power, if necessary, to issue and sell bonds of the city * * * to provide funds to make' tender of the amount fixed by the Court of Condemnation as the value of the condemned property, in order to accomplish a taking notwithstanding a pending appeal on the question of value. Similarly, it refers to section 19-705, [R.S.Neb. 1943, Reissue of 1954] quoted above, whereunder, upon final judgment on the issue of value of the condemned property, `the duly constituted authorities of any such city * * * shall have power and it shall be their duty to issue and sell bonds of any such city * * * to pay the amount of such value and judgment without vote of the people.' It, then, contends that, from the foregoing provisions dealing with the issuance of bonds, it follows that the election of April 3, 1956 must be regarded as having ultimately been an election upon the question of the issuance of municipal bonds for the payment of the eventual purchase price for the plant. And, citing many sections of the statutes of Nebraska, it reminds the court that several of them require notice for thirty days, several others for four weeks, still others for three weeks, and some either for twenty days or for two weeks, preliminary to an election upon the issuance of bonds of municipalities, or other governmental subdivisions. And it appears finally to contend that the interval of notice more commonly prescribed for the publication of notice of elections on bond issues is four weeks, and that this court ought, on that account, to hold that notice of the election in suit should have been published for four weeks. The argument reflects favorably upon the ingenuity and industry of counsel who tender it. But it fails in the test of persuasiveness. If the legislature of the state had intended or desired to define a particular period within which notice of the election must have been published, or the number of such publications, it could have done so either by direct prescription of a period, or of the number of publications, or by reference to and incorporation of a specific statute already existing in which such a prescription was contained. It elected to do neither.

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289 F.2d 217, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 4879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-electric-gas-company-v-city-of-stromsburg-ca8-1961.