City Council of Alexandria v. Alexandria County

84 S.E. 630, 117 Va. 230, 1915 Va. LEXIS 30
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 11, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 84 S.E. 630 (City Council of Alexandria v. Alexandria County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City Council of Alexandria v. Alexandria County, 84 S.E. 630, 117 Va. 230, 1915 Va. LEXIS 30 (Va. 1915).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The city council of Alexandria having, as it was advised, complied with all the requirements of clauses one and two of section 1014-a of the Code of 1904, on the 27th day of June, 1912, moved the Circuit Court of Alexandria county to make an order authorizing and declaring the annexation to the city of certain territory, belonging partly to the county of Alexandria and partly to the county of Fair-fax, described in an ordinance of the council of the city, approved December 29, 1911; and pursuant to the provisions of the statute in such cases made and provided the Governor of the State duly designated the Honorable Bennett T. Gordon, judge of the twenty-ninth judicial circuit, to hear the case and to determine the issues therein.

At the final hearing the issues in the case were all determined in favor of the defendant counties at the cost of the city, to which judgment the city excepted and duly filed its bill of exceptions, which embodies all the evidence introduced in the case.

[233]*233In the petition for this writ of error, awarded the city of Alexandria, the action of the presiding judge dismissing its motion is alone assigned as error.

Clause 3 of the statute—sec. 1014-a, supra—provides:

“The court presided over by some judge designated by the Governor, is to hear the case without a jury, upon the evidence introduced in the manner in which evidence is introduced in common law cases. The court shall ascertain and determine the necessity for or expediency of annexation; whether the terms and conditions are reasonable and fair; and whether fair and just provisions are made for the future management and improvement of the territory annexed. And if the court is satisfied of the necessity for or expediency of such annexation, and that the conditions and provisions are reasonable and fair, it shall enter an order annexing said territory to the city; but if the court is of opinion that no annexation is necessary or expedient, the motion shall be dismissed. The lines shall be drawn so as to have a reasonably compact body of land, and no land shall be taken which is not adapted to city improvements, unless it is necessarily embraced in said compact body of land or shall be needed in the reasonably near future for development. The court shall take into consideration the development of the city and the loss of revenue to the county.”

Clause 1 of the statute provides, that “whenever any city or town shall deem it desirable to annex any territory to such city or town, its council shall declare by ordinance that it desires to annex certain territory, and shall describe therein the metes and bounds of the territory proposed to be acquired, and set forth the necessity for or expediency of annexation, and the terms and conditions upon which it desires to annex such territory, as well as the provisions which are made for its future management and improvement.”

[234]*234The ordinance adopted by the council of the city of Alexandria, upon which this proceeding was instituted, is, mutatis mutandis, the same as that adopted by the council of the city of Richmond and proceeded upon in the case of Henrico County v. Richmond City, which came under review in this court—Henrico Co. v. City of Richmond, 106 Va. 282, 55 S. E. 683, 117 Am. St. Rep. 1001—where the annexation statutes then and now in force in this State were construed and held to be constitutional and valid.

In the case just cited, the opinion of the court by Harrison, J., says: “Nearly if not all of the questions to be determined under the provisions, of this act are questions of fact. The power so much inveighed against in the court to determine the necessity for, or expediency of, annexation, is controlled by the existence of facts and circumstances justifying action. The necessity for or expediency of enlargement is determined by the health of the community, its size, its crowded condition, its past growth, and the need in the reasonably near future for development and expansion. These are matters of fact, and when they so exist as to satisfy the judicial mind of the necessity for or expediency of annexation, then in accordance with the provisions of the act the same must be declared. It is manifest that the legislature, carrying out the provisions of the Constitution, intended, as doubtless did the enactors of the organic law, to require that every annexation should depend upon evidence showing the necessity for or expediency of annexation, that the terms proposed are reasonable and fair, and the provisions for the future management of the territory just.”

We have been cited to a number of cases decided in other jurisdictions dealing with the rules to govern where a municipal corporation is seeking to annex outlying territory, but these cases, as far as we have been able to examine them, had under review and construction local [235]*235statutes wholly dissimilar to our statute. So that, as said in this case by the learned judge presiding below, in his written opinion which is a part of the record: “The present proceeding for annexing territory to a city or town being purely statutory, we must look to our statute, as interpreted by the Supreme Court of Appeals, for guidance in this important matter. (Henrico v. Richmond, etc., 106 Va., p. 282, 55 S. E. 683, 117 Am. St. Rep. 1001.)”

The learned judge, after a view of the territory proposed by the city of Alexandria to be annexed, and also' a view of the physical conditions of the city, its streets, sewers and surface drainage, reasonably made no effort to analyze the evidence introduced, witness by witness, but did in his written opinion set forth what he conceived to be a fair deduction from the evidence as a whole, concluding, in effect, that no annexation to the city of additional territory was necessary or expedient, the sufficiency-of the ordinance of the city pursuant to which this proceeding was instituted as to the terms and conditions or provisions made for the future management and improvement of the territory proposed to be annexed not being discussed; so that the dismissal of the proceeding was rested solely upon the ground that the proof did not show that it was necessary or expedient to annex the territory described in the ordinance, or any part thereof.

The statute, clause 3, supra, provides that if the court or judge shall be of opinion that no annexation is necessary or expedient, the motion to annex shall be dismissed; but it also provides: “If, however, the court or judge shall be of opinion that the annexation of only a part of such territory is necessary or expedient, or if it shall be of opinion that said ordinance does not contain fair and reasonable terms, or if it shall be of opinion that more territory should be annexed than was described in the metes and bounds originally set forth, it shall enter a proper or[236]*236der, embodying what it deems reasonable and fair terms upon which the annexation is to be had, and how much of ■said territory shall be annexed, and shall direct the annexation of such territory in conformity with the terms and conditions so prescribed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 S.E. 630, 117 Va. 230, 1915 Va. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-council-of-alexandria-v-alexandria-county-va-1915.