City of Oklahoma City v. Lacy

1959 OK 30, 336 P.2d 906, 1959 Okla. LEXIS 386
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 10, 1959
DocketNo, 38174
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1959 OK 30 (City of Oklahoma City v. Lacy) 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
City of Oklahoma City v. Lacy, 1959 OK 30, 336 P.2d 906, 1959 Okla. LEXIS 386 (Okla. 1959).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

The broad question plaintiff in error seeks to have determined in this appeal is whether or not an area lying south of a line which would coincide with an east extension of Oklahoma City’s Northeast 36th Street, and east of such a line extending north from said City’s North Bryan Street, purporting to have been incorporated as the Town of Forest Park, exists (at all times involved in this controversy) as a separate town, or whether, by the purported annexation proceedings described herein, it has become a part of the City of Oklahoma City.

It is helpful in making an appraisal of the controversy to note some of its factual background and refer to the statutory provisions applicable thereto.

The basic provisions of our statutes authorizing cities to annex territory adjacent to their corporate limits is Tit. 11, O.S.19S1 § 481. Prior to May 22, 1956, the Forest Park territory, or area (referring to the land area within- the limits ..'of the present'purported Town of Forest: Park) was not adjacent to Oklahoma City’s limits. However, on that date, said City’s city council passed Ordinance No. 7798, which purported to annex adjacent territory lying west of North Bryan Street. This ordinance contained a so-called “emergency” provision purporting -to make it effective “after its passage, as provided by law.” Later, on the same day, said City Council also passed its Ordinance No. 7800, purporting to annex the Forest Park area, and this ordinance also contained a so-called “emergency” provision worded the same as the one in Ordinance No. 7798. On the next day, May 23, 1956, both of -said ordinances were published in a newspaper of general circulation in Oklahoma City or Oklahoma County, for the first time that either their titles or complete texts had ever been published. On the same date, after a census of the inhabitants residing within the Forest Park area had been taken two days before, certain persons, apparently residents of the said County, gave notice as the “Committee For Incorporation” that, under the authority of Tit. 11, O.S.1951 § 971 et seq., they would, on or after June 22, 1956, present to Oklahoma County’s Board of Coun-; ty Commissioners their petition for incorporation of said area “into the town of-Forest Park * * * Thereafter,- on' June 25, 1956, said Board entered its order, after hearing on a petition previously filed for that purpose, directing the holding of an election in that 'area to determine whether Forest Park should be an incorporated town. Thereafter, on July 16, 1956, said Board of County Commissioners issued its order approving- the election held in accord with its previous order; and later, in the due course of the administration of said incorporated- Town’s -affairs, the defendants in error-, were selected as members of its Board of Trustees ; , and have acted in that.. capacity since. . • ■■ . ,

As a.result of the above described conflict in the named Town’s and City’s jurisdiction over the Forest Park area, and a difference of opinion as to whether it had become an annexed- part-• of ' Oklahoma City or,- instead', 'was - a separate, incorporated town, the present action, in’ the nature of quo warranto,’’ was commenced in October, 1956, in the name of the State of Oklahoma on the relation of the County Attorney of Oklahoma County as plaintiff, against the defendants in error-,.: as defendants. •

In said plaintiff’s petition, it' relied upon the aforecited Ordinance No.-' 7800, as having validly annexed the Forest Park area to Oklahoma- City, before the above-described town incorporation proceedings were commenced; and a copy of said Ordinance was attached to said, petition-. Briefly, and in substance, .plaintiff further alleged some of .the facts herein-above shown concerning the purported . incorporation of the Town of Forest Park; further alleged that the persons named as [908]*908defendants weré attempting to “usurp official authority as officials of a separate individual municipality which does not exist”; and alleged various reasons for, and prayed for, an adjudication of the status of the Forest Park area and a determination that the Town of Forest Park does not exist; that defendants have no official status; and that the area “embraced within what is claimed to be the Town of Forest Park” was legally annexed by Oklahoma City’s Ordinance No. 7800.

It is unnécessa'ry to describe in detail the procedure by which the action acquired additional parties, and the issues were joined between them previous to the trial. Suffice it to say that in defendants’ first •"Amendment” to their answer they alleged that Oklahoma City’s'Ordinance No. 7800, supra, is void because the territory described therein was not, at the time it was ■enacted, adjacent to said City. Analysis of some of the other allegations in said Amendment, in the light of the position defendants assumed at the trial and herein re-assert, reveals that one of the grounds upon which the foregoing allegation was based was that on May 22, 1956, when said Ordinance No. 7800 was passed by the City Council, Ordinance No. 7798, which purported to annex territory between the Forest Park area and what was then Oklahoma City’s eastern boundary and which annexation had to be completely effective at that time in order to render “adjacent” to said City, the territory described in Ordinance No. 7800, was wholly void and ineffective.

. Pursuant to separate orders of the court, entered before the trial, the Board of County Commissioners of Oklahoma County and the City of Oklahoma' City became defendants, or interveners, in the action.

By its answer, the City objected to being made a party to the action, and then merely adopted the allegations asserted by the State in said plaintiff’s petition; and joined in the prayer for relief therein contained.

In its answer and the amendment thereto, the Board of County Commissioners pleaded, among other things, in substance, that the County Attorney who brought the action for the State, as plaintiff, was es-topped to maintain the action by reason of having actively participated in the proceedings before said Board for the incorporation of the Town of Forest Park; and that said Board’s order incorporating said town, being unappealed from, was res judicata of all questions involved in the present action.

Upon trial of the cause before the court, judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant members of Forest Park’s Board of Trustees and the Board of County Commissioners, but against the State, as plaintiff, and the defendant City. In so ruling, the trial judge specifically found, among other things, that the Town of Forest Park was duly and regularly organized as provided by law and that it existed, and was functioning, as such; and that Oklahoma City’s Ordinance No. 7800, purporting to annex the territory included therein, is void.

From said judgment the City of Oklahoma City, hereinafter referred to merely as “the City”, has lodged the present purported appeal, without the State, in whose name the action was instituted as plaintiff, being a party or appearing herein in any capacity whatsoever.

The members of Forest Park’s Board of Trustees and Oklahoma County’s Board of County Commissioners, hereinafter referred to collectively merely as “Trustees”, first filed a motion to dismiss the within cause here, on the ground of this Court’s asserted lack of jurisdiction. Said motion was overruled, and the parties then filed their respective briefs dealing chiefly with the merits of the judgment appealed from. The Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad has also filed a “Brief Amicus Curiae.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Klopfenstein v. Oklahoma Department of Human Services
2008 OK CIV APP 16 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2008)
State ex inf. Joyce-Hayes v. Twenty-Second Judicial Circuit
864 S.W.2d 396 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1993)
Edmondson v. Siegfried Insurance Agency, Inc.
1978 OK 45 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1978)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1959 OK 30, 336 P.2d 906, 1959 Okla. LEXIS 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-oklahoma-city-v-lacy-okla-1959.