City of Tulsa v. Williams

1924 OK 136, 227 P. 876, 100 Okla. 116, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 937
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 5, 1924
Docket14514
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 1924 OK 136 (City of Tulsa v. Williams) 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 Tulsa v. Williams, 1924 OK 136, 227 P. 876, 100 Okla. 116, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 937 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

SHACKELFORD, C.

For convenience in this opinion, the city of Tulsa, plaintiff in error, will be referred to as petitioner, and the landowners, defendants in error, will be referred to as respondents.

The petitioner began this proceeding in the district court of Mayes county by filing its jjetition therein on the 2nd of December, 1922. The petitioner seeks to condemn certain lands in Mayes county, not within petitioner’s corporate limits, for the purpose of creating a water reservoir to supply water to petitioner and the inhabitants thereof. In the petition the land sought to be condemned is set out and described by legal subdivisions of certain sections, and the names of the owners given. Due and legal notice was given to the land owners and their appearances are shown of record. It appears from this proceeding that it is the purpose of the petitioner to build an extensive dam across a n on-navigable stream running through Mayes county, known as Spavinaw creek, for the purpose of impounding the waters of said creek so as to create a water supply for petitioner and its inhabitants. It appears that the damming and impounding the waters of said creek will create a reservoir of water or lake, covering many hundreds of acres of land, and to be carried by means of con *118 duits leading from such reservoir, and into the petitioner’s confines. The petitioner seeks to acquire the fee-simple title by purchase, or the perpetual use and control by condemnation proceedings, of such lands as may be needed for the erection of its dam across said Spavinaw creek, in Mayes county, and for the purpose of erecting such buildings and water equipment as may be needed to effectuate the purposes for which, the reservoir is being created; also a right of way over, under, and across such lands as may be needed for the purpose of laying its conduits, water pipes, and pipe lines; and for building and operating a temporary railroad to be used for construction purposes ; also as to all lands which will be necessary to submerge by impounding the water of the said creek; also as to all lands which may lie between the low water line and the high water line when the reservoir is complete and flooded; also as to all lands lying within the watershed above the high water line that may be needed to protect the water impounded in the reservoir from pollution, or such as may be needed for the purpose of fencing, policing, and protecting the reservoir and the water therein.

The right to acquire the perpetual use and control of the property by condemnation proceedings is not denied, except as to such land as lies above the flood stage or maximum high water line which is desired and alleged to be necessary to have to prevent pollution of the water in the reservoir, and needed for fencing the reservoir and patrolling the water line and extending police protection over the petitioner’s water supply. Every other question has been eliminated.

in the petition it is alleged, in effect, that the perpetual use and exclusive control of the lands described', which may be lying above the high water line, are necessary for the public use for the purpose of properly protecting and safe-guarding the water to be impounded in petitioner’s water reservoir so as to, as nearly as may be, insure to petitioner and the inhabitants thereof, a supply of pure water. It is alleged that the legislative arm of the city government of the city of Tulsa regularly adopted a resolution declaring the lands sought to be condemned necessary for the purposes for which, the condemnation is sought, the lands being specifically described in such resolution, noi by metes and bounds, but by legal subdivisions of the federal survey; and a copy of the resolution of necessity is attached to the petition. The respondents deny that it is necessary for the petitioner to acquire the perpetual use and absolute control of such described lands as lie above the high water line, for the purpose of preventing pollution of the water supply, or for the purpose of policing and patrolling the shore and borders of the reservoir. They further deny that there is any power in the court in condemnation proceedings to invest the petitioner with perpetual use and absolute control of the lands outside the high water line of petitioner’s water reservoir for the purposes for which the condemnation is sought.

Upon a trial of the cause petitioner put in proof the resolution adopted by the legislative department of the city of Tulsa, declaring the necessity for petitioner to have the lands sought to be condemned both below and above the high water line of petitioner’s reservoir, and likewise offered the testimony of expert witnesses to show that the land sought above the high water line is necessary for the protection of the petitioner’s water supply from pollution, and for patrolling and policing the shores of the reservoir.

The trial court upheld the rights of the petitioner to acquire in condemnation proceedings the perpetual use and absolute control of the land described lying below the ■high water line of the reservoir; and appointed appraisers to view such land and fix the damage to the respective land owners; and also upheld the right of the petitioner to take certain lands not within the high water line, needed for buildings to be used in connection with the water project. No complaint is made by either party with reference to that part of the holding and judgment. The court found that as a matter of law the petitioner is not authorized to acquire by condemnation proceedings any of the property described lying above the petitioner’s high water line, except such as is needed for the buildings. That part of the court’s findings is as follows:

“The court further finds that the said petitioner herein is not authorized by the laws of the state of Oklahoma to acquire by condemnation proceedings any of the lands lying above the high water line of the lake heretofore mentioned, and which it is alleged are necessary for the protection of said reservoir, except certain lots in the West Addition to the town of Spavinaw, Oklahoma, which lots, although not being overflowed, are needed by said petitioner for construction purposes in building the dam to be constructed at the point indicated in said petition, over the protests and objections of such landowners.”

The petitioner prosecutes appeal from that part of the findings and judgment of the trial court which deny the petitioner the *119 right, as a matter of law, to condemn property aboye the high water line of its reservoir, covered by the resolution of necessity and alleged in the petition to he necessary for the proper protection of the reservoir and the water supply of the petitioner.

It is the contention upon the part of the petitioner, the. city of Tulsa, that it, as a municipal corporation under the laws of the state, and under its charter, has the right to acquire property for the public use as a water reservoir, and that the matter of determining what property or how much is a legislative question to be determined by the legislative department of the petitioner's own government; and is not a question for the state court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 136, 227 P. 876, 100 Okla. 116, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-tulsa-v-williams-okla-1924.