Cole v. City of Watertown

147 N.W. 91, 34 S.D. 69, 1914 S.D. LEXIS 80
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 147 N.W. 91 (Cole v. City of Watertown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cole v. City of Watertown, 147 N.W. 91, 34 S.D. 69, 1914 S.D. LEXIS 80 (S.D. 1914).

Opinion

WHITING, J.

Sections 1509, 1511 and 1512 of the Pol. Code of South Dakota provide, 'among other things, a® follows r

“§1509. On petition in writing, signed by not less than three-[71]*71fourths of the legal voters and 'by the owners of not less than three-fourths, in value, of the property in any territory within any incorporated' city * * and being upon- the border and within -the limits thereof, the city council of the city * * * may disconnect and exclude such territory from’ such city * * *; Provided, that the provisions of this section shall only apply to lands not laid out into city * * * lots or blocks.”
“§1511. Upon the failure of the city council * * * to grant the request contained in a petition * * * for thirty days after the last publication of the notice provided for in section 1510, or upon a refusal to* grant such request, the petitioners may present' their petition to the circuit court of -the county in Which such city * * * or the greater portion of it is situated, by filing such petition with the clerk, of said court. * * * The -hearing on the petition may be held at a regular or special term of the circuit court, or by the court in vacation.”
§1512. If upon the hearing 'the court shall find that the request of the petitioners ought to be granted and can be so granted without injustice to the inhabitants or persons interested, the court shall so order. If the court shall find against -the- petitioners, the petition shall be dismissed at the- cost of the petitioners.”

Proceeding under said1 §1509-, certain legal voters and property owners of the city of Watertown presented to the commissioners of said city a petition seeking to have certain territory situate in such city, disconnected and excluded from such city. The petition was proper in form and proper notice was given. The commissioners took no action upon the petition, and thereafter the petitioners presented their petition -to the circuit court in and for Codington County, it being the 'county wherein the 'said City of Watertown is situated. A hearing ■ upon said petition was had in said .court, and the court found that a part of the territory described in said petition should be disconnected and excluded from such city and that the remainder of such territory should be retained, and it rendered a judgment in accordance therewith. From such judgment the 'city appealed and upon such appeal, presents numerous assignments of error.

[1,2] Among other -things appellant contends that the -circuit court had no jurisdiction to grant the petition in part and rejeot the [72]*72same in part — that, under the provisions of our 'statute, the tract described in the petition must be treated as indivisible and such petition must either be granted as to the whole tract described or else must be refused as to the whole of such tract. In this contention we think it clear that appellant is' correct. The power to create municipal corporations, and to- add to or take from their territory is a power purely political in its mature and is vested in the legislature, which1 must determine the circumstances authorizing the creation of such corporations, and the enlarging or diminishing of their territory. But the legislature may delegate, to such body or tribunal as ’it sees fit, the determination of the existence of such circumstances, and may prescribe the method by which' the question of creating- a corporation or of enlarging or diminishing its territory shall be brought before such body or trifounal. This- power thus delegated is purely statutory and it is to the express provision of the statutes that we must look to find the -power given. The power to detach territory is in its nature, analogous to the -power to attach territory and statutory provisions in relation to these two’ powers are subject ito the same rules of construction. In the case of City of Peru et al. v. Bearss et al., 55 Ind. 576 — being a case wherein the plaintiff -city -had presented a petition to the board of county commissioners praying for an order attaching certain territory to' such city— the -court said:

“Prom' a close examination and analysis of the language used ■in and cited from sections 85 an-d 86, (1 R. S. 187, p. 3x1), it seems to us that the action of the board of -commissioners, provided for in section 86, is entirely dependent upon the action of the city, as provided: for in said section 85, and is limited strictly to the granting or denying of ¡the prayer of the city’s petition. The board of commissioners is not authorized by law to grant a part, and deny a part, of the city’s petition. If the 'board is of the opinion that the prayer of the petition should be granted’, then it shall make the order for the annexation. If the legislature had intended that the board of commissioners should have the power to grant the prayer of the city’s petition in part, in such manner as to authorize the board to annex to the city such part only of the territory described in the petition, as to -the board might seem right and proper, and to deny the prayer of the 'petition as to the residue of . [73]*73su'cb territory, 'then .the language of the statute would1 'have b.een very different from' what it is now. It seems to u© that it was intended |to provide, by the legislation • we have cited, that city boundaries might be extended, in the m'ode prescribed', to include contiguous territory, when the common council of the city and the board of commissioner's of the county, with the proper and necessary formalities required by the law, concurred in the proposed extension, but not otherwise. In the case at bar, the action of the hoard of commissioners upon the petition of the City of Peru, in the annexation of a part only of the territory described therein, was not in harmony with nor pursuant to, the city’s action and petition. It can not be said, with any degree of accuracy, that the board of commissioner's granted the prayer of said petition; and k was only upon the granting of the prayer of the petition, that the board was authorized to make any order for the annexation of territory. And the order of the board in this case, for the annexation -to The City of Peru of a part only of the territory described -in the city’s petition, was wholly unauthorized by law, and was therefore inoperative and void.”

Section 1512, supra, provides that the Court shall make its order provided' it finds, “that the request of the petitioners ought to be granted.” When the court determined that >a part of the territory described ought not to -be disconnected from the city, it was a 'conclusion that the request of the petitioners ought not to be granted. In the case of Foreman v. Town of Marianna, 43 Ark. 324 — a case wherein, as provided by statute, a vote of the electors was first 'had and then the petition presented .to the county court -and an appeal iflalcen (to the circuit court, and, in the circuit court, an amendment of said petition asked for, by which amendment the amount of territory sought to be attached was diminished — «the question presented to the appellate court was as to the authority of the circuit court to allow an amendment of such petition 'so that a different territorial tract might be annexed, the court granted the amendment but’ said:

“It i's contended that the amendment of the petition, after it had been voted upon, was * * * an error. It certainly would be fatal, if the Statute, on that point, had been silent;

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Bluebook (online)
147 N.W. 91, 34 S.D. 69, 1914 S.D. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-city-of-watertown-sd-1914.