Crawford v. Cassity

1920 OK 189, 190 P. 412, 78 Okla. 261, 1920 Okla. LEXIS 378
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 27, 1920
Docket9589
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1920 OK 189 (Crawford v. Cassity) 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
Crawford v. Cassity, 1920 OK 189, 190 P. 412, 78 Okla. 261, 1920 Okla. LEXIS 378 (Okla. 1920).

Opinion

McNEILL, J.

This action was instituted in the district court of Kay county by G. M. Cassity, Elihu Myers, and G. G. Overstreet against the city council of Tonkawa and F. W. Keeney & Company to enjoin the city from constructing lateral C in sewer district No. 4, in the alley of block 30. It is alleged that the plaintiffs were the owners of all of the lots in said block, and that lateral O, which extended into block 30, was placed in said ordinance by the said city council and officers of the said city designedly and capriciously and unnecessarily, for the rea-' son a sewer placed in the alley of said block would not be beneficial to the citizens of the city of Tonkawa in any manner, would benefit no one, and the act of the city council in including said block in said ordinance was unreasonable, unjust, and not a reasonable and just exercise of the authority conferred upon the said mayor and council.

It is further alleged that there are sewers running along sides of said block, and that said lateral is unnecessary, and that plaintiffs filed a protest with the city conn- *262 cil, and thereafter the city council let a contract to Keeney & Company. To this petition is attached the plaintiffs’ protest and the ordinance. The plaintiffs ash for a temporary injunction, which was denied by the court. Thereafter plaintiffs filed a supplemental petition, alleging that Keeney & Company had filed its bond and was attempting to proceed with said wórk. Thereafter a second supplemental petition was filed, alleging, in addition, that the work had been completed and that the city council had passed an ordinance assessing the benefits to said lots, amounting to $278, and asking that the same be declared illegal and void and the city be enjoined from collecting the same. The defendants answered admitting a great portion of the allegations of the petition, except the fact that it was unnecessary that the sewer be installed in said block, and denying that said lateral C was included in said sewer district on account of any ill will, or for oppression, but alleging that said block was in the center of said city, and a portion of the same was low, and without sewerage and insanitary; and further answered that the ordinance had been passed and the sewer had been installed as provided in sections 462-471, Rev. Laws 1910. With the issues thus formed, the case was tried upon its merits to the court, and after hearing the evidence the court granted the injunction, and the court, in granting the injunction, slated as follows:

“'The court finds that the city council and defendants herein were without jurisdiction to order the sewer complained of in the petition of the plaintiff, for the reason that after ihe protest was filed by the plaintiffs there was no finding by the city council and no record of any finding made in accordance with the statute, section 468, Rev. Laws, 1910, making it necessary, where the protest is filed,- that the council find it necessary to build said sewer, and that said neglect of the council to make said finding when said protest is filed is jurisdictional.
“The court further finds as a matter of fact that the said sewer in block 30 in said city of Tonkawa, as set out in plaintiffs’ petition, was not necessary, in the judgment of the court.”

The defendants filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled by the court.

The plaintiffs in error, for reversal, argue two propositions — or they might be considered as three:

First. That the trial court had no jurisdiction to hear and .determine the matter presented in the petition of defendants in error, for the reason that the jurisdiction conferred by legislative enactment upon the mayor -and council to prooeed with the work of providing a sewer when they deemed it necessary, is conclusive.

Second. That the judgment of the trial court, holding plaintiffs in error were without jurisdiction to order the sewer complained of in the petition for* the reason that after the protests were filed by defendants in error there was no finding by the city council, and no record made of any finding made in accordance with section 468 of. Revised Laws of 1910, is not based upon evidence introduced into the trial of the case; and, further, that the judgment of the court is contrary to the weight of the evidence and is contrary to law.

We will first consider the finding of the court in regard-to the city council having no jurisdiction to enter into the contract for the reason that after the protest was filed the city council did not make a finding that the sewer was necessary. We have searched the pleadings to find where this question was ever raised or made an issue in the case at bar, and have been unable to find where such question was made an issue in the case, either by the pleadings or the evidence.

The opening statement of defendants in error and their statements during the trial disclose that the question as to whether the city council had made an order after the protest was filed finding that the sewer was a necessity, was not an issue in the case. Counsel for defendants in error, in defining their position, stated their contention was that this lateral C was unnecessary; that the same was not for the benefit of plaintiffs’ property and added no benefit to the property in any amount, no benefit to the citizens of Tonkawa, nor was it beneficial for the welfare of the city; and, further, that the city could not take private property to benefit the public unless it gave the private property back sufficient benefit to equal the amount of the costs or taxes to be assessed against said property. There was-.no issue raised by the pleadings that the injunction was applied for upon the ground that the city council acquired no jurisdiction by failing to make a record after the protest was filed that the city council considered the lateral a necessity. The record of the city council upon this proposition is not evidence. The evidence does not disclose whether there was such a record or not. The evidence does disclose that the city council gave the Protestants a hearing, but there was no evidence offered upon either side as to whether the council had overruled the protest or *263 whether there was a record disclosing that the city council considered it a necessity to complete said lateral. The evidence does disclose that, after hearing the protest, the city council proceeded to let the contract for constructing the sewer, and all or practically all oí the members of the city council testified they considered said sewer necessary.

Defendants in error, who were the plaintiffs below, did not introduce the record of the city council upon this point, and if they attacked the proceedings upon that ground, the burden of proof was upon the defendants in error to prove no such record was made. It was not incumbent upon plaintiffs in error, being the defendants below, to introduce such record, when no such issue was presented in the pleadings.

This court, in the case of Newman v. Warner-Quinlan Asphalt Co., 71 Oklahoma, 177 Fac. 375, stated as follows:

“Proceedings of a municipal corporation ordering street improvements and making assessments to pay for same are presumed to be regular, and the burden is upon the one attacking the legality of such assessments to show irregularity in such proceedings.”

See, also, Rawlins v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1920 OK 189, 190 P. 412, 78 Okla. 261, 1920 Okla. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-cassity-okla-1920.