Delahoussaye v. Board of Trustees

103 So. 152, 157 La. 782, 1925 La. LEXIS 1968
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 5, 1925
DocketNo. 26875.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 103 So. 152 (Delahoussaye v. Board of Trustees) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delahoussaye v. Board of Trustees, 103 So. 152, 157 La. 782, 1925 La. LEXIS 1968 (La. 1925).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

Plaintiffs are residents and taxpayers of the city of New Iberia, and own property therein, abutting on Main street, between Weeks street and Lewis avenue. The city of New Iberia has taken steps to pave the section of Main street on which plaintiffs own property; that is to say, the section between Weeks street and the avenue mentioned. Plaintiffs oppose the paving by the city of that part of Main street, and, moreover, contend that the manner in which the city is proceeding is contrary to law, and will, if carried out, work great injury *785 to them. ’ They have therefore brought suit against the city to obtain relief by injunction.

Plaintiffs allege that in July, 1924, together with other property owners owning property abutting on the section of Main street indicated, they addressed a petition to the board of trustees of New Iberia reading as follows:

“TVe, the undersigned property owners fronting East Main street, in the city of New Iberia, with 'respect show that said Main street is part and parcel of the Old Spanish Trail, the Pershing Highway, the Jefferson Highway, and the Transcontinental Highway, and is the exclusive outlet for all travelers along these routes, and is used mostly by outside travelers.
“Eor the above reasons it is nothing but fair that the improvement of said East Main street should be made by the state highway department, with state and federal aid as applied fot by your body; that it is unfair and unjust that the contemplated paving of East Main street be made by the property owners abutting the same.
“We therefore petition your honorable body to delay your present paving program until such time as proper and equitable relief be granted your petitioners in the premises.”

The petition then sets out that, acting upon a prior petition, the board of trustees of the city requested aid from the state highway department for the paving of that part of Main street heretofore indicated; that the department did not act upon the request, but that the state highway engineer answered, advising the board of trustees that, at the time at which he wrote, there were no available funds for the paving of said street, intimating that at some future time the department would grant the request.

The petition then alleges that, notwithstanding that 80 per cent, of those owning property abutting on the section of Main street, which the city had undertaken to pave, had petitioned the board of trustees to delay the paving until equitable relief could be granted them by the highway department of the state, and that, notwithstanding the fact that the board of trustees had demanded state aid for the paving of Main street, the board of trustees ordered publication of the ordinance providing for said paving, and that the ordinance was accordingly published.

The petition then declares that, immediately after the publication mentioned, an affidavit made by eight of the electors of the city, among whom were the plaintiffs herein, declaring that it was their intention to circulate and present a petition for a referendum, with respect to said ordinance, was presented by the affiants to the board of trustees, and that, true to the declaration made in said affidavit, the affiants circulated a petition for a referendum, and obtained thereon the signatures of more than 20 per cent, of the number of votes cast at the last election for a board of trustees for said city, and duly and timely presented said petition to, and filed it with, said board.

The petition then alleges that under the charter of said city, which is Act 187 of 1910, it is the mandatory duty of the board of trustees, upon the filing of such an affidavit, and upon the presenting and filing of a petition for a referendum, to reconsider and repeal the ordinance against which protest is made, but that, regardless of said duty, the board is still persisting in having the same published and in calling for bids for the paving of said section of said street, all in utter disregard of the property rights of plaintiffs, and of the wishes, request, and demand of over 20 per cent, of the electors of said city.

The petition then sets out that the ordinance providing for said paving is null and void, for the reason that it is based on Act 23 of 1914 and Ordinance No. 109 of said city, when, in truth and in fact, Act 23 of 1914, which is an amendment to the charter of New Orleans, and Act 31 of 1915, which *787 is an enabling act, authorizing municipalities of a certain class to adopt, in substance, as a part of their charters the amendment to the charter of New Orleans, were repealed by Act 69 of 1916, before the adoption of Ordinance No. 109, and before its approval by the Attorney General and prior to its recordation in the office of the secretary of state.

The petition also alleges that the paving of said section of Main street, that is, from Weeks street to Lewis avenue, will not be of actual benefit to them or to the remaining residents of said city, unless the entire street is paved to the end of the corporate limits, and that to pave said section only is a discrimination against plaintiffs and in favor of the remaining property owners on Main street from Lewis avenue to the end of the corporate limits.

The prayer • of the petition is that a rule nisi issue directed to said board of trustees and to each member thereof, ordering them to show cause why an injunction should not issue commanding said board to consider and repeal said paving ordinance, and restraining said board and each member thereof from proceeding further with the publication of the same, from finally adopting said ordinance, from advertising for bids for the paving of said section, from letting any contract therefor, from paving said section of said street, and that said injunction, after hearing had, issue accordingly. The petition closes with a prayer for general relief.

The trial court issued the rule nisi, as prayed for by plaintiffs, and, for reason why the injunction prayed for should not issue, defendants excepted to plaintiffs’ petition, averring that the petition disclosed neither a cause nor a right of action.

The rule was tried on the- pleadings filed, and judgment was rendered recalling the rule and denying the writ of injunction. From this judgment plaintiffs have appealed devolutively to this court.

The foregoing is a brief outline' of plaintiffs’ petition. In order to bring out more clearly the grounds on which plaintiffs rely for a writ of injunction, it is necessary to state them briefly in another form.

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Delahoussaye v. Board of Trustees of City of New Iberia
104 So. 370 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
103 So. 152, 157 La. 782, 1925 La. LEXIS 1968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delahoussaye-v-board-of-trustees-la-1925.