Dickson v. Hardy

148 So. 674, 177 La. 447, 1933 La. LEXIS 1708
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 1, 1933
DocketNo. 32241.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 148 So. 674 (Dickson v. Hardy) 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
Dickson v. Hardy, 148 So. 674, 177 La. 447, 1933 La. LEXIS 1708 (La. 1933).

Opinion

LAND, Justice.

The present suit is a contest between petitioner, C. Bickham Dickson, commissioner of public utilities, and the defendant, George W. Hardy, Jr., mayor, over the supervision and control of Cross Lake, the source of the water supply of the city of Shreveport.

The commission plan of government, as provided by Act No. 302 of 1910, was adopted by that city. Under section 4 of this statute, a distribution of the functions and powers of government is provided for in the following manner:

“And the powers and duties shall be distributed into and among five departments as follows:
“1. Department of Public Affairs and Public Education.
“2. Department of Accounts and Finances.
“3. Department of Public Safety.
“4. Department of Public Utilities.
“5. Department of Streets and Parks.”

On October 19, 1932, the city council adopted a resolution in which it assigned to the commissioner of public utilities, among other things, the duties pertaining to “Waterworks and Sewerage.”

Petitioner contends, therefore, that' jurisdiction over Cross Lake is appropriately vested in him, as commissioner of public utilities, and, in the present proceeding, seeks to restrain the defendant, mayor of the city of Shreveport, from interfering with petitioner in the exercise of that jurisdiction.

Defendant, the mayor of Shreveport, admits in his answer such interference, and justifies same under the terms of Ordinance 39 of 1932. After the failure of the passage of this ordinance, it was submitted, under section 14 of Act No. 302 of 1910, to the qualified voters of the city of Shreveport. At this election, held September 13, 1932, the proposition of the adoption of the ordinance received a majority of votes cast.

This ordinance contains, among others, the following provisions:

*451 “Section 2. The Mayor shall be Superintendent of the Department of Public Affairs, of Public Education, of the Legal Department, of the Health Department, of Public Property, the Municipal Library, the Municipal Auditorium, the Department of Conservation and Enforcement on Cross Lalce and the Department of Public Recreation. He shall make rules and fix policies for the proper conduct of all of said Departments.
“The following officers shall be elected by the City Council on the nomination of the Mayor: * * *
“A Superintendent of Conservation and Enforcement on Cross Lalce.
“All of said named officers shall be under the supervision and control of the Mayor. * * *
“The Superintendent of Conservation and Enforcement on Cross Lake shall have full charge of the patrolling of Cross Lake and of the enforcement of laws and ordinances with reference thereto which have been or may be adopted by the Council.”

Petitioner has attacked Ordinance 39 of 1932 as illegal, null, and void on the following grounds:

(a)That Act No. 302 of 1910, the charter of the city of Shreveport, establishes five departments into which the powers and duties of municipal government are distributed; that the other offices named in that act are expressly limited to city attorney, secretary-treasurer, tax collector, etc.; and that the city council could not, nor could the electorate, create a department of conservation and enforcement on Cross Lake, nor the office of superintendent of conservation and enforcement on Cross Lake.

(b) That the authority which can be delegated to the mayor of Shreveport is limited by the provisions of Act No. 302 of 1910 to the superintendence of the departments of public affairs and education, and that the assignment to the mayor of the supervision of Cross Lake, as provided by Ordinance 39 of 1932, is not appropriate to the functions which, can be legally exercised by him; but can be appropriately assigned only to the department of public utilities.

(c) And, finally, that section 14 of Act No. 302 of 1910, the referendum clause of the act, deals solely with administrative rather than legislative matters, and that only ordinances legislative in character may be submitted to referendum under that section.

1. If defendant relied upon the original provisions of Act No. 302 of 1910 to sustain the legality of Ordinance 39 of 1932, there might be some semblance of soundness in the contentions above made by able counsel for petitioner. But defendant does not so rely. On the contrary, defendant rests his case upon Act No. 155 of 1926, amending section 5 of Act No. 302 of 1910, and upon Act No. 39 of 1926, an act “To authorize and empower the City of Shreveport to adopt, exercise and enforce police and sanitary regulations and ordinances over the bed and waters of Cross Lake and the area surrounding same.”

After conferring upon the city of Shreveport “full power and authority to adopt and enforce all needful police and sanitary ordinances and regulations for the protection of the bed and waters of Cross Lake * * * *453 from * * * pollution, contamination or destruction by salt water, refuse, filth, or from any other cause,” it is clearly and specifically provided in Act No. 39 of 1926: “That the City shall have the right and authority through its Board of Health, Public Safety Department, Public Utilities Department, or otherwise, to inspect all of said property and the drainage area of said Cross Lake and to enforce its ordinances and regulations by fine or imprisonment through the proper Courts of the State of Louisiana.”

Under the above provision, the right and authority of the city of Shreveport to inspect the lake and its drainage area are not restricted, either to the board of health, or to the public safety department, or to the public utilities department, but the city may accomplish this end “otherwise,” that is to say, through any board, department, or agency it may see fit to create and use for that purpose.

Ordinance 39 of 1932, in 'providing for a “Department of Conservation and Enforcement on Cross Lake” and for a “Superintendent” of that department, is clearly within the limits of the authority delegated to the city of Shreveport by Act No. 39 of 1926. And if other authority were necessary, it is found in the plain and unambiguous provisions of Act No. 155 of 1926, amending section 5 of Act No. 302 of 1910, the charter of the city of Shreveport. These provisions are as follows: “Section 5. That the Mayor shall be Superintendent of the Department of Public Affairs and Public Education; and in cities of forty thousand (40,000) or more population one councilman shall be the Superintendent of the Department of Accounts and Einance; one councilman shall be superintendent of the Department of Public Safety; one councilman shall be Superintenednt-of the Department of Public Utilities; and one councilman shall be Superintendent of the Department of Streets and Parks.

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Bluebook (online)
148 So. 674, 177 La. 447, 1933 La. LEXIS 1708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickson-v-hardy-la-1933.