Edwards v. Town of Ponchatoula

34 So. 2d 394, 213 La. 116, 1948 La. LEXIS 834
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 12, 1948
DocketNo. 38417.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 34 So. 2d 394 (Edwards v. Town of Ponchatoula) 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
Edwards v. Town of Ponchatoula, 34 So. 2d 394, 213 La. 116, 1948 La. LEXIS 834 (La. 1948).

Opinion

FOURNET, Justice.

The plaintiffs, citizens and taxpayers of the town of Ponchatoula, Louisiana, are appealing from a judgment dismissing their suit against the town to have declared null and void, and to enjoin the enforcement of, an ordinance contracting the corporate limits by excluding therefrom a certain designated area on a part of which is located industrial plants owned and operated by Marion T. Fannaly, Inc.

According to the record the Fannaly corporation started a cold packing business in the town a few years ago on a comparatively small scale. This has since grown into one of the largest businesses of its kind in the country, with the result that the corporation now has a modern plant covering some three squares in the area excluded from the town limits by the ordinance, the value of these facilities being estimated to be equal to or in excess of the assessed valuation of all of the remaining property within the corporate limits,— $1,000,000. From its very inception the plant has been exempt from all taxes— state, parochial, and municipal' — having obtained a certificate of exemption from the State Board of Commerce and Industry. This exemption will soon expire.

In 1945 the corporation proposed to the town of Ponchatoula that if it would exclude from its territorial limits that part of the town north of Willow street and east of the Illinois Central Railroad, it would double its plant facilities and pay to the town $7,500 as soon as the ordinance providing for such contraction would become operative and a like sum on January 10, 1946, in order that the town might buy a much needed new fire engine, road equipment, and improvements for its water system. It also agreed to pay $600 a year, 'at the rate of $50 a month, to the fire department, and $300 a year, or $25 a month, for police protection. In this proposition it is suggested that if the plans are put into effect “the Hayes Dairy Products plans to dispose of their present plant and to erect a complete dairy manufacturing plant on Square 19 for cooling and pasteurizing milk, manufacturing of ice cream, cheese, butter, evaporated, or condensed milk, etc. This plant would be in the corporate limits of Ponchatoula.”

In the furtherance of this plan or proposition, Marion T. Fannaly, president of the corporation, appeared before various civic bodies and organizations in the community explaining the proposal to them and he obtained from them resolutions recommending that the ordinance be adopted contracting the corporate limits as requested. The particulars in connection with the plan (and as outlined above) were detailed in a full page advertisement in a local *121 newspaper, the readers being advised that the plan would be submitted to the town council at its regular meeting on Tuesday, November 6, 1945, and that it would again be taken up by the council for final consideration at a special meeting scheduled to be held one week later, on November 13. On that day the ordinance was adopted by the council, the Mayor and one of the councilmen not voting. By this ordinance the town limits were refixed so as to exclude an area of approximately 70 acres located only three blocks from the main street of the town. One of the industries benefited by such exclusion is directly across Willow street from a competitor in the same business (veneering). The corporation’s cold storage and packing business, also affected by the ordinance, is only two blocks from a competing business, although the latter business is operated on a much smaller scale.

Following the adoption of the, ordinance, A. M. Edwards, Jr., Leon Edwards, the A. M. Edwards Company, Inc., Albert L. Wright, Everett Cowen, Carl Wilson, and Edward Vineyard, joined by the Ponchatoula Farm Bureau and the Ponchatoula Farmers Union, instituted this proceeding. The last five parties, because of certain allegations contained in the petition, subsequently discontinued their suit.

It is the contention of the plaintiffs that Act 154 of 1944 (amending and re-enacting Section 1 of Act 35 of 1924, as amended and re-enacted by Act 149 of 1928), authorizing the council’s action in contractingthe town limits, is unconstitutional in that (1) because of extraneous matter contained in the body the act expresses more than one object, the title of which is not indicative thereof, and (2) it seeks tO‘ place a limit upon the period during which the ordinance adopted by municipal authorities in extending or contracting the territorial limits of the various municipalities may be contested. They contend, further, that to uphold the action of the town council as being authorized under this legislative act is in violation of Section 22 of Article X of the Constitution of 1921. It is their further argument that the ordinance is grossly unreasonable and tends to establish the dangerous precedent of permitting a corporation to barter for tax immunity for a stipulated sum, thereby discriminating against competing industries, seriously jeapordizing the fisc of the community, and making the burden of maintaining the municipality more onerous on the remaining taxpayers, with the ultimate reduction of the security of the bondholders as well as the revenues needed for the maintenance of the peace and safety of the community.

Act 154 of 1944, as indicated by its title, is an act to amend and re-enact Section 1 of Act 35 of 1924, as amended and re-enacted by Act 149 of 1928, and a perusal of the body of the act does show that there is contained therein extraneous matter entirely foreign to the object thereof. *123 The act as reported in the bound volume of the acts of the legislature for 1944 released by the Secretary of State also appears to be incomplete. However, the portion' of the act applicable to the issues here presented for our consideration are, for all intents and purposes, identical with the 1928 act, with the exception that there is contained in the 1944 act a provision to the effect that the only-question to be decided on appeals taken from the - adoption of such ordinances is “whether the proposed extension or contraction of the corporate limits be or be not reasonable,” a matter that has been established by the jurisprudence of this court previous to the adoption of the 1944 act. Lawrence v. Mansfield, 129 La. 672, 56 So. 633; Bowman-Hicks Lumber Co. v. Oakdale, 144 La. 849, 81 So. 367. It therefore follows that whether or n'ot (because of the extraneous matter contained in the act) it be held invalid (and conceding that the act is not valid for the purpose of disposing of this case), the provisions of Act 35 of 1924, as amended by Act 149 of 1928, which were followed, are controlling.

Likewise, the further contention' of counsel for the plaintiffs that because the act of 1928 and the act of 1944 contain the provision that limits the time within which an attack may be made upon the ordinance adopted by the municipality in extending or contracting the corporate limits renders both of these acts unconstitutional, is without foundation. The authorities cited in support of this contention are not applicable to the case at bar. It is clearly within the province of the legislature in all cases where there is no constitutional inhibition, to place a limit upon the time within which such matters may be contested in the courts.

It is elementary that municipal corporations are creatures of the state, established by the legislature for the purpose of administering local affairs of government.

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Bluebook (online)
34 So. 2d 394, 213 La. 116, 1948 La. LEXIS 834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-town-of-ponchatoula-la-1948.