Gulick v. Linn

1923 OK 393, 216 P. 460, 90 Okla. 201, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 1147
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 19, 1923
Docket14428
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1923 OK 393 (Gulick v. Linn) 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
Gulick v. Linn, 1923 OK 393, 216 P. 460, 90 Okla. 201, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 1147 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

BRANSON, J.

Plaintiffs ask a writ of prohibition against the district court of the jmreemn judicial district, and the judges thereof, to prevent the enforcement of an injunction judgment entered therein on the 1st day of June, 1923, in a cause then pending in said court, entitled, “The State of Oklahoma on the Relation of Sam L. Wilhite, County Attorney of Oaddo county, Oklahoma, Plaintiffs, v. Perry M.. Gotham and. others, Members of the County Election Board of Oaddo County, Oklahoma, Defendants,” enjoining said board and its members from holding on June 26, 1923, an election called by the Governor, and intended to be held in approximately 16 townships of said county of Caddo, the purpose and object of which, was to permit the qualified electors of that part of said county designated in the petition to pass upon whether or not the territory therein described should be detached from Caddo county and become, with other territory of Canadian county, a new, separate, and distinct subdivision to be known as “Walton county.”

To secure this 'writ, the plaintiffs make a preliminary contention that under and by reason of sections 13 and 14, chapter 40, Session Laws of Oklahoma, 1910-11 (sections 5690-5691, Compiled Laws Okla. 1921), exclusive original jurisdiction is conferred upon the Supreme Court in all matters touching the formation of new counties, as herein involved. A proper reading of the sections cited does not lead, to the result contended for, and does not deprive the district court of jurisdiction to hear a controversy as there involved, and said court had such jurisdiction, unless it be for other reasons deprived thereof.

The petition in said injunction cause alleged in part that the Governor had issued his proclamation calling an election to be held in those parts of Caddo and Canadian counties, as describee) in the proclamation, sought to be detached for the purpose of forming a new county; that said proclamation is void, and the call for said election was for a purpose in excess of, and not sanctioned by law, in that, among numerous other reasons set out in the petition, to take the territory specified in the proclamation from the said county of Caddo would bring the boundary of said county within eleven miles of the city of Anadarko, the county seat of said county, in violation of the provisions of chapter 120 of the Session Laws of 1917, and that the officers were about to expend public funds therefor illegally.

The petition pleaded further the proclamation of the Governor which recites as to the county line of said county: “And the change sought to be made in creating said new county of Walton, will not bring the county line of the county of Caddo nearer than ten miles to the county seat of said county of Caddo, * * *” And, as further alleged, that said statute provides that territory cannot be served for such purpose from an organized county which would bring the boundary of the old' county within less than 15 miles from the county seat thereof.

- Objection made to the jurisdiction of the district court for the reason the suit sought injunctive relief against the exercise of purely political rights, was overruled, and the allegations of the petition were heard on their merit, and the injunction judgment sought here to be prohibited was entered.

As in the district court, it is urged here by the plaintiffs that the writ sought against the judgment should be granted, for-the reason that equity will not assume jurisdiction to grant relief against the exercise of purely political rights, and that the judgment complained of is for that reason void, as in excess of the jurisdiction of the court.

Many cases are cited by the plaintiffs in support of this contention. While it is impracticable to discuss any considerable number of the cases cited, or to go into them to an extent that might show the reasons for the rule, and the apparent exceptions thereto, we are convinced the opinions are read with resultant confusion, unless the facts in each ease are clearly in mind. We find no reason to be averse to the declaration of the

• general rule as found in the first case cited by the plaintiffs (City Council, etc., v. Milwee et al., 31 Okla. 621), to the effect .that “Courts of equity are only conversant with matters of property and the maintenance of civil rights, and will not interfere to enforce or protect purely political rights.” An election to -recall the mayor of the city of McAlester, under the provisions of apparent law, was sought there to be prohibited by injunction.

Davis, Supt. of Public Instruction, v. Whitehead, 86 Okla. 274, 208 Pac. 216, is urged as authority from this court on the question involved. This case sought injunc-tive relief'against an election for the consoli *203 dation of school districts. The decision turned upon the right of appeal given by statute. In the language used in the ease:

■<* * * ipkg mle ig announced to the effect that courts will not interfere with the action of school officers in forming or altering school districts, except in cases of fraud, corruption, oppression, ■ or where gross injustice is clearly shown. Where an appeal may be taken from the action of an official forming or altering school districts, the weight of authority appears to support the rule that the remedy by appeal is exclusive.”

Write much about the varying opinions of the courts, discussing the sacfedness of political rights, the exercise of which chancery will not ordinarily assume jurisdiction to regulate or defeat by injunction,- can it be said there is an invasion of any right, political or otherwise, for equity to assert its power to prevent an intended election, accompanied by a large expenditure of public funds, which, if the vote is favorable, would have for its purpose dismembering a political subdivision without sanction or basis in apparent law, but in- violation of the law of the state? Political rights is a misnomer if the alleged rights sought to be exercised have not only no sanction in law, but are for a purpose in excess of and in violation of apparent law.

In the case of Cleveland Cliffs Iron Co. v. Village of Kinney, 262 Fed. 980, the Supreme Court of the United States, in discussing a case involving a question similar to the one here, said:

“All of the cases cited by plaintiff in which injunctions were granted against the holding of elections were based upon the fact that there was some matter outside of the election itself, into which the court might properly inquire, and the determination of which might necessitate the forbidding of the intended election.”

There is no case cited where the result of the proposed election might be an expression of the voters in favor of dismemberment of a political subdivision, for the purpose of forming a new one, but which expression could not, under the law as it is, be effective, where a court of equity has refused to interpose and grant the relief prayed. Where equity has refused to take jurisdiction, the exercise of the political rights against which injunction was sought was based upon the authority of apparent law, and not outside apparent law, or the election could have no result other than that which is purely political, such as a determination of who shall or shall not hold office or exercise the right of franchise.

The case here involved is not such a case.

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Related

Kelly v. Scott
1927 OK 171 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1927)
Savage v. Gotham
1923 OK 775 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 393, 216 P. 460, 90 Okla. 201, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 1147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulick-v-linn-okla-1923.