Hamilton County v. City of Chattanooga

310 S.W.2d 153, 203 Tenn. 85, 7 McCanless 85, 1958 Tenn. LEXIS 279
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 310 S.W.2d 153 (Hamilton County v. City of Chattanooga) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamilton County v. City of Chattanooga, 310 S.W.2d 153, 203 Tenn. 85, 7 McCanless 85, 1958 Tenn. LEXIS 279 (Tenn. 1958).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Swepston

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The sole question in this ease is whether under Section 9 of Ch. 113 of the Public Acts of 1955. T.C.A. sec. 6-318, counties are included within the phrase “any affected *87 instrumentality of the state of Tennessee”. Tlie chancellor answered this question in the affirmative and hence this appeal by the City of Chattanooga,

Able and constructive briefs have been filed by all counsel and the same have been given careful consideration. We do not deem it necessary or advisable, however, to refer in detail to every proposition advanced in the respective briefs, but shall confine our discussion to what we deem necessary to express the conclusions we have reached.

Section 9 of said original act is appended hereto; also Section 1, Ch. 381, of the Acts of 1957, amending said Section 9.

This suit was filed under the declaratory judgment law of Tennessee by Hamilton County seeking a construction of Section 9, supra. The bill charges that pursuant to Ch. 113, Acts of 1955, the City of Chattanooga by ordinance effective January 8, 1957, has annexed that portion of Hamilton County known as Eastdale, which included the Eastdale Elementary School of Hamilton County, and by ordinance effective January 9, 1957, said City had annexed that portion of Hamilton County known as East Brainerd, which includes the Elbert Long School; that said County has spent a total of $539,117.34 in building and equipping these two schools for which judgment was sought against the City of Chattanooga; that Hamilton County had issued bonds in the amount of $81,668.66 in part payment for erecting and equipping the Eastdale School, which bonds are still outstanding and unpaid, and $109,145.09 in bonds outstanding and unpaid for the erecting and equipping of the Elbert Long School.

*88 The bill prayed for a declaration of its rights under said statute and for a judgment against the City of Chattanooga for the total amount, supra, expended on said schools.

The City demurred on three grounds: (1) said bill fails to allege any state of facts upon which relief may be granted as against this defendant.

(2) Said bill shows on its face that this defendant, a municipality under the laws of Tennessee, legally annexed the territory in which the two schools set out in the bill are located and under the law, immediately upon the effective day of said annexation, title passed unconditionally to said municipality.

(3) Said bill shows on its face that none of complainants are “instrumentality of the State of Tennessee such as, but not limited to, a utility district, sanitary district, school district, or other public service district ejusdem generis, and, therefore, are not entitled to arbitration, award, payment or other relief under Section 9, Ch. 113, Public Acts of 1955. ’ ’

The chancellor overruled the demurrer.

Prior to the present act under discussion it was held in Prescott v. Town of Lennox, 100 Tenn. 591, 47 S.W. 181, following a prior unreported decision, that valuable property acquired for school purposes became the property of the annexing city after said school district had been annexed. Questions of whether or not property held by a city in its private or proprietary capacity, could be acquired by another annexing municipality and the question of whether or not property held by the annexed *89 territory in its governmental capacity must be paid for by the annexing authority are all discussed in 37 Am. Jur., 658, sec. 41, and 62 C.J.S. Municipal Corporations sec. 77, p. 185, et seq. Some of the cases making a distinction between property already paid for by the County or other annexed territory as distinguished from improvements as to which there remains an existing indebtedness.

Prior to the 1953 amendment to Art. XI, Sec. 9 of the Tennessee Constitution, the extension of municipal boundaries in Tennessee has been accomplished largely by private act of the Legislature (Professor Wallace Mendelson, 8 Vanderbilt Law Review, 1, 3), and the Legislature had unrestrained power to change the territorial limits of municipal corporations either by public or private act without the consent of the municipality or the inhabitants thereof (Town of Oneida v. Pearson Hardwood Flooring Co., 169 Tenn. 449, 88 S.W.2d 998). Municipalities had no power to- initiate annexation proceedings and the same could only be initiated in accordance with Section 3320 of the 1932 Code, T.C.A. sec. 6-301, upon the petition of at least 50 freeholders, all of whom must have resided in the territory proposed to be annexed.

In 1954 appeared the article by Professor Mendels on in Vanderbilt Law Review, supra, entitled “Suggestions for the Improvement of Municipal Annexation Law”. Then the 1955 Legislature enacted Ch. 113, now under discussion. The substance of the Act is stated in Witt v. McCanless, 200 Tenn. 360, 292 S.W.2d 392. This act makes a radical change in the methods by which municipalities may annex adjoining territory. It is very carefully drawn *90 and obviously the draftsman bad tbe benefit of Professor Mendelson’s article, as much of the phraseology is identical; else this is the greatest coincidence since John Adams and Thomas Jefferson died on the same day. For example, Section 2(b) of the act is almost identical with the fourth suggestion in the Appendix on page 18 of the article with reference to quo warranto proceedings. The same material is found in suggestion No. 2 of the Appendix on page 50. Then section 9, following Sections 7 and 8 which latter two refer to the larger and smaller municipalities, contains first, the phrase “other stated instru-mentalities”, which necessarily means State instrumen-talities other than existing municipalities. Then in the body of Section 9 appears the phrase “affected instrumentality of the State of Tennessee”. In the first proposal of the Appendix, supra, on page 14, the phrase does not appear but the description is spelled out in these words “annexing municipality and any other town, city or county” and in the next paragraph public service districts are referred to. Nor is the phrase used in the third proposal. However, in the second and fourth proposals the phrase is used and is defined to “include any town, city, county, utility, sanitary, school or other public service district within the State of Tennessee.” Pp. 16 and 18.

Now it'seems to us that the draftsman of the act in question has simply condensed his thoughts to include every State instrumentality' other than a municipality by the expression “any affected instrumentality of the State of Tennessee, such as, but not limited to, a utility district, a sanitary district, school district, or other public service district.”

*91

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Bluebook (online)
310 S.W.2d 153, 203 Tenn. 85, 7 McCanless 85, 1958 Tenn. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-county-v-city-of-chattanooga-tenn-1958.