Hamilton v. Salt Lake County Sewerage Improvement District No. 1

390 P.2d 235, 15 Utah 2d 216, 1964 Utah LEXIS 231
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1964
Docket9910
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 390 P.2d 235 (Hamilton v. Salt Lake County Sewerage Improvement District No. 1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamilton v. Salt Lake County Sewerage Improvement District No. 1, 390 P.2d 235, 15 Utah 2d 216, 1964 Utah LEXIS 231 (Utah 1964).

Opinion

HENRIOD, Chief Justice.

Appeal from a judgment voiding a sewer bond election. Affirmed.

The sewer district raised two points on appeal: 1) that the mandatory provisions of the statute with respect to the bond election became directory only, after the election, and 2) that the protestants here did not demonstrate that there were sufficient illegal votes to alter the result.

We cannot agree with the first point on appeal, under the facts of this particular case, although as a general proposition, the point might be well taken in a case, if departure from statutory interdiction is quite inconsequential. Each case must be bottomed on its own facts.

As to the second point on appeal, we think that plaintiffs did not point numerically to a sufficient number of specific and proven illegal ballots, which were 16, to overcome the 95 plurality in the election where 2,727 *218 ballots, were deposited, but we do believe other uncontroverted evidence added to the proven illegal votes lends substance to a conclusion that the election may have turned out otherwise if statutory requirements and proper procedural methods had been employed.

The trial court based its decision on the grounds that the County Clerk had failed to furnish a certified list of registered voters 1) residing outside of municipalities but within the sewer district 1 and 2) those within the district generally. 2 The court, wé believe, was in error to some degree on both counts but his decision was also based on the fact that the resolution of the trustees required such lists, which requirement concededly was not fulfilled. Hence his judgment seems to be justified. The court also was most careful to point out that if any of the other objections raised by the plaintiffs were well taken, they would support and validate the judgment. This is in line with our own pronouncements. 3 Suffice it to say, plaintiffs voiced about every objection that could have been raised. Some were not well taken. Others, however, either individually or collectively have sufficient merit to sustain the trial court’s judgment invalidating the bond election.

Before the facts are documented here, we feel it of sufficient concern to allay some fears reflected by the litigants and any “amicus curiae.” 4 Doing so, we generalize and hold the following:

1. This decision will not affect similar cases where the issuance of bonds has become fait accompli and the time for protest has expired. 5

2. We need not canvass matters raised for the first time on appeal. 6

3. A state senator ipso facto is not ineligible to act as trustee for a sewer district.

4. A sewer bond election is a special election (20-1-3), required to be “held at other times” than on a general election day (20-1-1). 7

*219 5. Protestants reasonably and substantially must demonstrate that the election would have resulted differently but for departure from statutory interdiction or dereliction at the ballot box, and it is for the judicial process to determine each case on its own merits, where timely and proper protest has been registered.

6. Where voter qualification is based on taxpayer status, official tax rolls covering the area are presumed to be accurate and to reflect such status, until otherwise shown.

7. Voter eligibility is not solely determinable by an unsworn statement by him who presents himself as a voter in the area involved, absent anything else.

8. Where a sewer district’s boundaries bisect general, regular, voting districts, reasonable and accurate procedures must be effected by the trustees to determine voter eligibility in the sewer district and to exclude persons not eligible.

9. Whether wives are qualified as vot■ers because of their inchoate dower interest, or whether buyers under a conditional sales contract, are eligible to vote if they do not appear on the tax rolls, were not issues in the case, as conceded in defendants’ brief, and hence are determinable when and if they arise.

The sewer district in which the bond election was to be conducted is a wide area of about 54 square miles. The trustees of the district, one of whom was a state senator, by resolution, called for a bond election to construct and maintain sewer' facilities. The election was to be held on the date required for general elections (Title 20-1-1, U.C.A.1953). Special elections such as this are to be “held at other times.” The trustees’ resolution required the County Clerk to furnish the lists that the trial court said had to be furnished by the Clerk before the election could be valid.

The trustees designated established regular, official general election districts as the same voting districts for the special bond election districts, and named the same registration agents as previously had been named by a different agency of government, but named their own judges for the special bond election. Four of the seven general election districts were bisected by the sewer district, so that a goodly number of voters at the general election were qualified to vote in the latter, but may have been ineligible to vote on the bond issue, because they may not have been “qualified voters as shall have paid a property tax in the (sewer) district” *220 the year before (17-6-3.1). The trustees in their resolution specifically required that this provision be enforced.

The resolution, as adverted to above, required the County Clerk to 1) furnish a list of voters residing outside of municipalities, but within the sewer district, and also 2) a certified copy of a list of those living in the district generally. The first list requested applied only to voting on trustees under 17-6-3.1, not as to the bond issue, and hence was a confusing, but idle gesture. The second list required had to do, perhaps, with the bond issue, but added also to the confusion since obviously an effort was made to comply with 17-6-3.3, which provided for the bond election procedure to be in accordance with Utah laws having to do with “elections on the issuance of courthouse bonds by counties.” We can find no such Utah law, but assuming the legislature intended not to use the word “courthouse,” a matter we do not decide, the circumstance is mentioned to point up one of the many factors that in the aggregate reflected the confusion mentioned. 8 At any rate the County Clerk, apparently willing, did not furnish the lists required in the resolution because, he said, it was impossible to canvass the wide area before the election and thus determine the addresses of the prospective voters. (Emphasis ours)

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Bluebook (online)
390 P.2d 235, 15 Utah 2d 216, 1964 Utah LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-salt-lake-county-sewerage-improvement-district-no-1-utah-1964.