In Re Courthouse of Okmulgee County

1916 OK 952, 161 P. 200, 58 Okla. 683, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 91
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 14, 1916
Docket8445
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1916 OK 952 (In Re Courthouse of Okmulgee County) 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
In Re Courthouse of Okmulgee County, 1916 OK 952, 161 P. 200, 58 Okla. 683, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 91 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

SHARP, J.

May. 4, 1916, by a vote of two to one, ' the county commissioners of Okmulgee county selected as a site for the county courthouse about to be constructed • in the city of Okmulgee, Okmulgee county, certain lots in block 110 of said city, owned by James Parkinson, J. D. Brazeel, and Anne Thomas, respectively, and by the same vote declined to consider and accept as a site for said courthouse' certain lots in block 59 of said city. These tracts are designated in the record„and the briefs of counsel as the Parkinson and Baker sites, and we shall so refer to them. Within 20 days after the action of the board, upon written demand of 75 freeholders of Okmulgee county, the county attorney of said county prosecuted an appeal from the decision of the board of county commissioners in the selection of the Parkinson site, which said appeal was in due time lodged in the district court. Notice of appeal was served upon one member of the board of county commissioners. Thereafter the board of county commissioners and Parkinson, Brazeel, and Thomas filed their respective motions to dismiss the appeal prosecuted by the county attorney for and on behalf of the said freeholders, on the grounds: (1) That no notice of an appeal had been served on either Parkinson, Brazeel, or Thomas; and (2) that the action of the board in selecting a. site for the location of the courthouse was not an appealable order.

The power of the board of commissioners to act and the regularity of its proceedings are not brought in quesr tion. It appears from the transcript of the proceedings had before the board of county commissioners: That on *685 the 1st day of May, 1916, a body known as the citizens’ advisory board held a meeting for the purpose of selecting a free site for the courthouse and jail. That on said date there had been filed with the county commissioners deeds and abstracts for two lots or parcels of ground, in response to a notice given by said board that all persons offering free sites should file their deeds with the county clerk by 2 o’clock p. m. on said 1st day of May; the sites proposed being as follows: The Parkinson site, situated- at the . corner of Seminole and Seventh streets; and the Stuart site, situated at the corner of Fifth street and Central avenue. That on said date, between the hours of 2 o’clock and 3 o’clock p. m., both the owners of the Parkinson site and the Stuart site offered to enlarge the respective sites donated by them, but before a vote was taken thereon, one Baker tendered to the advisory board a tract of land at Grand avenue and Fifth street. After said advisory board viewed and inspected said latter site, ón a second ballot being taken, the same was unanimously chosen as the courthouse -site. Thereafter said Baker, being the owner of said lands so selected, offered and tendered to the ..county commissioners a deed and abstract covering and embracing the tract of land selected by the advisory committee. Thus it appears that at the time the board acted there was presented to it for it's consideration and choice both the Parkinson and Baker sites. From the memorandum of the proceedings had by the board at its meeting of May 4th it seems that said body refused to consider the Baker site, because the offer was filed “one day late in the county clerk’s office.” The- demand served upon the county attorney by the said freeholders contains ■ a recital that prior to the decision by said board there had been filed with the county clerk of Okmulgee county a petition protesting against the selection of the Parkinson site, and *686 against the county commissioners making the selection of any site on said date, because of what was claimed to be a much more advantageous and desirable site offered by Baker, and that said protest was by said commissioners overruled, disallowed, and rejected in all things.

The statute by which we are to determine the right of the county attorney to prosecute an appeal, as was done in the case at bar, is section 1640, Rev. Laws 1910, as amended by the Act of March 11, 1915 (Sess. Laws, 1915, c. 117, p. 205), which reads:

“From all decisions of the board of commissioners, upon matters properly before them, there shall be allowed an appeal to. the district court by any persons aggrieved, including the county by its county attorney, upon filing a bond with sufficient penalty, and one or more sureties to be approved by the county clerk, conditioned that the appellant will prosecute his or her appeal without delay, and pay all cost that he or she may be adjudged to pay in the said district court; said bond shall be executed to the county, and may be sued in the name of the county upon breach of any condition therein: Provided, that the county attorney, upon the written demand of at least fifteen (15) freeholders of the county, shall take an appeal from any action of the board of county commissioners when said action relates to the interests or affairs of the county at large or any portion thereof, in the name of the county, when he deems it to the interest of the county so to do; and in such case no bond shall be required or given, and upon serving the notice provided for in the next section the county clerk shall proceed the same as if a bond had been filed.”

It is said by counsel for defendants in error that the word “decisions,” found at the beginning of said section, refers only to decisions that are judicial or of a judicial character, and not merely to those that are ministerial, and that, where it is provided in said section that the *687 county attorney upon demand of the required number of freeholders shall take an appeal from “any action” of the board of county commissioners, the rule ejusdem generis is applicable, and that the words “any action” refer to a “judicial decision.”

It is unnecessary that we at this time determine whether or not an appeal will lie to the district court from a purely ministerial act of the board of county commissioners when prosecuted by the county attorney, or determine the constitutionality of said provision; for, in our opinion, the action of the board in making a decision between contending forces and in determining the site for the courthouse was of a judicial character, or what is commonly termed “quasi judicial.” The right to select a courthouse site includes, necessarily, the power to decide that one site is more suitable than another; to take evidence if necessary, and adjudicate upon the merits of the different locations.

A quasi judicial duty is one lying in the judgment or discretion of an officer other than' a judicial officer. When such an officer is charged with looking into and acting upon facts not in a way which the law specifically directs, but after a discretion in its nature judicial, the function is termed “quasi judicial.” An act is judicial when it requires the exercise of judgment or discretion by one or more persons, or by a corporate body when acting as public officers in an official character, in a manner which seems to them just and equitable. State ex rel. Board of Liquidation v. Briede, 117 La. 183, 41 South. 487; Grider v. Tally, 77 Ala. 422, 54 Am. Rep. 65; Malmo, v. Commissioners, 72 Conn. 1, 43 Atl. 485; People v. Board of Supervisors, 35 Barb. (N. Y.) 408; Throop on Public Officers, sec. 553.

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Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 952, 161 P. 200, 58 Okla. 683, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-courthouse-of-okmulgee-county-okla-1916.