Ingram v. Board of Com'rs of Pottawatomie County

1930 OK 304, 289 P. 273, 144 Okla. 41, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 649
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 17, 1930
Docket21058
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1930 OK 304 (Ingram v. Board of Com'rs of Pottawatomie 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
Ingram v. Board of Com'rs of Pottawatomie County, 1930 OK 304, 289 P. 273, 144 Okla. 41, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 649 (Okla. 1930).

Opinion

OULLISON, J.

This is an appeal from the district court • of Pottawatomie county, Okla., wherein plaintiffs, J. A. Ingram and others, as taxpayers and property owners in said county, filed their petition for a permanent injunction to enjoin the defendants, the board of county commissioners of Pottawatomie county, and O. E. Pettigrew and J. D. Seay, members of said board, from expending certain funds in the hands of the county treasurer of said county, for the repair and rebuilding of the Pottawatomie county courthouse.

The defendants filed a demurrer to plaintiffs’ petition, and the trial court, after a hearing thereon, sustained said demurrer and dismissed the action. Prom the judgment of the trial court sustaining defendants’ demurrer and dismissing the case, plaintiffs appeal to this court.

The material allegations of plaintiffs’ original and amended petition are as follows:

Plaintiffs allege that under the provisions of Senate Bill No. 68, Session Laws of 1925, (eh. 13), and House Bill No. 165, Session Laws of 1925 (ch. 140), a tax levy of one mill was made in Pottawatomie! county for the purpose of erecting a county courthouse at Tecumseh, and that said tax was so collected; that the provisions of Senate Bill No. 68, supra, have heretofore been held unconstitutional by this court; that two members of said board of county commissioners, constituting a majority, 'had passed a resolution to expend the money derived from said levy in repairing the old courthouse; that they had passed a resolution employing an architect and directing him to draw plans and specifications to repair the courthouse, and alleged that unless enjoined the board of county commissioners would contract illegal indebtedness and would attempt to repair the courthouse and expend the money derived from the alleged illegal levy for said purpose.

Plaintiffs attached as exhibits to their amended petition the resolution of the board of county commissioners providing for the creating of a courthouse .fund in said county, in accordance with and pursuant to the provisions of Senate Bill No. 68 and House Bill No. 165, Session Laws 1925, which acts provide for the transfer of certain funds into said courthouse fund, making other provisions with reference thereto, and declaring an emergency.

Plaintiffs also attach as an exhibit to their amended petition a resolution of said board for the levy of a tax of one mill for courthouse funds, in accordance with Senate Bill No. 68, supra, and further allege that the true intent and purpose' in making the alleged illegal levy of one mill was for the sole purpose of constructing a new courthouse and jail, and not to repair the old courthouse.

The plaintiffs in error, who were plaintiffs in the trial court, direct their argument on appeal to the sole proposition that the trial court erred in sustaining defendants’ demurrer and in refusing to grant the injunction as prayed for.

The record herein discloses that the relief sought by plaintiffs was the granting of an injunction against the defendants, which, of necessity, involves and invokes the jurisdiction and powers of a court of equity.

The record affirmatively discloses that the plaintiffs seek equitable relief from the action of the board of county commissioners.

It is a familiar rule of law, recognized in this jurisdiction and universally accepted, that when a party has a plain and adequate remedy at law, he cannot invoke the jurisdiction or powers of a court of equity. Black v. Geissler, 58 Okla. 335, 159 Pac. 1124; Fast v. Rogers, Co. Treas., 30 Okla. 289, 119 Pac. 241; Racy v. Racy, 12 Okla. 650, 73 Pac. 305.

Section 5834, C. O. S. 1921, as amended by section 1, ch. 43, Session Laws 1923, clearly provides that from decisions of the board of county commissioners, aggrieved parties have the right of appeal to the district court. Said section provides, in part:

“Prom all decisions of the board of county 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 *43 couhty clerk, conditioned that the appellant will prosecute his or her appeal without delay, and pay all costs that he or she may be adjudged to pay in the said district court.

In construing this statute, the court in Board of Com’rs of Cherokee County v. Hatfield, 121 Okla. 28, 247 Pac. 77, held:

“Section 5834,, C. S. 1921, as amended by chapter 48, S. L. 1923, provides: ‘Prom 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. * * *’ The foregoing language implies that an issue of some kind must be properly before the board of commissioners for a decision, and that in all matters properly before the board, where an issue is involved, necessitating a decision, and a party or parties are aggrieved by such decision, when made, they have the right of appeal to the district court for a trial de novo. * * *”

The questions raised by plaintiffs’ petition, now the subject-matter of this appeal, presented issues properly before the board of county commissioners of Pottawatomie county, necessitating a decision by said board, within the meaning of section 5834, supra.

Resolution No. 134, attached to plaintiffs’ amended petition as an exhibit, creates and provides for a courthouse fund in said county in accordance with and pursuant to the provisions of Senate Bill No. 68 and House Bill No. 165, Session Laws 1925, providing for the transfer of certain funds into said courthouse fund, making other ■ provisions with reference thereto, and declaring an emergency.

In the matter now before us, the commissioners decided in favor of reconstructing the Pottawatomie county courthouse, and in their own judgment they construed the above statutes and assumed to exercise authority thereunder.

Conceding the invalidity of Senate Bill No. 68, which had at that time been held unconstitutional, still, under Resolution No. 134, the action of the county commissioners acting under House Bill No. 165, supra, which is a special act creating a courthouse fund for Pottawatomie county and providing that it shall be expended by the direction of the board of county commissioners of said county, their action was, prima facie, good, House Bill No. 165 not having been judicially construed at that time.

It, therefore, follows that the questions raised by the plaintiffs’ petition presented issues properly before the board of county commissioners of said county, necessitating a decision by said board, as provided by section 5834, supra, and that the parties aggrieved by such decision had the right of appeal to the district court for a trial de novo, as provided by section 5834, supra.

This court, in Board of Com’rs of Okmulgee County v. Armstrong, 127 Okla. 260, 260 Pac. 758, in construing this same statute, held that the procedure provided therein for appeal to the district court from1 the action of the commissioners affords a plain and adequate remedy at law; that the jurisdiction of a court of equity cannot be invoked, and that the equitable action of injunction will not lie.

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1930 OK 304, 289 P. 273, 144 Okla. 41, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingram-v-board-of-comrs-of-pottawatomie-county-okla-1930.