Lackey v. State Ex Rel. Grant

1911 OK 270, 116 P. 913, 29 Okla. 255, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 285
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 11, 1911
Docket2666
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 1911 OK 270 (Lackey v. State Ex Rel. Grant) 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
Lackey v. State Ex Rel. Grant, 1911 OK 270, 116 P. 913, 29 Okla. 255, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 285 (Okla. 1911).

Opinion

HAYES, J.

On the 8th day of November, 1910, in pursuance of a resolution passed by the city council of Oklahoma City, aii election was held in that city at which freeholders were elected for the purpose of writing a charter to be submitted to the qualified electors of the city. The freeholders elected at said election made, prepared, and compiled a charter to be submitted to the qualified electors for their rejection or adoption, and thereafter, on the 8th day of March, 1911, the proposed charter was voted upon at an election held, within said city, at which more than three-fourths of the voters voting thereon cast their ballots in favor of the adoption of the charter. On the 14th day of March, 1911, the charter was presented to the Governor, and by him in all things approved. Section 1, art. 2, of that charter provides that the elective officers of the city shall be five commissioners, namely, the mayor, who is the commissioner of public affairs, a commissioner of accounting and finance, a commissioner of public safety, a commissioner of public works, and a commissioner of public property, all of whom shall be elected at large by the qualified electors of the city for a term of four years and until their successors are elected and qualified. Section 3 of article 10 of the charter provides that there shall be held on the eighth Tuesday after the charter shall have been adopted and approved by the Governor an election in the city for the purpose of electing the five commissioners provided for by the charter, who, when elected, shall constitute the board of commissioners for the cuy, with terms of office as provided for in the charter. Section 4 of the same article adopts and puts in full force and effect in the city, for the purpose of said special election, the general laws of the state applicable to municipal elections. On the 9th day of *257 May, 1911, said special election was held, and defendants in error, relators in the court below and hereafter referred to as such, were duty elected as the commissioners provided for under the charter, and, after a canvass of the returns of said election, received certificates of election from the county election board of Oklahoma county. They • thereafter took and subscribed to the oath of office required by law, and executed bonds in the sum prescribed by the charter, which were approved, and each of them then took possession of the office to which he was elected and entered upon the discharge of its respective duties. Respondents, who constituted the officers of the city and were in charge thereof, and engaged in administering the affairs of the city prior to the adoption of the charter, are in possession of the books, records, funds, and other property of the city, which are necessary to relators in the discharge of their official duties. Relators charge in their petition that respondents, acting together, wrongfully refuse to turn over to relators the books, records, and property of the city, and they pray in their petition for a writ of mandamus requiring respondents to deliver to them all books, accounts, contracts, records, paraphernalia, and all other property now ,in the possession of respondents belonging to the city. Respondents by their answer first make a general denial of the allegations of relators’ petition, and then make certain specific admissions, and lastly they make various allegations of affirmative facts; but it will not be necessary to set out in further detail the pleadings. Some questions that might have been raised under the pleadings have been expressly waived by counsel in their presentation of the case to the court.

The contentions made by respondents in this court present two propositions for our consideration and determination, the first of which is: Has the city of Oklahoma City, which is now and has been for several years past a city of the first class, power to frame and adopt a charter which provides for the administering of its municipal affairs by a board of five commissioners elected by the people at large? And, second, Were rela-tors elected at an election authorized by law?

*258 Prior to the admission of the state into the Union, there existed in the territory now constituting the state two sets of municipal corporations, organized under two different general statutes. One set of these corporations was organized and their powers fixed under the provisions of chapter 29 of Mansfield’s Digest of the Statutes of Arkansas, 'extended in force in the Indian Territory by Act of Congress approved June 28, 1898 (Act June 28, 1898,- c. 517, 30 Stat. 495). The other set had been organized and their powers defined by chapters 12 and 13 of Wilson’s Revised and Annotated Statutes of the Territory of Oklahoma of 1903, as amended by subsequent acts of the territorial Legislature. None of these municipal corporations were destroyed by the admission of the state, but all of them, by specific provision of the Constitution, were continued; but the general statutes in force in the Indian Territory side of the state, constituting the charter of such corporations, were superseded by the statutes of Oklahoma Territory, extended in force in the state; and while the municipal corporations of the Indian Territory continued to exist as municipal corporations in the state after its admission, the powers of such corporations, except as otherwise provided by the Constitution, are to be found in the general statutes of Oklahoma Territory, extended in force in the state, providing for the organization of municipal corporations and defining their powers. State ex rel. v. Ledbetter, 22 Okla. 251, 97 Pac. 834. Upon the admission of the state, there existed therein no municipal corporations with any other charter than that which was provided by some statute extended in force in the state.

Section 1 of article 18 of the Constitution provides:

“Municipal corporations shall not be created by special laws, but the Legislature, by general laws shall provide for the incorporation and organization of cities and towns and the classification of same in proportion to population, subject to the provisions of this article.”

The power of the legislative department of the state to create municipal corporations and definé their power is recognized by this section of the Constitution, which, in specific terms, puts certain limitation upon said power in that it prohibits the creation *259 of any such corporaton bjr a special law, and, on the other hand, commands that the -creation of such corporations and their on ganization, so far as provided for by the Legislature, shall be by general laws; and it further directs that the classification of such incorporated towns and cities shall be based upon their population, and, added to these limitations of the section, is the further limitation that the powers therein named shall be exercised subject to the provisions of the article of which this section forms a part. The second section of the same article reads:

“Every municipal corporation now existing within this state shall continue with all of its present rights and powers until otherwise provided by law, and shall always have the additional rights and powers conferred by this Constitution.”

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Bluebook (online)
1911 OK 270, 116 P. 913, 29 Okla. 255, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lackey-v-state-ex-rel-grant-okla-1911.