Marsh v. Village of Trenton

137 N.W. 981, 92 Neb. 63, 1912 Neb. LEXIS 7
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 1912
DocketNo. 16,663
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 137 N.W. 981 (Marsh v. Village of Trenton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marsh v. Village of Trenton, 137 N.W. 981, 92 Neb. 63, 1912 Neb. LEXIS 7 (Neb. 1912).

Opinion

Hamer, J.

The appellees, Prank C. Marsh, John C. Stalter, George Hirschfleld and five other persons, filed their petition in the office of the clerk of the district court for Hitchcock county, seeking to have certain territory therein described detached from the village of Trenton in said county. In addition to the allegations that they are legal voters, except as to a part, and the exclusive owners and in possession of said territory, they say in their petition (a) that when the village was incorporated large tracts of wild, grazing and purely agricultural lands “in all directions from and outside of the platted lots, blocks, streets and alleys of said village,” including the lands and territory sought to be detached, were incorporated in said village; (6) that the lands and territory sought to be detached are purely agricultural, and are used by the owners “for farming, grazing and stock-raising, and as rural residences, and no part is laid out into village blocks, or lots, and there are no streets, alleys, or thoroughfares except the public highway “on the section line dividing section 2, township 2, range' 38, from section 35, township 3, range 33,” and which road was laid out by the county commissioners and extends many miles east; and (c) that the case was submitted on the petition of. the plaintiffs, Prank O. Marsh, John O. Stalter, George Hirschfleld, John H. Brown, Ralph S. Otis, Nannie Marsh and Mattie Stalter, the amended answer of the defendant, the village of Trenton, and the reply, and the evidence; and that the court found in favor of the said plaintiffs named (the name of the plaintiff Thornhill being omitted from the list) and the territory disconnected by the judgment of the district court includes only the tracts indicated on plat “exhibit A” as the Hirschfield, Stalter, Marsh and Brown tracts, [65]*65leaving the Thornhill tract, including what had been a part of Wayne street and an unplatted tract west of it, between the Brown tract and the village, and also leaving between the Hirschfield tract and the village three small unplatted tracts and the park and a part of that territory formerly platted as “Wayne street of the village of Trenton,” all the land east of the village and between the Brown tract and the Hirschfield tract being left out of the judgment detaching the territory, and Wayne street seems to have been vacated after the proceedings were begun, and therefore an uncertain quantity of land, approximating 40 acres more or less, has been left unplatted between the village and the land sought to be retained in the village, and the east line of sections 35 and 2 are now the east boundary line of the corporate limits of the village of: Trenton; (d) that the territory sought to be detached is no part of the village, does not conduce to the welfare of the village or its citizens, except that its retention in the village would enable the raising of more revenue, but that the assessment, levy and collection thereof would be unjust and inequitable. The plat filed with the petition shows the relative size of the several tracts sought to be detached. The amended answer admits the incorporation of the village, and that the plaintiffs respectively reside on and own the lands described in their petition, also alleges the lien of $6,000 in bonds upon all lands included in the village. The reply is a general denial. The land detached by the judgment of the court is as follows: Nannie Marsh’s land,.5 acres; John H. Brown’s land, 8.75 acres; Mattie Stalter’s land, 300 feet by 634 feet; George Hirschfield’s land, 300 feet by 300 feet. The land in question is shown by the plat attached to the record.

It is urged in the appellant’s brief that these parties carry on business in the village or perforan their official duties at the court-house in Trenton as county officers; that they and their families get their mail at the village post office; that they trade at the village stores, and send their children to the village school, and use the village [66]*66streets, and. enjoy the convenience of having their purchases delivered by the merchants, and that they partake equally of all the benefits and advantages of village organization and government, along with the other inhabitants of the place. It is also said that the tracts are used chiefly as residences, but that they have small orchards, gardens and alfalfa patches, and keep domestic animals in the way of horses, hogs and cows. The judgment of the district court granted the petition of the plaintiffs, except as to the plaintiff Thornhill whose name is dropped from the proceedings.

It is contended by the appellant, the village, (1) that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; (2) that the finding and decree of the court is not sustained by sufficient evidence, and that the testimony introduced by the applicants clearly establishes the fact that the village could “reach out and connect the territory,” and for that reason that the district court should not have granted' the petition. It is urged that the petitioners “should not be allowed to secede over the objections of their fellow villagers.” Section 8978, Ann. St. 1909, provides, among other things: '“If the court find in favor of the petitioners, and that justice and equity require that such territory, or any part thereof, be disconnected from such city or village, it shall enter a decree accordingly.” The case of the Village of Hartington v. Luge, 33 Neb. 623, is cited in support of the appellant’s contention that the land might be annexed to the village, and therefore that it should not be disconnected-. In the opinion in that case it is said: “It will be seen that to justify the annexation of territory it must appear that such territory, or some part, would receive material benefit from the annexation, or that justice and equity require such annexation. Unless one of these conditions exist, there is no authority in a village board or the district court to annex territory;” but, in the opinion it is said: “If this action could be sustained upon the facts pleaded and prayed, then a village might annex a whole township or county, as such [67]*67annexation conld be placed upon the same grounds as it is sought to predicate this action upon. This cannot be permitted.” It may be a little difficult to determine exactly what “justice and equity” require in this sort of case. In City of Wahoo v. Dickinson, 23 Neb. 426, it was held that the court had power, in a proceeding instituted for the annexation of territory to a municipality, to consider and determine whether that real estate would receive material benefits, and also whether justice and equity required such annexation.

In Bisenius v. City of Randolph, 82 Neb. 520, it is said by Mr. Justice Root, speaking for this court: “In State v. Dimond, 44 Neb. 154, * * * we adopted from the opinion of Mr. Justice Mitchell in State v. Village of Minnetonka, 57 Minn. 526, a definition of the conditions essential to vest county commissioners with power to incorporate territory within a municipality ; that is, such lands must ‘have some unity of interest with the platted portion, in the maintenance of a village government.’ ” Mr. Justice Post is quoted as saying in the opinion in State v. Dimond, supra, “that the rule applied is not only reasonable, but safe and logical.” This court has said, in the third paragraph of the syllabus in Bisenius v. City of Randolph, supra: “Upon an appeal in an action under said statute (sec. 8978), the judgment of the district court will be affirmed, unless it is made to appear that the trial judge committed an important mistake of fact or.

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Bluebook (online)
137 N.W. 981, 92 Neb. 63, 1912 Neb. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marsh-v-village-of-trenton-neb-1912.