Matter of Boundaries of City of Vicksburg

560 So. 2d 713, 1990 WL 39806
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1990
Docket07-CA-59634
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 560 So. 2d 713 (Matter of Boundaries of City of Vicksburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Boundaries of City of Vicksburg, 560 So. 2d 713, 1990 WL 39806 (Mich. 1990).

Opinion

560 So.2d 713 (1990)

In the Matter of the Extension of the BOUNDARIES OF the City of VICKSBURG, Mississippi.
MAGNOLIA MARINE TRANSPORT COMPANY, Ergon, Inc., Ergon General Store, Inc. d/b/a Ergon Marine and Industrial Supply, Ergon Refining, Inc., Bunge Corporation, Anderson-Tully Company, Tenarc Construction Company, and Warren County Port Commission
v.
CITY OF VICKSBURG, MS.

No. 07-CA-59634.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

April 4, 1990.
Rehearing Denied May 23, 1990.

*714 Joel J. Henderson, Edward D. Lamar, Henderson Duke Dantone & Hines, Greenville, Edley H. Jones, III, Ward Martin Hassell Jones & Williford, Robert R. Bailess, Wheeless Beanland Shappley & Bailess, Vicksburg, for appellants.

Wren C. Way, Way Field & Bodron, Vicksburg, G. Kenner Ellis, Jr., Greenville, for appellee.

Before HAWKINS, P.J., and ROBERTSON and ANDERSON, JJ.

ROBERTSON, Justice, for the Court:

A number of industrial firms north of the present city limits of Vicksburg, Mississippi, appeal a Chancery Court judgment confirming annexation to the City of 31.7 square miles within which Objectors' properties lie. Objectors' principal argument on appeal challenges the jurisdiction of the Chancery Court. They challenge as well the fairness of the proceedings below.

On October 7, 1985, the Mayor and Board of Aldermen of the City of Vicksburg adopted an annexation ordinance finding that the public convenience and necessity required enlargement of the corporate limits of the City by some 68.4 square miles and ordering the annexation thereof. On December 16, 1985, the City commenced the present proceedings by filng in the Chancery Court of Warren County, Mississippi, its complaint for confirmation of the annexation. Throughout the proceedings below, the City argued the entire annexation should be confirmed. In the alternative, the City urged, if the entire annexation were not confirmed, the Court should confirm annexation of a lesser area (-GL-) of 31.7 square miles, and, in fact, in its final judgment the Court did confirm annexation of the lesser area. The 31.7 square mile area confirmed for annexation lies entirely within the original 68.4 square mile area described in the October 7, 1985, annexation ordinance.

Vicksburg's corporate limits have heretofore included some 13.7 square miles in which approximately 26,000 persons reside. The areas in the annexation as confirmed include a large industrial area south and southwest of the present city limits, smaller residential areas to the south, southeast and east, a substantially developed residential corridor extending to the northeast along the western edge of the Vicksburg National Military Park and the harbor fill industrial area to the north and northwest of the present city limits. All Objectors come from this latter area. As enlarged by the annexation, Vicksburg will cover some 45.4 square miles and have a population of approximately 42,000.

Objectors complain that the Court was without authority to approve annexation of the lesser area on grounds the City never made a legislative determination that the public convenience and necessity required such a lesser annexation. The point is specious.

Mississippi law clearly empowers a chancery court sitting in an annexation confirmation proceeding to confirm the annexation of an area less than all the municipality seeks to annex. Mississippi Code § 21-1-33 (1972) provides:

If the chancellor finds from the evidence presented at such hearing that the proposed enlargement or contraction is reasonable and is required by the public convenience and necessity and in the event of an enlargement of a municipality, that reasonable public and municipal services will be rendered in the annexed territory within a reasonable time, the chancellor shall enter a decree approving, ratifying and confirming the proposed enlargement or contraction, and describing the boundaries of the municipality as altered. In so doing the chancellor shall have the right and the power to modify the proposed enlargement or contraction by decreasing the territory to be included in or excluded from the municipality, as the case may be... .

In City of Jackson v. Town of Flowood, 331 So.2d 909 (Miss. 1976), this Court considered Miss. Code Ann. § 21-1-33 (1972), quoted above, concerning the chancery court's power to modify the proposed area. "This provision of the statute gives the annexation procedure flexibility, and the *715 authority of the chancery court to omit areas from the proposed annexation has been upheld in the following cases. Lippian v. Ros, Registrar, 253 Miss. 325, 175 So.2d 138 (1965); In re City of Forest, 247 Miss. 340, 153 So.2d 688 (1963); In re City of Philadelphia, 232 Miss. 582, 100 So.2d 100 (1958); Dodd v. City of Jackson, 238 Miss. 372, 118 So.2d 319 (1960)." Flowood, 331 So.2d at 912. In Flowood, this Court upheld the exclusion of two areas from the Chancery Court's consideration due to an agreement between the city and objectors.

As stated in Lippian v. Ros, Registrar, 253 Miss. 325, 175 So.2d 138 (1965), the chancery court has the authority to "(1) ratify and approve the ordinance if found to be reasonable, (2) modify the proposed enlargement or contraction by decreasing the territory to be included or excluded, or (3) deny in toto the proposed enlargement or contraction if it is found to be unreasonable." Lippian, 175 So.2d at 144, citing Smith v. City of Meridian, 237 Miss. 486, 489, 115 So.2d 323 (1959); Ritchie v. City of Brookhaven, 217 Miss. 860, 65 So.2d 436, 832 (1953).

In a similar vein, Objectors claim they were surprised at the City's last minute maneuver in restricting the area it sought to annex, all to Objectors' great prejudice. Further, we are told the Court erred in allowing the City to offer evidence with respect to the lesser 31.7 acre area. The Court held evidence of the reasonableness of annexing the smaller area was necessarily

relevant and a necessary part of the Court's consideration of the whole area sought to be annexed.... In the Court's view, when the City disclosed that it would prove the reasonableness of annexing the entire area, the necessity as to any portion thereof is self-apparent.

We agree. Moreover, the record reflects that, after the City had offered its evidence in support of annexing the lesser area at the June 1986 hearing, the proceedings recessed, and it was only at a second recessed hearing held in January of 1987 that Objectors were required to go forward with their proof. We hold there was no legal inadequacy in the lack of notice via pleadings and discovery available to Objectors prior to the June 1986 hearing. Any practical inconvenience was more than cured by the fact that Objectors had some seven months within which to prepare their opposition case which was presented in January of 1987.

Particular objection is made to the use by the City of the Municipal Annexation Resource Analysis Study prepared by Joseph A. Lusteck and Associates, Inc. in August of 1982. The Lusteck Study discussed a proposed annexation of an area north of the current city limits of Vicksburg and very much like unto the area confirmed by the Chancery Court. In fact, Objectors had access to the annexation study well in advance of trial and on May 21, 1986 obtained the deposition of Lusteck, at which point he was questioned and cross-examined extensively about the study.

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Bluebook (online)
560 So. 2d 713, 1990 WL 39806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-boundaries-of-city-of-vicksburg-miss-1990.