Mayor of Guthrie v. Territory Ex Rel. Losey

1892 OK 12, 31 P. 190, 1 Okla. 188, 1893 Okla. LEXIS 20
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 19, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1892 OK 12 (Mayor of Guthrie v. Territory Ex Rel. Losey) 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
Mayor of Guthrie v. Territory Ex Rel. Losey, 1892 OK 12, 31 P. 190, 1 Okla. 188, 1893 Okla. LEXIS 20 (Okla. 1892).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

BURFORD, J :

On the 22dday of April, 1889, at the opening of the Oklahoma country to settlement and occupancy, a large number of people settled for townsite purposes upon the lands now occupied by the city of Guthrie. The act of congress approved March 2, 1889 contains a provision that no entry of lands for townsite purposes shall embrace more than 320 acres in any one entry. To avoid this inhibition and seggregate more lands for the purpose of trade and business, four separate entries were made of these lands, consisting of 320 acres each, and were severally denominated Guthrie, East Guthrie, Capitol Hill and West Guthrie. The townsite settlers and occupants of each of these subdivisions organized what was called provisional Governments, under charters adopted by the people at public meetings held for such purposes, and each se *190 lected municipal officers, made public improvement'-, graded streets, erected buildings, constructed bridges, adopted laws and ordinances and arrested, punished and imprisoned violators of such ordinances. These provisional governments assumed and exercised all the powers, functions and authority of legally constituted municipal corporations and continued to exercise the same until the month of August A. D. 1890, when they were consolidated and organized as a village corporation under and pursuant to the laws of Nebraska, as adopted and extended over said Territory by the Act of Congress approved May 2, 1890, providing a Territorial government for the Territory of Oklahoma, and said village of Guthrie succeeded to all the improvements, property, books and documents of the several provisional governments.

During the existence of the several provisional governments they each contracted and created in various ways pertaining to their municipal affairs, certain debts, which remained unpaid at the time the said provisional governments were converted into a legally constituted municipal corporation.

The village of Guthrie continued her corporate existence until after the adjournment of the First Territorial legislature, when she organized as a city of the first class under the laws of Oklahoma, and has ever since remained such, with a mayor, common council and police officers, exercising all the functions and powers of a municipal corporation, and is composed of the same people, and embraces the same territory as the original provisional governments of Guthrie, East Guthrie, Capitol Hill and West Guthrie, and has succeeded to all their property and improvements and has adopted and appropriated the same.

During the session of the First legislature, and after the village of Guthrie had been organized, an Act *191 was passed, entitled “An Act for the Purpose of Providing for the Allowance and Payment of the Indebtedness Pleretofore Created by the People and Cities of Guthrie, East Guthrie, West Guthrie and Capitol Hill, now Consolidated into the Village of Guthrie”. (Chap. 14, Art. I Statute of Oklahoma.)

This act empowers the district judge of Logan county to appoint three disinterested persons, to act as referees to inquire into and pass upon all claims and demands of every character, heretofore issued by the four provisional governments for all purposes. •

“The holders of claims are requested to present them to the referees, supported by affidavit that the claims are bona fide ard were for money advanced, materials furnished or labor peformed for the benefit of the city requiring the same, and the referees are authorized to hear evidence if they deem necessary. The referees are required to give notice of the time for presentation of claims and after thirty days all demands not presented are barred.”

Section 4 of said Act provides:

“That after the commission or referees shall have passed upon and allowed any and all claims mentioned in this act, they shall make a report to the district court of same, showing the names and amounts allowed by them, and also all claims and the names of persons and amounts disallowed by them, for approval or disapproval of the district judge. And all claims allowed and approved by the district judge shall be certified to the mayor and council of the village of Guthrie, who are hereby authorized and directed to issue warrants upon the village,, and payable by the villagers to the holders and owners, payable in installments, each of the amounts to be in one, two, three, four and five years, to bear interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from the date of the allowance by the commission or referees; and said mayor and council of the village of Guthrie shall levy a tax upon the property of the residents of said village to pay the warrants herein referred to, levying same upon each subdivision heretofore constituting *192 Guthrie, East Guthrie, West Guthrie, and Capitol Hill, according to the amount of indebtedness created by the city councils, the majors and school boards, heretofore acting for and in behalf of the' people resident of said cities. Each of said cities to be liable for and taxable under this act for the amount of indebtedness created, by them.”

Section 5 is as follows:

“That said commission or referees shall be allowed such compensation as the district judge may allow them, for the services to be performed by them under this act. and the village of Guthrie shall pay the same to the said commissioners or referees, upon the order of the-district judge.”

Acting under the provisions of this statute, the district judge of Logan county appointed the relator with two others, referees or commissioners, and they qualified and performed the duties required of them in said act, and made their report to the district court. Thereupon the court ordered that the relator be allowed the-sum of $425.00 for his services as such referee, and! ordered that the council issue warrants of the city of' Guthrie therefor. This order was presented to the-council in session and a demand made for the warrant,, which was refused.

The relator applied to the district court of Logan cou.nty for an alternative writ of mandate, commanding, the city to issue said warrant, or show cause why the same should not be done.

The city council made their return to this writ byway of demurrer, and assigned as cause for demurrer,.

“That the court had no jurisdiction to grant the relief; prayed for.
“That the act upon which the claim was-based was unconstitutional and in conflict Avith the organic act of; Oklahoma.
“That the petition does not state facts- t®. entitle the; relator to the relief prayed for.”

*193 This demurrer was overruled and exception saved.

The city then answered in eleven paragraphs, the first of which was a general denial of the allegations contained in the petition.

The relator demurred to the several answers, and the demurrer was sustained as to all of the answers except the first, to which it was overruled. This paragraph was afterwards stricken out, for the reason that the defendant refused to verify the same.

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1892 OK 12, 31 P. 190, 1 Okla. 188, 1893 Okla. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-guthrie-v-territory-ex-rel-losey-okla-1892.