McDonald V. Doust

69 L.R.A. 220, 81 P. 60, 11 Idaho 14, 1905 Ida. LEXIS 33
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 69 L.R.A. 220 (McDonald V. Doust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDonald V. Doust, 69 L.R.A. 220, 81 P. 60, 11 Idaho 14, 1905 Ida. LEXIS 33 (Idaho 1905).

Opinions

AILSHIE, J.

— This is an original application by the plaintiff, praying for the issuance of a writ of mandate. The plaintiff alleges that at the general election held in November, 1904, the defendant, Edwin Doust, was duly elected sheriff of the county of Kootenai, and thereafter qualified and entered upon the discharge of his duties as such sheriff. That thereafter the legislature passed an act abolishing the county of Kootenai and creating the counties of Lewis and Clark, and that by the provisions of the act, the governor was authorized and directed to appoint county officers for each of the new counties, and that in accordance therewith he appointed the plaintiff as sheriff of the county of Clark, and that plaintiff immediately entered upon the discharge of his duties as such sheriff and demanded of the defendant as the former sheriff of Kootenai county that he deliver over to-plaintiff the records, money, property and prisoners within his care and custody belonging to the county of Clark, and that the defendant refuses so to do. The defendant demurred to the petition and at the same time answered, and under both his demurrer and answer urges that the act abolishing Kootenai county, and creating the counties of Lewis and Clark is unconstitutional and void. The act in question was approved on the twenty-eighth day of February, 1905, and is entitled: “An act to abolish the county of Kootenai within [18]*18the state of Idaho, and create and organize the counties of Lewis and Clark within said state, define the boundaries thereof, and locate the county seats of Lewis and Clark counties, apportion the debt of Kootenai county between Lewis and Clark counties, and to provide for the appointment of officers in said Lewis and Clark counties, and for transcribing a portion of the records of Clark county, and to constitute said counties of Lewis and Clark a part of the first judicial district of the state of Idaho.” Section 1 of the act is as follows: “The county of Kootenai, in the state of Idaho, shall be and is hereby abolished, and the county of Lewis and the county of Clark in said state are hereby created, and said counties of Lewis and Clark shall embrace all the territory heretofore included within the boundary of said Kootenai county.” By the further provisions of the act the territory comprising Kootenai county is divided between the two new counties, and the county seat of Lewis county is established at Sandpoint, and that of Clark at Coeur d’Alene City. It contains an emergency clause whereby the act goes into effect immediately upon its approval, and the governor is directed to appoint officers for the two counties within ten days after the approval of the act; but there is no provision in the bill for the continuation or carrying on of county government from the time the act goes into effect until the new officers qualify.

By section 1 of this act the county of Kootenai is abolished and from the identical territory formerly constituting and comprising that county, two counties are created, to be known as Lewis and Clark, respectively. To my mind the controlling, and in fact the only serious, question in this ease is the power of the legislature to abolish and destroy a county existing at the time of the adoption of the constitution. If ■í.Tiis question be resolved in favor of the exercise of such power, then, in my judgment, the act under consideration must stand. If such power does not exist, then the act is unconstitutional and void.

Article 18 of the constitution is entitled “County Organization. ’ ’ Section 1 of that article reads: ‘ ‘ The several counties [19]*19of the territory of Idaho, as they now exist, are hereby recognized as legal subdivisions of this state.” Section 2 of the same article provides that “no county seat shall be removed unless upon petition of a majority of the qualified electors of the county, voting on the proposition at a general election, shall vote in favor of such removal.” Section 3 of the same article provides that no county shall be divided and the portion cut off be attached to another county without first submitting the question to a vote of the people in the portion to be detached. By section 4 it is provided that “no new counties shall be established which shall reduce any county to an area of less than four hundred square miles.....Nor shall any new county be formed which shall have an area of less than four hundred square miles.”

The only instance in which these provisions of the constitution have been directly under consideration by this court was in People v. George, 3 Idaho, 72, 26 Pac. 983. In that ease three separate opinions were filed by the justices of this court. Mr. Justice Huston, in his concurring opinion, held that the legislature was without the power or authority under the constitution to abolish 'a county. Mr. Justice Morgan, who filed the principal majority opinion, held that the act of the legislature creating and establishing the counties of Alta and Lincoln from the identical territory formerly constituting Alturas and Logan was a palpable evasion of the constitution by doing in an indirect manner that which the constitution forbids being done directly, and that the evasion consisted in the attempt to cut off a portion of one county and attach it to another county without submitting the question to a vote of the people affected thereby. Chief Justice Sullivan, dissenting from the views announced by the majority of the court, expressed the opinion that the legislature had plenary power in both the abolition and creation of counties. It is true that several cases have been before our court involving acts abolishing old and creating new counties, but in none of those cases has the question here involved been directly in issue or squarely passed upon by our court. In Doan v. Board of Commissioners, 3 Idaho, 38, 26 Pac. 167, it was [20]*20held that section 2, article 18, of the constitution does not apply to the location of a county seat consequent upon the creation of a new county. In Wright v. Kelley, 4 Idaho, 624, 43 Pac. 565, the court declined to pass upon the constitutionality of an act of the legislature creating Blaine county, on the ground that such question could not be raised upon application for writ of mandate by a private party. In Bellevue Water Co. v. Stockslager, 4 Idaho, 636, 43 Pac. 568, it was held that the constitutionality of an act creating Blaine county could not be tested upon application of a private party for a writ of prohibition. In Blaine County v. Heard, 5 Idaho, 6, 45 Pac. 890, it was held that the court could not examine the legislative journals for the purpose of ascertaining the motives of the legislature for the passage of an act. The opinion in that case concludes by saying that the act establishing Blaine county is constitutional, but that expression seems to have followed from the court’s conclusion that it could not examine into the legislative motive rather than from any other point considered. It is evident from that opinion that the court did not consider or pass upon the constitutional authority of the legislature to abolish a county. This is clearly apparent when we remember that the writer of this latter opinion had stated his position in People v. George, that a county could not be abolished by legislative act. In People v. Alturas County, 6 Idaho, 418, 55 Pac. 1067, 44 L. R. A. 122, the constitutionality of the act establishing Blaine county was sustained by reason of the application of the doctrine of estoppel, and no other point was passed upon in the ease.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 L.R.A. 220, 81 P. 60, 11 Idaho 14, 1905 Ida. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-doust-idaho-1905.