McFarlain v. Town of Jennings

106 La. 541
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 15, 1901
DocketNo. 14,097
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 106 La. 541 (McFarlain v. Town of Jennings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McFarlain v. Town of Jennings, 106 La. 541 (La. 1901).

Opinion

The .opinion of the court was delivered by

Breaux, J.

The town of Jennings adopted an ordinance relating to the running at large of stock within; the town. y\Te are informed by the record .that after it' had been adopted, the Mayor had a census of the -town taken by his daughter,; and the Council afterward ordained a census to be- taken by- a census taker regularly appointed. The census made by the Mayor’s daughter1 shows that the population of Jennings was two thousand and four. The census taken a short time afterward by the census taker of the Council shows that two- thousand and thirty persons resided in Jennings between June 1st and 9th, 1901.

The Mayor and Council claiming that the number of inhabitants is more than two thousand, seek to have the stock ordinance enforced. In accordance with their order the cows of plaintiff were impounded, and plaintiff obtained an injunction and claimed damages against Jennings and its marshal. The census of the United States shows that the population of Jennings-was fifteen hundred and thirty-nine in 1900.

The ease was put at issue and.tried. '■ Judgment was pronounced for plaintiff sustaining his injunction and allowing him damages against the,town intjie gum of sixty-five dollars. Defendant appeals.'

: Manifestly; -the legality of the ordinance in Question • depends upon the' extent’to'which the inhabitants can be held bound by the census taken at the -instance of the municipality, of Jennings. If that census is -to .be taken as fixing the number of i'nhabi'tánts, then the town has at: this time the required number to bring it within the scope of Section 17, of .Act 136 of 1898, which confers upon the Mayors and Aldermen of cities - and towns, having more thán two thousand inhabitants, the'power'to prevent or to regulate the roaming at large of [543]*543animals and cause them to he impounded. (§ 4th, Sec. 17 of the cited Act above.) ■ •

If, on the other hand, the census of the United States is to be taken instead, as conclusive of the number in the town, then the Mayor and Aldermen have not, because of the insufficiency in number, the power to have stock impounded that are found roaming in the town.

Under the Governor’s proclamation issued in the year 1900, in pursuance of the provisions of Act 136 of 1898, Jennings having the requisite number of one thousand inhabitants, is a town, that being the number' necessary to its incorporation under that Act. The municipalities under the Act just cited are to be classified according to their population .as shown by the United States’ census; the class is changed in accordance with the provisions of the statute. '

In Section 8 of this statute special authority is conferred upon the Governor in matter of classification when it shall be shown by reference to an Act of Congress or Legislature that the population of a city, town, or village has increased or diminished so as to take it out of the class to which it previously belonged. It is then made his duty, after proper investigation, to make a correct classification of the erroneously classified corporation. The authority of the Governor, it will be^ observed, is confined to classification of these cbrporations into cities, towns and villages. The law .contemplates, evidently, classifications by the executive based upon the number required to constitute a city, town, or village, but no reference is made in the statute to-any other classification by: the executive or to ascertaining ■' any other number except those needful to establish classification of the corporation' into a village, town, or city:

Yet, without regard to classification by the Governor, certain powers are delegated to designated municipalities when the number of its members exceed two thousand, and among these powers is the power delegated to impound stock. But the. statute does not expressly authorize and direct how to find out and determine how many persons are within the town when it seeks to enforce powers delegated to towns of more than two thousand inhabitants.

As relates to the ascertaining if in the town there are as many persons as just mentioned, no reference is made to a census whether by the United States or by' the State. The statute is absolutely silent upon the subject. The question arises, should the'number taken from the census be controlling, in the absence of statutory direction ? If the [544]*544population, can. only be determined by the United States’ census, it would result in not carrying the legislative will into effect. It’ might well occur that a town would have the requisite number and yet for a period of nine or more years the law would remain a dead letter. As the law reads at present, it contains no reference to a census, as relates to the special power in question, and we take it that without a special enactment the census is not exclusive of all other methods of ascertaining the number of members of a corporation.

It must, in some way, be ordered that the census of the United States be taken as a basis in determining the number of a municipality; and if we were to take the census as determining the question a town with two thousand inhabitants at this time would have to wait until the next census before attempting to exercise the power conferred, and even then it would require some legislation to render it possible to determine the number by reference to the census of the United States.

Recently, in another jurisdiction, it was held that the failure of the Legislature to point out a method to determine the number of persons should not be allowed to destroy the power granted. We quote: ' “In this case it is manifest that the provision can be determined by competent testimony outside of any legislative enactment;” that it was a question for the court to determine. State ex rel. Smith vs. Neal, Vol. 65, p. 188, Pacific Reporter.

In another case and regarding number of population, another court said: “It is manifest that the provision can be determined by competent testimony outside of any legislative enactment.” Anderson vs. Whetcome Co., 33 L. R. A. 137. The same rule was sustained in Kumber vs. Boon, 37 P. 383.

In the first decision cited above, the court said regarding a question similar to the one here: “We think that in the case under discussion a rule is equally prescribed which is capable of enforcement. ' In this case the ascertainment of the amount of the population in the town or city is for the courts and not for the Legislature.” In each of these cases it became necessary to establish the population of municipal corporations in which the law making power had failed to make provision for ascertaining the number of persons.

We do not go to the extent of holding that the question is not for the Legislature, and in that respect we do not agree with the cited eases, nor do we think that, as between a municipality and its members, [545]*545the number of the population may be ascertained as any other fact. There must he some regular method followed in ascertaining the number of the population. We think legislation is desirable to provide means for ascertaining the number of persons, but where a power is granted and the law-making power is silent, as in this case, it then becomes a question to be ascertained by a method usually followed in the course of municipal administration.

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Bluebook (online)
106 La. 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcfarlain-v-town-of-jennings-la-1901.