Meier v. City Council of Boise City

254 P. 221, 43 Idaho 693, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 209
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 254 P. 221 (Meier v. City Council of Boise City) 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
Meier v. City Council of Boise City, 254 P. 221, 43 Idaho 693, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 209 (Idaho 1927).

Opinion

*697 T. BAILEY LEE, J.

Boise City was incorporated under special charter by the territorial legislature of 1866. Its charter rights were later recognized and confirmed by the state constitution. Evidently desirous of attaining uniformity in city government, the framers of the constitution by art. 12, sec. 1 thereof, provided:

“The legislature shall provide by general laws for the incorporation, organization and classification of the cities and towns, in proportion to the population, which laws may be altered, amended, or repealed by the general laws. Cities and towns heretofore incorporated, may become organized under such general laws, whenever a majority of the electors at a general election shall so determine, under such provisions therefor as may be made by the legislature.”

Pursuant to such authorization, the legislature of 1911 adopted what is commonly known as the Black Law, providing a commission form of government for cities having a population of 2,500 or more, which enactment now appears as C. S., chap 173. C. S., sec. 4297, being a section of that law, provides:

“Any city which shall have operated for more than six years, under the provisions of this chapter, may abandon such organization hereunder, and accept the provisions of the general law of the state then applicable to cities of its population, or if now organized under special charter, may resume said special charter as follows:
“Upon the petition of not less than 25 per centum of the electors of such city a special election shall be called at which the following propositions only shall be submitted:
*698 “Shall the city of (name of city) abandon its organization under the act of the eleventh session of the legislature of Idaho and become a city under the general law governing cities of like population, or if now organized under special charter, shall it resume said special charter?
“If a majority of the votes cast at such special election be in favor of such proposition, the officers elected at the next succeeding biennial election shall be those then prescribed by the general law of the state for cities of like population, or prescribed by special charter if such city had been incorporated under special charter at the time of adopting the provisions of this chapter; and upon qualification of such officers, such city shall again become organized under such general law of the state, or special charter, as the case may be; but such change shall not in any manner or degree affect the property, rights or liabilities of such city, but shall merely extend to such change in its form of government.
“The sufficiency of such petition shall be determined, the election ordered and conducted, and the results declared generally as provided by the provisions of this chapter, in so far as the provisions thereof are applicable.”

In 1912 the city adopted the commission form of government, and has since operated thereunder. On December 30, 1926, there were filed with the city clerk certain petitions requesting the calling of an election under this section to determine the wish of the people to abandon the present form of government and resume operations under the special charter. On January 4, 1927, the mayor set February 3d following as the date of such election, and on January 5th issued his proclamation calling such election. On January 11th he signed the notice of such election and caused the same to be published. At a meeting of the city council on that day, it was “Moved by Councilman Smith to adopt and approve the notice of the Mayor calling for a special election on February 3rd, and that the city clerk and deputies act as registrars for all precincts for said election/’ which mo *699 tion was duly carried. The proclamation “calling” the election recited among other things:

“ .... and whereupon after due investigation said petition has been found to be proper in form and to contain the names of 3,087 bona fide electors, which is more than 25 per centum of the electors of Boise City and of the 11,319 electors of the Boise City precincts as shown on the 1926 registration lists of Ada County; and
“Whereas: The sufficiency of the petition having been thus clearly established, etc.”

The election was duly had with the unofficially reported result of 1,682 votes for and 1,508 against abandonment and resumption. Claiming that the election was invalid, the council refused to canvass and certify the returns. The plaintiff, George Meier, a qualified elector, taxpayer and resident of the city, has applied for a -writ of mandamus directing the council to canvass the returns, certify the same and make in writing a public declaration of the result. The council in its return admits its refusal to canvass the returns, but pleads that see. 4297, supra, conflicts with art. 12, see. 1, and art. 3, sec. 19 of the state constitution; that the sufficiency of the petition was never determined by the council; that the proclamation of election and notice thereof were made and published by the mayor without authority of the council; that such election was held within 90 days of the general city election to be held on April 5, 1927, and therefore was void under C. S., sec. 664, which expressly prohibits the holding of special elections within 9.0 days of a general election.

For the reasons given, the council declares the entire proceedings void, and asks to be relieved from the canvass as necessarily a useless and vain thing. The unconstitutionality of said sec. 4297 is based upon the contention that in contravention of the constitution, supra, it permits the “organization and incorporation of such cities as have formerly bad special charters under special and local laws, and is not therefore a general law”; that it classifies according to a *700 former form of government and authorizes the granting of a new, special and local charter to Boise City after the adoption of the constitution. There might be something in one or all of these arguments, if their premises were not so obviously fallacious. To sustain them there must be some new incorporation, some new entity established in place of one dissolved. Boise City became a corporate entity in 1866. It has never ceased to be such. Begotten.a child of the legislature, its legitimacy recognized by the constitution, it exchanged its old-fashioned habiliments at the behest and promise of its parent that it might resume them after a six-year experiment with the latest styles. Had there been an unconditional departure from the original incorporation to the organization under the commission form of government, it might well be held that such a departure, ipso facto, worked an abandonment or abrogation of the former charter. But abandonment and abrogation are matters of intent; and until that intent is definitely fixed, there can be neither one nor the other. The adoption of the commission form of government was expressly and consciously undertaken subject to the assured right after a limited time to renew activities under the original charter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
254 P. 221, 43 Idaho 693, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meier-v-city-council-of-boise-city-idaho-1927.