Missoula Rural Fire District v. City of Missoula

775 P.2d 209, 237 Mont. 444, 1989 Mont. LEXIS 145
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1989
Docket88-558
StatusPublished

This text of 775 P.2d 209 (Missoula Rural Fire District v. City of Missoula) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missoula Rural Fire District v. City of Missoula, 775 P.2d 209, 237 Mont. 444, 1989 Mont. LEXIS 145 (Mo. 1989).

Opinion

*445 MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TURNAGE

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

In 1974, a permanent injunction was issued against the City of Missoula and in favor of the Montana Rural Fire District (MRFD), barring the City from annexing any lands outside city limits which were situated within the MRFD. The injunction remained in effect until 1988 when the District Court, Fourth Judicial District, ordered the injunction dissolved on motion of the City. The District Court reasoned that the legislature significantly changed the annexation laws through the 1979 amendment. With the change of the statutory law, the injunction was no longer valid. The District Court found that under the present law the City can use its discretion in choosing one of several annexation methods without requiring detraction of land it wishes to annex from the MRFD. MRFD appeals this order. We affirm.

The issues on appeal are:

1. Whether the 1974 injunction was properly dissolved by the District Court.

2. Whether the case affirming the 1974 injunction, MRFD v. City of Missoula (1975), 168 Mont. 70, 540 P.2d 958, was impliedly overruled by the legislature.

3. Whether the 1979 amendment of annexation laws has nullified the 1974 injunction.

4. Whether current Montana municipal annexation laws require, prior to inception of annexation, that land proposed for city or town annexation be first successfully detracted from a rural fire district regardless of the statutory method of city or town annexation used.

On October 10, 1974, the District Court permanently enjoined the City of Missoula “from attempting any annexation procedure of whatever kind or character for any land within the boundaries of Missoula Rural Fire District.” In MRFD v. City of Missoula (1975), 168 Mont. 70, 540 P.2d 958, we affirmed the 1974 injunction.

A 1974 Act (Planned Community and Development Act of 1973, §§ 11-514 through 11-526, RCM (1947); § 7-2-4701, et seq. MCA, (1979)), required extensive planning for growth in cities. One provision prohibited annexation of land that had been within a fire district for more than ten years at the time of proposed annexation. In 1977, the legislature provided for limited annexation of lands within the rural fire district only after detraction from the fire district. After 1977 if a single landowner wanted land annexed, that landowner *446 could send written notice to the fire district requesting detraction from the fire district for the purpose of having the land annexed.

In 1979 the Montana legislature made significant changes to the municipal annexation laws. The 1979 Legislature divided the annexation methods, stating that annexation through detraction from the fire district is independent from other annexation methods. City of Missoula annexed some areas within the MRFD subsequent to 1979 without detracting the land to be annexed from the fire district.

In 1987, the Missoula City Council scheduled public hearings to receive public comment as to whether the City should annex 230 parcels of real property which were already connected to the City’s municipal water system. MRFD sued the City to prevent these annexations based upon the 1974 injunction. The City applied to have the injunction dissolved or modified based on the 1979 changes. The District Court originally dismissed the motion. The court, however, ordered on July 28, 1988, that the injunction be dissolved. The District Court relied on the 1979 legislative changes and considered each method of annexation to be separate and distinct from the others.

The main issue to be addressed is whether land proposed for city or town annexation must be first successfully detracted from a rural fire district prior to inception of annexation, for every statutory method of city or town annexation. In the alternative, is detraction from the rural fire district necessary for only one of several possible methods of annexation? If so, then the 1974 injunction was properly dissolved by the District Court.

On October 10, 1974, the District Court permanently enjoined the City of Missoula from annexing land without first seeking detraction from the rural fire district within which the land was located. In 1975, this Court affirmed the order of the District Court in MRFD v. City of Missoula, supra. In that case, we stated that the legislature considered the annexation laws to be discriminatory and caused indiscriminate growth patterns. We acknowledged that although the legislature did not repeal these prior discriminatory annexation laws, it did provide in § 11-525 RCM (1947):

“In so far as the provisions of this act are inconsistent with the provisions of any other law, the provisions of this act shall be controlling. The method of annexation authorized in this act shall be construed as supplemental to and independent from other methods of annexation authorized by state law.”

*447 The act referred to in § 11-525, RCM, is the “Planned Community Development Act of 1973,” which provided that

“no part of the area may be included within the boundary, as existing at the inception of such attempted annexation, of any fire district organized under any of the provisions of chapter 20, Title 11, if the fire district was originally organized at least 10 years prior to the inception of such attempted annexation.”

Section ll-519(2)(d), RCM (1947). The annexation amendment prohibited any annexation of land by the city which had been within a fire district for more than ten years at the time of the proposed annexation, regardless of the type of annexation proposed. Thus, MRFD could prevent any growth of the municipality where rural fire district lands were located.

The legislature made limited annexation possible in 1977 by way of detraction under §§ 11-514 through 11-525, RCM.

In 1979, the legislature made two significant changes in municipal annexation laws. First, § 11-403, RCM (1947) was expanded. Section 11-403 provided the ways in which annexation could take place. Prior to 1979, a city could freely annex contiguous areas of land, any lands to be used for manufacturing purposes, provided that the owners of such land agree, and any wholly surrounded parcels of land. The 1979 amendment separated each of the types of annexation provided for in § 11-403, into separate statutes. The statutes now provide:

“Title 7, Chapter 2, Part 42 — addition of territory enjoining any incorporated city;
“Title 7, Chapter 2, Part 43 — annexation of contiguous land to an incorporated city;
“Title 7, Chapter 2, Part 44 — annexation of contiguous government land;
“Title 7, Chapter 2, Part 45 — annexation of wholly surrounded land;

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Related

Missoula Rural Fire District v. City of Missoula
540 P.2d 958 (Montana Supreme Court, 1975)
State Ex Rel. Hilands Golf Club v. City of Billings
647 P.2d 345 (Montana Supreme Court, 1982)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
775 P.2d 209, 237 Mont. 444, 1989 Mont. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missoula-rural-fire-district-v-city-of-missoula-mont-1989.