Nanney v. Town of Leesville

4 So. 2d 825, 198 La. 773, 1941 La. LEXIS 1164
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 3, 1941
DocketNo. 36434.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 4 So. 2d 825 (Nanney v. Town of Leesville) 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
Nanney v. Town of Leesville, 4 So. 2d 825, 198 La. 773, 1941 La. LEXIS 1164 (La. 1941).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

This is a suit by Albert H. Nanney, a qualified elector and taxpayer, attacking the legality of the proceedings creating Sewerage District No. 3, of the Town of Leesville, and calling a special eler rion in the District for the purpose of issuing bonds to construct, acquire, extend, and improve a sewer system, together with the necessary equipment and furnishings therefor.

The defendants are the Town of Leesville, Sewerage District No. 3, and the Mayor and Board of Aldermen of the Town, as the governing authority of the Sewerage District.

*778 Plaintiff alleges that the proceedings of the Mayor and Board of Aldermen are illegal, because the municipal officers are not authorized to establish a sewerage district embracing the territorial limits of the mu-' nicipality; that they are not empowered to create an overlapping sewerage district, or a district that includes the territory of two other districts previously created; and that the bonds, the issuance of which the electors and taxpayers authorized, together with the bonds outstanding, exceed the constitutional limitation of 10% of the assessed valuation of the taxable property in the newly created District.

Answering the suit, the defendants filed an exception of no right or cause of action, pleas of prescription of thirty days to the attack on the creation of the sewerage district and sixty days to the attack upon the validity of the bonds. They also pleaded the legality of the proceedings and the validity of the bonds. ’

The case was submitted for decision to the Court below on the pleadings, exhibits, and an agreed statement of facts. Upon the issues as thus presented, the trial judge rendered a judgment in favor of defendants, rejecting plaintiff’s demands. He sustained defendants’ exception and pleas of prescription and also decreed as valid the proceedings creating the Sewerage District, the election held therein, the issuance of bonds in the amount of $85,000 and the levy and collection of taxes to pay the bonds in principal and interest. The plaintiff has appealed from the judgment.

Briefly stated, the facts as disclosed by the agreement of the parties and the attached exhibits are as follows: The plaintiff is a qualified elector and property taxpayer, residing in Sewerage District No. 3,’ of the Town of Leesville, which town is a municipal corporation created under the provisions of Act 136 of 1898. By Ordinance No. 212, adopted March 11, 1930, and Ordinance 306, adopted March 25, 1941, Sewerage Districts Nos. 1 and 2, of the Town of Leesville, were created, respectively. By Ordinance Ño. 309, adopted March 26, 1941, the territorial limits of Leesville were extended, and by Ordinance No. 310, adopted May 27, 1941, Sewerage District No. 3 was created by the consolidation of Sewerage Districts Nos. 1 and 2 and by extending the boundaries thereof so as to include all the territory situated within the corporate limits of the municipality as defined by Ordinance No. 309. At the time of their consolidation with Sewerage District No. 3, Sewerage District No. 1 had an outstanding bonded indebtedness of $13,309 and Sewerage District No. 2 had no bonded indebtedness. The taxable value of all the property situated within the corporate limits of the Town of Leesville and Sewerage District No. 3, as shown by the assessment rolls for the year 1940, is the sum of $1,045,-339.

Pursuant to the authority granted by the State Bond and Tax Board of Louisiana, the Mayor and Board of Aldermen of Lees-ville adopted Ordinance No. 311, calling a special election in Sewerage District No. 3 to obtain the sense of the qualified electors and property taxpayers within the District on the proposition of issuing negotiable bonds to the amount of $100,000, for the purpose of constructing, acquiring, extending, *780 and improving a sewer system, together with the necessary equipment and furnishings therefor. The special election was regularly held on July 1, 1941, and the result thereof was promulgated as required by law, showing that the proposition was carried by the votes of a majority of the qualified electors and taxpayers participating in the election.

Due to the location and construction of Camp Polk in the vicinity of the Town of Leesville, and the resultant increase of the population of the town, it is necessary to extend the existing sewer system so as to provide adequate sanitary facilities for its residents. The United States Government, through the Federal Works Agency, Defense Public Works Division, has offered to make a grant of $339,596 to Sewerage District No. 3, of Leesville, in order to aid in financing the construction of a sewer system and public improvements for which the issuance of the bonds was authorized at the special election.

In view of the grant made by the Federal Government, it is not necessary, and the governing authorities of the Sewerage District do not intend, to issue more than $85,-000 of the authorized issue of $100,000 of bonds, in order to accomplish the purposes for which the bonds were voted.

No protests of any nature or kind have been made by any qualified elector or property taxpayer, or by anyone else to the Mayor and Board of Aldermen contesting or complaining of the inclusion of any of the property situated within Sewerage District No. 3, or protesting against the calling and holding of the election or the issuance of the bonds.

The judgment appealed from is correct in every respect.

Plaintiff’s contention that under sub-paragraph (c) of Section 14 of Article XIV of the Constitution of 1921, a municipality is without authority to create a sewerage district co-extensive with its. territorial limits, is untenable. The provision of the Constitution, as amended by Act 177 of 1924, reads as follows: “The Legislature * * * may by general law authorize the police juries to create sewerage districts, composed of territory wholly within a parish, but no sewerage district shall be created comprising the whole territory of a parish; and may by general law authorize municipal corporations to create sewerage districts, whose territory may be less than the territory of the municipality * *

The constitutional provision, although authorizing police juries to create sewerage districts, expressly prohibits them from creating any sewerage district comprising the whole territory of a parish. But there is no such prohibition as regards municipalities. As to them, the constitutional provision expressly declares that: “The Legislature * * * may by general law authorize municipal corporations to create sewerage districts, whose territory may be less than the territory of the municipality * *

The provision is permissive rather than prohibitive. The language in which it is couched indicates that the framers of the Constitution having in mind the fact that most sewerage districts embraced or would embrace the whole territory within the cor *782 porate limits of the municipality, intended to make it clear that under the constitutional provision municipalities would have a discretionary right to create sewerage districts composed of less territory than the entire territory within the corporate limits.

[2] At the time the 'Constitution of 1921 was adopted, Act 246 of 1916 was in effect.

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4 So. 2d 825, 198 La. 773, 1941 La. LEXIS 1164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nanney-v-town-of-leesville-la-1941.