Nielson v. Utah National Rank of Ogden

120 P. 211, 40 Utah 95
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1911
DocketNo. 2320
StatusPublished

This text of 120 P. 211 (Nielson v. Utah National Rank of Ogden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nielson v. Utah National Rank of Ogden, 120 P. 211, 40 Utah 95 (Utah 1911).

Opinion

STRAUP, J.

This appeal involves proceedings bad in the district court to disincorporate Huntsville City, in Weber County. A petition for that purpose was filed in the district court by more than one-fourth of the legal voters of the city. On the 25th day of September, 1909, a notice was published that the question of discontinuance of the city would he submitted to the legal voters of the city at the general municipal election to he held in November, 1909. A vote was taken, canvassed, and return made to the district court, who found that a majority of the legal votes cast was for a discontinuance, and made an order discontinuing the’ city. The court further caused a notice to he published in a newspaper for a period of at least ten days, requiring all claims against the city to he filed in the district court within three months from the date of the first publication of the notice. The first publication was on the 28th day of April, and the last on the 9th day of May, 1910. Among other claims presented and filed within the time fixed by the court was the verified claim of the Utah National Bank of Ogden for the sum of $3,311.67, which was filed on the 21st day of July, 1910. The time for filing claims expired on the 28th day of July of that year. On the 5th day of August, the court, on ex pao'ie proceedings, in chambers, without notice, allowed the claim. The proceedings bad with respect to the claim of the Utah National Bank of Ogden were as follows:

[98]*98“Court: We are proceeding with the adjudication of the claims against Huntsville City, which has been disincorpo-rated. Yon want to introduce those in evidence? Pratt (counsel for Utah National Bant): Yes. Court: Mr. Pratt, in behalf of the Utah National Bank, introduces in evidence the warrants which were issued upon the money which was advanced by the bank according’ to the resolution. Pratt: Those warrants were presented and cashed by them. Court: Let them be introduced in evidence. That is all you wish to> introduce in behalf of your client ? Ptratt: Yes. Boyd (representing the First National Bank): I will only introduce one of mine. Court: Let it be received in evidence in behalf of the First National Bank. Pratt: Also this copy of the resolution. Court: It may be received on behalf of the Utah National Bank. Boyd: I will supply that other one later.”

It is certified to us by the district judge that the above and foregoing testimony, together with the warrants therein referred to, being sixteen in number, and the resolution, was all the evidence taken, heard and considered by the court in respect of the adjudication of the claim of the Utah National Bank of Ogden. Upon that evidence, the court, on the 5th day of August, allowed, and pretended to adjudicate the claim. Other claims were also, on that day, allowed by the court, amounting in all, including that of the Utah National Bank, to the sum of about $4900. The court- thereupon ordered a tax levy of twenty mills on the dollar to be made and levied upon the taxable property of the citizens of the city to- pay the allowed claims. On the 8th day of August sixty-three citizens of the city, and who were citizens thereof at the time the vote to- disincorporate was taken, and who were without knowledge or notice of the allowance and adjudication of the claims, filed a protest in the district court against the allowance and payment of the claim of the Utah National Bank “for the reason that the indebtedness forming the basis of said claim is in excess of the limitation of indebtedness permitted, authorized, and prescribed by the Constitution and the statutes of Utah, no tax having [99]*99been levied for the current year in which the said indebtedness was incurred; and for the further reason that said indebtedness which is the foundation for said claim is illegal, the same being unauthorized and having been incurred without any authority of law whatsoever therefor, the proposition to create such indebtedness never having been submitted; to a vote of the qualified electors and taxpayers of Huntsville City as prescribed by article 14, sec. 3, of the Constitution of the State of Utah; and that in the creating of said indebtedness the city council exceeded their powers and authority conferred upon them, and in the creation thereof said city exceeded the power and authority conferred upon it by the statutes of the State of Utah.” After the filing of that protest, and learning that the court, had already made an order allowing and adjudicating the claim of the bank, two of these protestants on their own behalf, and on behalf of a majority of the citizens of Huntsville, on the 20th day of October, filed a petition in the district court in which they prayed that the order theretofore made by the court allowing and adjudicating the bank’s' claim be set aside, and that a hearing be given upon the protest already filed, and that upon such hearing the claim be disallowed for the reasons set forth in the filed protest. In this petition it was also averred that a majority of the citizens of Huntsville were represented' by counsel of record in all of the proceedings had in the district court in respect of the disincorporation of the city; that the last claim presented and filed was on the 27th day of July, 1910; that thereafter the court, without notice and without a hearing, and without sufficient or any evidence to support the bank’s claim, allowed and adjudicated such claim on the 5th day of August, 1910; and that as soon as they learned of the filing and presentation of the hank’s claim they, on the 8th day of August, 1910, filed a protest against its allowance. The court denied the application to set aside the order of allowance and to grant a hearing, upon the ground that notice of a hearing to adjudicate the claim was not required, that the application was [100]*100made too late, and that to vacate the order might render the tax levy invalid. Hence this appeal.

The assignment of errors presents two questions: (1) Sufficiency of the evidence to support the order allowing the bank’s claim; and (2) the ruling refusing to vacate the order and to grant a hearing. We think the appellants are entitled to prevail on both.

The statute relating to the disincorporation of cities (Compi. Laws 1907', see. 294), so far as material, provides:

“The vote shall be taken and canvassed in the same manner as in other municipal elections, and return thereof made to the district court. If it finds that a majority of the legal votes oast for and against such proposition 1 were cast ‘for disincorporation,’ then a judgment shall be entered discontinuing the same, and upon the entry of said judgment its corporate powers shall cease, and the court shall cause notice to be given in a manner to be prescribed by it, requiring all claims against the corporation to be filed in said court within a time fixed in the notice, not exceeding six months, and all claims not so filed shall be forever barred. At the expiration of the time so fixed, the court shall adjudicate said claims which shall be treated as denied, and any citizen of such city at the time the vote was taken may appear and defend against any claim so filed, or the court may in its discretion appoint some person for this purpose.”

It will be seen that by the statute the claim of the bank was required by the court to be treated as denied. The claim as presented recites that on the 19th day of February, 1907, the mayor and city council of Huntsville City adopted a resolution whereby the mayor was authorized to enter into a contract with the Utah Light &

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118 P. 122 (Utah Supreme Court, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 P. 211, 40 Utah 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nielson-v-utah-national-rank-of-ogden-utah-1911.