Parker v. Mayor & City Council

55 So. 587, 128 La. 951, 1911 La. LEXIS 667
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 24, 1911
DocketNo. 18,260
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 55 So. 587 (Parker v. Mayor & City Council) 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
Parker v. Mayor & City Council, 55 So. 587, 128 La. 951, 1911 La. LEXIS 667 (La. 1911).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

MONROE, J.

Plaintiffs, four citizens and taxpayers of the city of Monroe, obtained an injunction prohibiting the city authorities

“ — from proceeding with the opening of a canal, or excavation, along Calypso street, and constructing along said street a concrete box for drainage, or doing .any work whatever under the resolution or ordinance adopted by the city council of Monroe on July 19, 1909, authorizing the mayor, drainage committee, and city [953]*953engineer to proceed, as soon as possible, with the construction of the drainage system, according to the plans submitted by the city engineer and -adopted by said council at its meeting, July 19, 1909.”

The allegations upon the basis of which the injunction was obtained are, in effect, that the natural and practicable way to drain the city is through the west fork of Young’s bayou, which lies to the eastward, and that the plan which the authorities have adopted (of ■draining into the Ouachita river, which borders the city upon the westward) is unscientific, impracticable, unreasonable, illegal, wrongful, unauthorized, null, and void; that there is an identity of interest as to the drainage between the city and the territory of the parish lying to the north, east, and southeast; that the law contemplates co-operation in such cases between the city and parish authorities, and that the police jury created a drainage district, including the city, but that the city authorities declined to be included, and authorized the mayor and drainage committee and city engineer to proceed, as soon as practicable, with the construction of a drainage system according to the plans submitted by the city engineer and adopted by said authorities; that no appropriation was made to cover the expense, and that the attempt to incur an indebtedness therefor is illegal; that the authorization to the officers mentioned to do the work and purchase material at the expense of the city is in contravention of the charter (section 31, Act No. 47 of 1909), which provides that all public works and all purchases of materials and supplies ordered by the city shall be let at public auction to the lowest bidder who can furnish the same satisfactorily ; that the digging of said canal through Calypso street is an unlawful use of the street, which was dedicated as a highway for the use of people and vehicles, and will reduce the value of property thereon; that the throwing up of quantities of dirt in the summer will be inconvenient and unwholsome; that the putting in of the proposed concrete box drain will cause sloughing and caving, and threaten the destruction of the street and of peitioners’ property, etc. The injunction, which was issued, after hearing on a rule nisi, was dissolved after the case had been heard on the merits, and the plaintiffs are prosecuting the appeal.

The facts, as disclosed by the record (so far as we find it necessary to recapitulate them), are: That the city of Monroe lies between the Ouachita river, which constitutes its western boundary, and the west fork of Young’s bayou, which flows in a general southeasterly direction, partly within the limits of the eastern boundary; that there is a fall of about 13 feet from the river to the bayou, and that the natural drainage is in the direction of the bayou; that the bayou is a sluggish stream, and, though the city, in past years, has spent $25,000 in the effort to make it available, does not furnish an adequate outlet for prompt drainage; that the present mayor has been in office since 1898, and, having the question of the drainage of the city constantly in his mind, has availed himself of his opportunities for studying the subject; that the city engineer, who has been in office since 1900, and had considerable experience in his profession prior to that time, has also given the matter his careful attention, and that the two officers, both of whom are thoroughly familiar with the topography and meteorological phenomena of the city, after consulting at various times with the members of the city council, recommended a plan for drainage, one of the units of which is the construction of a reinf reed concrete conduit, which is to extend from the bayou to the river, and serve eventually both as a drain and sewer, the other units of the plan to consist of similar conduits (to be constructed in the future), sewer connections, etc., and that the plan so recommended was adopted by the city council, which body declined to recognize the [955]*955inclusion of the city in a drainage district attempted to be created toy the police jury, and instructed the mayor, the drainage committee and the city engineer to proceed with the execution of the plan so adopted; that the drainage district proposed toy the police jury includes, say, 40,000 acres of land, of which probably nine-tenths lies outside of the city of Monroe, and of which, also, plaintiffs (with, perhaps, one exception) own a considerable portion, in addition to their holdings within the city limits; that the action referred to was taken by the council on July 19,' 1909, at a time when the water in the river was very low and falling, and that, as the outlet of the contemplated conduit was to enter the river at a point some 23 feet below the surface of the ground, and be provided with an iron gate or valve, it was considered highly important that it should be constructed without delay, as its construction in high water would have been impossible, and the rising of the water whilst the work was going on would have been disastrous; that, under the circumstances, the particular work referred to was regarded as in the nature of emergency work, which it was competent and proper that the officers mentioned should have done at once and without advertising for bids or letting out contracts; that it was the intention to advertise for bids for the rest of the work and material required, though the details of the plan had not been sufficiently worked out by the city engineer to furnish a basis for an advertisement at the time that the injunction issued; that there had been a budget appropriation for drainage purposes for the year 1909 of $7,500, and another of $18,750 for improvements' in the fire department, and that, the negotiations looking to such improvements having been fruitless, it was contemplated that such amount should be transferred to the drainage fund.

Plaintiffs introduced a civil engineer as an expert witness, and he gave his opinion in regard to the advantage of drainage into the bayou as compared with the plan proposed: he, however, labored under some disadvantage, in that he was not accurately informed in regard either to scope or the details of the plan, and was not familiar with the country or conditions in and under which it is to be-executed. Much of his testimony is therefore rather wide of the mark. Defendants called. ' two civil engineers, the city engineer of Monroe and the city engineer of Beaumont, Tex., and they differed in opinion with the engineer-called by plaintiffs; and, so far as we can judge, had rather the better of the argument. At all events, plaintiffs have entirely failed to show that the plan of which they complain is either unscientific, impracticable, or unreasonable.

Opinion.

[1] The charter of the city of Monroe exempts it from the jurisdiction of the police-jury of the parish, and confers upon it the power “to provide a levee and drainage system” (Act No. 4:7 of 1900, § 9, subd. 19); and' Act No. 159 of 1902 (amending and re-enacting Act No. 12 of 1900) § 10, provides that:

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Bluebook (online)
55 So. 587, 128 La. 951, 1911 La. LEXIS 667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-mayor-city-council-la-1911.