Pirtle v. City of Jackson

560 S.W.2d 400, 1977 Tenn. LEXIS 646
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 560 S.W.2d 400 (Pirtle v. City of Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pirtle v. City of Jackson, 560 S.W.2d 400, 1977 Tenn. LEXIS 646 (Tenn. 1977).

Opinion

OPINION

COOPER, Justice.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Chancery Court of Madison County upholding the validity of the ordinance annexing the Bemis and north of Bemis areas of Madison County to the City of Jackson. Appellants, residents of the areas annexed, insist the ordinance was invalid in that it was procedurally defective and was unreasonable and unnecessary in consideration of the health, safety, and welfare of residents of the annexed areas and also of the City of Jackson. Appellants also insist the chancellor erred in placing entirely on them the burden of proving the invalidity of the ordinance.

The land area that is the subject of the annexation ordinance is surrounded on two sides by the city limits of the City of Jackson. Bemis, formerly a company town owned by the Bemis Bag Company, covers some 422 acres and has approximately 1,335 inhabitants. The north of Bemis area covers 87 acres and has approximately 450 residents.

T.C.A. § 6-309 provides for the annexation of territory by a municipality by ordinance, after the adoption of a plan of services for the annexed area and after notice and public hearing on the ordinance, “when it appears that the prosperity of such municipality and territory will be materially retarded and the safety and welfare of the inhabitants and property thereof endangered,” unless the territory is annexed.

*401 T.C.A. § 6-310 grants residents of the annexed area the right to contest the annexation ordinance by a quo warranto proceeding and, with some exceptions, places upon the municipality “the burden of proving that [the] annexation ordinance is reasonable for the overall well-being of the communities involved.”

In both sections 6-309 and 6-310, the legislature undertook to exclude from affirmative duties placed on cities generally, the municipalities located in counties “having a population of not less than sixty-five thousand (65,000) nor more than sixty-six thousand (66,000) and counties having a population of four hundred thousand (400,-000) or more according to the federal census of 1970 or any subsequent federal census and counties having a metropolitan form of government.”

Madison County having a population of between 65,000 and 66,000 according to the 1970 census, the City of Jackson falls within the exclusions set forth in T.C.A. §§ 6-309 and 6-310. However, the municipality did not rely on the exclusion set forth in T.C.A. § 6 — 309, but followed the procedure placed on cities generally, when they undertake to annex territory by ordinance. Procedurally, the record shows that on December 4, 1975, the Jackson Municipal Regional Planning Commission recommended to the Board of Commissioners of the City of Jackson that it annex the Bemis and north of Bemis areas of Madison County to the City of Jackson. A plan of services for the areas to be annexed was approved by the Planning Commission on July 22,1976. Notice of public hearing before the City Commission of Jackson of the plan of services was published in the Jackson Sun on August 22, 1976. The hearing was held on September 3, 1976, and the plan of services proposed by the Planning Commission was adopted on that date. The annexation ordinance was introduced at the next regular meeting of the Board of Commissioners, which was held on September 10,1976. Notice of the introduction of the ordinance and of a public hearing to be held October 15, 1976, on the ordinance was published in the Jackson Sun on September 14, 1976. The hearing was held on the date advertised and, thereafter, the ordinance was adopted.

Appellants argue that the procedure described above was defective in that public hearing on the ordinance did not precede its introduction. We see no merit in this argument. The City of Jackson Charter (Chapter No. 167 of the Private Acts enacted by the General Assembly in 1969) provides in Section 31 that:

Every ordinance and resolution shall be introduced in open meeting of the Board of Commissioners and filed with the City Recorder. ... No ordinance may be adopted at the same meeting at which introduced before the Board of Commissioners and must be published in full in a newspaper of general circulation within the City of Jackson at least one time before adoption.

The City of Jackson followed the procedure prescribed by its Charter in adopting the ordinance and, in doing so, gave the statutorily mandated notice and held a public hearing on the ordinance before the ordinance was adopted. This meets the requirements of T.C.A. § 6-309.

The record shows that on trial of the cause, appellants sought a ruling by the chancellor that the second paragraph of T.C.A. § 6-310, set out below, was class legislation and was therefore unconstitutional.

“Except in counties having a population of not less than sixty-five thousand (65,000) nor more than sixty-six thousand (66,000) and counties having a population of four hundred thousand (400,000) or more according to the federal census of 1970 or any subsequent federal census and except in counties having a metropolitan form of government, the municipality shall have the burden of proving that an annexation ordinance is reasonable for the overall well-being of the communities involved.”

Article 11, § 9 of the state constitution states:

“The General Assembly shall by general law provide the exclusive methods by *402 which municipalities may be created, merged, consolidated and dissolved and by which municipal boundaries may be altered.”

In Frost v. City of Chattanooga, 488 S.W.2d 370 (Tenn.1972), this court held that the foregoing constitutional provision was violated by a statute, which purported to permit a special option as to taxation in connection with annexation proceedings by the City of Chattanooga, which option was not extended to other annexing authorities by general law and which was not found to be based upon any rational basis or scheme of classification.

In the course of its opinion, the court had the following to say:

In view of these facts and this unambiguous mandatory language now a part of our Constitution, we do not hold that the Legislature could not act to alter municipal boundaries by legislation valid as a general law under the classification doctrine, but we are not able to conceive of any circumstances where such would be valid. 488 S.W.2d at 373.

No rational basis has been suggested, nor does any occur to us, to justify the exclusion of a few chosen municipalities from the burden of proving the reasonableness of their annexation ordinances when such a burden is placed upon all other municipalities by the general law of this state. We hold, therefore, that that part of T.C.A.

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Bluebook (online)
560 S.W.2d 400, 1977 Tenn. LEXIS 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pirtle-v-city-of-jackson-tenn-1977.