Potvin v. Village of Chubbuck

284 P.2d 414, 76 Idaho 453, 1955 Ida. LEXIS 302
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1955
Docket8297
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 284 P.2d 414 (Potvin v. Village of Chubbuck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potvin v. Village of Chubbuck, 284 P.2d 414, 76 Idaho 453, 1955 Ida. LEXIS 302 (Idaho 1955).

Opinion

As Modified On Denial Of Petition For Rehearing

ANDERSON, Justice.

October 12, 1954, the Village of Chub-buck, Bannock County, Idaho, passed Ordinance No. 30 annexing approximately 2i/£ acres in Power County, owned by J. E. McNichols and wife and known as the Last Frontier property. It is connected to the Village through a corridor strip or shoestring about three miles long and five feet wide, mostly within a public highway. The total acreage, including the strip, is less than five acres.

November 18, 1954, Gregg R. Potvin, Prosecuting Attorney for Power County, State of Idaho, filed a complaint for a declaratory judgment under R10-1202, I.C., against the Village and its officials and against Last Frontier, Inc., an Idaho corporation, contending that Ordinance No. 30 is invalid and void and does not conform to the provisions of Section 50-303, I.C., in that portions of the tract have not been laid off into lots or blocks containing not more than five acres each, nor have they been sold or begun to be sold off by metes and bounds in tracts not exceeding five acres; that certain portions of said strip purport to annex part of the public roads and highways belonging to the State of Idaho, and that the annexed land is neither contiguous nor adjacent to the Village of Chubbuck, Idaho, and that it lies in a different County from the Village.

The complaint alleges that respondent (plaintiff) is the duly elected prosecuting attorney of Power County, Idaho, and sets out certain of his duties and requests a declaratory judgment in order for respondent, and his successors in office, as prosecuting attorney of Power County, to de *456 termine and know his duties and obligations as such, relative to prosecution of persons who may make sales of intoxicating liquor by the drink at retail upon said Last Frontier property, and the validity and propriety of said Ordinance No. 30 of the Village of Chubbuck.

The evidence in this case discloses that the McNichols had resided on the property the past six years and he testified no intoxicating liquor had been sold during that time. There is no evidence as to plans for future sales.

The trial court held there was no justiciable controversy existing between respondent and appellants on which the court could enter a declaratory judgment. Nevertheless, the trial court held respondent had sufficiently plead a suit in quo warranto to demand by what authority respondent claimed said Ordinance No. 30 to be invalid.

The court held that Ordinance No. 30 was invalid, as the Last Frontier land was not contiguous or adjacent to the Village of Chubbuck, nor was it platted, nor did said Ordinance comply with Section 50-303, I.C., in other respects.

Appellants (defendants) contend that respondent is not the proper party to bring the action in this case and cites Toncray v. Budge, 14 Idaho 621, 642, 95 P. 26, wherein it was held the action must be brought in the name of the people of the State on the relation of either the prosecuting attorney or the attorney general. We are of the opinion the complaint shows this action is not brought by respondent as an individual, as it was in the Toncray case, but in his official capacity for and on behalf of the people of Power County, as prosecuting attorney and therefore for the people of the State.

A quo warranto proceeding could be maintained, Section 6-602, I.C. Quo warranto proceedings are not the exclusive remedy for testing validity of annexation. City of Anaheim v. City of Fullerton, 102 Cal.App.2d 395, 227 P.2d 494; see also 18 A.L.R.2d 1255 Annotation.

Section R10-704, Idaho Code, provides:

“The relief granted to the plaintiff, if there be no answer, can not exceed that which he shall have demanded in his complaint; but in any other case the court may grant him any relief consistent with the case made by the complaint embraced within the issue.”

No attack has been made as to the regularity and the adoption of Ordinance No. 30. The Section of the statute under which the validity of the Ordinance is being contested is 50-303, I.C., which provides:

“Whenever any land lying contiguous or adjacent to any city, town or village in the state of Idaho, or to any addition or extension thereof, shall be, or shall have been, by the owner or proprietor thereof, or by any person by or with the owner’s authority or acqui *457 escence, laid off into lots or blocks, containing not more than five acres of land each, whether the same shall have been, or shall be, laid off, subdivided or platted in accordance with any statute of this state or otherwise, or whenever the owner or proprietor, or any person by or with his authority, has sold, or begun to sell off such contiguous or adjacent lands by metes and bounds in tracts not exceeding five acres, it shall be competent for the council or board of trustees, as the case may be, by ordinance, to declare the same, by proper legal description thereof, a part of such city, town or village.”

In passing, it is noted that this statute has been amended by Senate Bill No. 184, 1955 Legislature, which will become effective May 4, 1955.

In the case of Hillman v. City of Pocatello, 74 Idaho 69, at page 71, 256 P.2d 1072, Justice Keeton, speaking for this Court, stated:

“Cities, towns and villages have the power to annex additional territory only under the conditions, restrictions and limitations which the legislature has imposed. Boise City v. Baxter, 41 Idaho 368, 238 P. 1029.
“The fundamental conception of a ■city or village is that it is a collective body of inhabitants, gathered together in one mass, with recognized and well-defined external boundaries which gather the persons inhabiting the area into one body, not separated by remote or disconnected areas. In its territorial extent, the idea of a city, town or village is one of unity and of continuity, not separated or segregated areas. [Emphasis added.]
“Under statutes authorizing a city or village, under prescribed., conditions, to annex adjacent or contiguous territory to the municipality, such statutes have been generally construed to include only contiguous or conterminous territory. The words ‘adjacent’ and ‘contiguous’ so used must be construed to have a meaning in their primary and obvious sense, and the territory to be annexed must be adjoining, contiguous, conterminous or abutting. In other words ‘adjacent” as used in the statute means connected with and does not contemplate that a city or village should be divided into noncontiguous parts or separated areas. (Cases cited.)” (Emphasis added.)

37 Am.Jur. 644, 645, Municipal Corporations No. 27, reads as follows:

“ * * * The legal as well as the popular idea of a municipal corporation in this country, both by name and use, is that of oneness, community, locality, vicinity; a collective body, not several bodies; a collective body of inhabitants—that is, a body of people

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Bluebook (online)
284 P.2d 414, 76 Idaho 453, 1955 Ida. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potvin-v-village-of-chubbuck-idaho-1955.