Price v. Water Dist. No. 8

1930 OK 579, 293 P. 1092, 147 Okla. 11, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 339
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 16, 1930
Docket21145
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1930 OK 579 (Price v. Water Dist. No. 8) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Price v. Water Dist. No. 8, 1930 OK 579, 293 P. 1092, 147 Okla. 11, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 339 (Okla. 1930).

Opinion

ANDREWS, J.

The plaintiffs in error (hereinafter referred to as plaintiffs) filed an action in the district court of Tulsa county against the defendants in error (hereinafter referred to as defendants) to enjoin the levying of assessments against the property of plaintiffs in water district No. 8, Tulsa county, to have said water improvement district declared to be nonexistent, to remove any cloud on the property of the plaintiffs caused by the creation of the water improvement district, to enjoin the attempted levying of assessments thereon, and for other relief.

, Water district No. 8, Tulsa county, Okla., was organized under the authority conferred by chapter 145, S. L. 1925, which authorizes counties ” to create water improvement districts, to provide for the construction^ of a water distribution system, to obtain, supply, transport, and distribute water, and to levy and' collect assessments upon the property benefited by such water improvements, homesteads included, without regard to cash valuation. The provisions of the act relating to the organization of such water improvement districts, where no incorporated town is embraced within the limits of the proposed district, are as follows:

. .There ’ shall be filed with the board of county commissioners a petition, signed by ndt less than a majority’Of the'holders of title to lands desiring to be embraced .in-A water improvement district. (The'necessary allegations of the petition are set forth in the act, but it As not necessary for us: to consider the allegations thereof, for the reason .that .they are. hot withih the issues in this case.) Upon the filing of such a peti *12 tion tie county clerk shall cause the petition, to be set down for hearing and shall give notice of the ’ hearing by publication in a newspaper printed and of general circulation in the county, stating that any person may appear and protest the organization of the district. The board of county commissioners is given exclusive jurisdiction to hear and determine all protests to the creation of such district and all matters pertaining to the same. The board of county commissioners shall determine whether the formation of the district will be conducive to the public health and welfare of the said proposed district, and if said board so determines, it shall call an election of the qualified electors in the territory comprising the proposed district on the question of whether said district shall be organized.

The legislative intent shown by the act is, as contended by plaintiffs, that the petition must be signed by not less than a majority of holders of title to lands within the proposed water improvement district. In every instance there Would be a question of fact as to whether or not the petition is signed by not less than a majority of the holders of title to lands within the proposed water improvement district. Of necessity there must be some metho.d.for determining that question. The county clerk is given no authority to make the determination. His duty to set the petition for hearing and give notice of the hearing is purely .ministerial and he has no authority to determine whether or not the petition is sufficient. Under the terms of the act the board of county commissioners is given authority to .hear and determine all protests to the creation of such district and all matters pertaining to the same. .

The plaintiffs contend that the board of county commissioners is without jurisdiction or authority to pass upon 'the sufficiency of the petition and that its action in finding the petition sufficient is a nullity. Since the act provides that" tie board of county commissioners shall' have exclusive jurisdiction to hear and determine'.all protests to the creation of such district- and "all’ matters pertaining to the same, ■ it’has-jurisdiction and authority 'to pass upon the sufficiency of the petition or the sufficiency thereof can be determined only by^aUeourfc* 'Nbtice 'Of hearing gave opportunity to protest'the organization of the ' district.-:' That' carried with it the right to ther'e assert that the district ■■ should not be organized for the reason 'that the 'petition filed Was insufficient.' The giving of- exclusive jurisdiction to the board of county commissioners, to hear and determine all protests to the creation of such districts includes the jurisdiction to hear and determine a protest to the creation of the district on the ground that the petition therefor was not signed by a majority of the holders of title to lands within the proposed district.

To give the act the construction contended for by plaintiffs is to say that the Legislature intended that a petition filed with the board of county commissioners for the organization of a water improvement district must be determined to be valid by a court of competent jurisdiction before the board of county commissioners can proceed under the authority granted by the act. We cannot sustain that contention. We hold that, under the authority conferred by the act, the board of county commissioners is authorized to determine the sufficiency of the petition filed with it.

The California case, Mulligan v. Smith, 59 Cal. 266, relied upon by the plaintiffs, is not in point. That decision was based upon the fact that the statute there considered failed to provide the -parties in interest an opportunity to be heard upon the sufficiency of the petition on which the whole proceeding was made to depend.

In Spaulding v. North San Francisco Homestead & R. R. Ass’n, 87 Cal. 40, 24 Pac. 600, that court said:

“Even if, as seemingly suggested by counsel for appellant, the act referred to does not provide in express terms for any determination of the matter of a petition, clearly, where a board is empowered to receive a petition and is invested with discretion in regard to the subject-matter, it has the implied power to determine whether it shall be granted or not. The law makes it the duty of the board, upon receiving a proper petition for the grading of a street, ■to publish a resolution of its intention to perform the work, and thereafter make an order that it shall be done. C'an it be reasonably contended that, if a petition sufficient upon its face should pray for the grading of a street already graded, the board would have to perform the idle ceremony of publishing a resolution of intention to perform the work, and order the same to be done, regardless of the falsity of. .the apparent necessity of the grading shown by the petition? Assuredly not. To determine the necessity for the work requires the exercise of judgment on the part of the board, and,' in order to properly reach the consideration of this fact, it would first have to determine whether the petition were sufficient or not.
*13 “The amount of frontage owned or possessed by the petitioner being, then, one of the jurisdictional facts that the board had to pass upon, its determination of the same in favor of the petitioner is and was conclusive against .the collateral attack of appellant at the trial.”

On rehearing, 87 Cal. 40, 25 Pac. 249, it was urged the decision was in conflict with Mulligan v. Smith, supra. In answer to that contention the court distinguished the eases and said:

“But, after argument on rehearing, and mature consideration, we are satisfied with the conclusions reached in department. Mulligan v. Smith, and Kahn v.

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Bluebook (online)
1930 OK 579, 293 P. 1092, 147 Okla. 11, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-water-dist-no-8-okla-1930.