Purdy v. City of Vestavia Hills

246 So. 2d 440, 286 Ala. 714, 1971 Ala. LEXIS 864
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 25, 1971
Docket6 Div. 699
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 246 So. 2d 440 (Purdy v. City of Vestavia Hills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Purdy v. City of Vestavia Hills, 246 So. 2d 440, 286 Ala. 714, 1971 Ala. LEXIS 864 (Ala. 1971).

Opinion

LAWSON, Justice.

On February 18, 1969, the City of Vestavia Hills, by its Mayor, filed with the Judge of Probate of Jefferson County a certified copy of its Resolution 256, wherein it is stated that the public good and public health require that certain territory, described in the resolution, be brought within the limits of the City of Vestavia Hills.

It was requested in the resolution that the Judge of Probate “make all orders and decrees and to do all things required by law, in particular by Article 1 of Chapter 5 of Title 37 of the Code of Alabama of 1940, as amended to the end that the above-described territory be incorporated within the limits of the City of Vestavia Hills, Alabama, if authorized at an election therefor as provided by law.”

The resolution was filed under the authority of § 135, Title 37, Code 1940, as last amended by Act 402, approved August 16, 1965, Acts of Alabama, Regular Session 1965, Volume I, p. 578. Act 402, supra, is included in the 1969 Cumulative Pocket Part to Volume 9 of the 1958 unofficial Recompiled Code of Alabama at page 92. When we allude hereinafter to .§ 135, Title 37, we have reference to the provisions of Act 402, supra, as set out in the above-referred-to Pocket Part to Volume 9 of the 1958 Recompiled Code.

Section 135(10), Title 37, reads:

“The plat or map filed with the certified copy of the resolution, as required herein, shall show accurately the territory proposed to be embraced within the corporate limits, including all subdivisions into lots, blocks, streets and alleys within such territory, if any, and an accurate description by metes and bounds of the boundary of such territory, which territory must be contiguous to the boundary of and form a homogeneous part of the city or town and such territory may extend to or around the boundary line of any other city or town, but is not to embrace any territory within the corporate limits of another municipality. No platted or unplatted territory shall be included within such boundary unless there are at least two qualified electors residing on each quarter of each quarter section, according to government survey, or part thereof, of such platted or unplatted land, who assent thereto in writing by signing said petition, together with the consent of the persons, firms or corporations owning at least sixty percent of the acreage of such platted or unplatted land, such consent to be signified by their signing said petition. Proof of residence and qualification as electors of petitioners and of persons affected shall be made to the judge of probate, by affidavit or otherwise, as he may direct. When determining the ownership of the land within such boundary, the persons, firms or corporations assessing the .same for taxation shall be accepted by the probate judge as prime facie the owners thereof.”

[716]*716Resolution 256 in its preamble contains statements showing a compliance in all respects with the requirements of § 135(10), Title 37, supra.

At the time Resolution 256 was certified to the Judge of Probate there was attached thereto (1) maps of the territory sought to be brought within the limits of the City of Vestavia Hills; (2) petitions of “Property Owners, Residents and Voters” within the territory sought to be annexed; (3) certificate of the Tax Assessor of Jefferson County which reads, in part: “ * * * the signatures of the persons, firms, or corporations owning at least sixty (60%) per cent of the acreage described in the attached petition, appear as signers of such petition”; (4) certificate of the Chairman of the Board of Registrars of Jefferson County as to the voting qualifications of the persons whose names appeared on the aforementioned petitions; (5) an affidavit of the City Clerk of the City of Vestavia Hills which reads, in part: “ * * * that at least two qualified electors residing on each quarter-quarter section, according to the government survey or part thereof, of the territory sought to be annexed to the City of Vestavia Hills, Alabama, have signed the attached petition. I further solemnly swear (or affirm) that the persons, firms or corporations owning at least sixty percent of the acreage of land sought to be annexed to the City of Vestavia Hills, Alabama, have signed the said petition.”

On February 27, 1969, before the Judge of Probate could have legally ordered, an election as requested in the resolution (§ 135[2], Title 37), Kathryn Purdy, Margery Purdy, William G. White, Jewel Leigh White and Mildred M. Brannan filed in the Probate Court of Jefferson County a petition alleging that Kathryn Purdy was “ * * * jjQidg]- 0f an option to purchase a part of the said territory proposed to be annexed by the City of Vestavia Hills, Alamaba. * * * ”; that Kathryn Purdy and those who joined with her in the petition were “owners of property in Jefferson County, immediately adjoining a portion of the territory proposed to be annexed by the City of Vestavia Hills, Alabama, whose property lies within the territory included in a petition for annexation pending with the Town of Hoover, Alabama which also includes part of the property included in the said property included in the petition pending in this proceeding * * * ”

The petition of Kathryn Purdy et al. prayed that the relief sought by the City of Vestavia Hills be denied for the following reasons:

1. The territory to be annexed was not contiguous to the City of Vestavia Hills.

2. There was pending before the Town of Hoover a proceeding to annex to that town property of petitioners and others located in a described quarter-quarter section, which quarter-quarter section “is included in the territory proposed to be annexed by the City of Vestavia Hills.”

3. A portion of the territory described in Resolution 256 of the City of Vestavia Hills was within the corporate limits of the Town of Hoover.

4. The petition filed by the City of Vestavia Hills with its Resolution 256 did not contain the names of two qualified voters residing in a certain quarter-quarter section in the territory proposed to be annexed (the same forty referred to in 2 above) in that all but one had withdrawn their names from the petition.

On February 27, 1969, the Judge of Probate ordered that the petition of Kathryn Purdy et al. and Resolution 256 of the City of Vestavia Hills be “set down for a hearing on the 5th of March, 1969.”

On March 5, 1969, the City of Vestavia Hills filed its Resolution 256-A with map attached, which amended Resolution 256 only as to property description. Resolution 256-A had the effect of eliminating from the territory proposed to be annexed to the City of Vestavia Hills “a small parcel of land which, under the provisions of law, was not includable in the territory subject to annexation to said City.” Apparently [717]*717“the small parcel of land” was in the Town of Hoover. Kathryn Purdy et al. were not connected with that parcel of land.

The City of Vestavia Hills on the same day filed in the office of the Judge of Probate of Jefferson County a “Motion to Dismiss and Answer.” The grounds for dismissal read:

“1. For that said petitioners are not owners of property located in the area described in Resolution Number 256 of the City Council of the City of Vestavia Hills, Alabama.

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Bluebook (online)
246 So. 2d 440, 286 Ala. 714, 1971 Ala. LEXIS 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purdy-v-city-of-vestavia-hills-ala-1971.