Richardson v. City of Omaha

104 N.W. 172, 74 Neb. 297, 1905 Neb. LEXIS 211
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1905
DocketNo. 13,766
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 104 N.W. 172 (Richardson v. City of Omaha) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson v. City of Omaha, 104 N.W. 172, 74 Neb. 297, 1905 Neb. LEXIS 211 (Neb. 1905).

Opinion

Jackson, C.

The plaintiffs instituted this action to enjoin the collection of certain special taxes and assessments levied by the city of Omaha on certain lots and lands, and the case was brought to this court by appeal from the decree declaring the assessments in street improvement district No. 679 to be void, and that the assessment for certain permanent sidewalks was also void. It appears from the record that at special meetings’of the city council of the city of Omaha an ordinance was introduced and passed providing for certain improvements in street improvement district No. 679. Section 39 of the charter of Omaha provides:

“The mayor or any three councilmen shall have power to call special meetings of the council, the object of which shall be submitted to the council in writing, and the call and object and disposition thereof, shall be entered upon the journal by the clerk.” The record of the meeting at which the ordinance ivas introduced, in so far as it is pertinent to the inquiry, is as follows: “Council Chamber, July 1, 1899. Special meeting. Council called to order. Special session Saturday July 1, 1899, at 8:30 o’clock A. M., by President Bingham. Present, Bechel, Burkley, Burmester, Karr,.Mount, Stuht, Mr. President. [299]*299Absent, Lobeck, Mercer. Qnornm. present. Call. A special meeting of the city council of the city of Omaha is hereby called for Saturday, July 1, 1899, at 8:30 o’clock A. M., in the council chamber in the City Hall, for the purpose of considering communications, petitions, resolutions, committee reports and ordinances on first, second and third reading and passage. Frank J. Burkley, Ernest Stuht, W. W. Bingham, Tfm. F. Bechel.” At this meeting the ordinance was introduced, read the first time, and, under a suspension of the rules, read for the second time. On July 3 of the same year, at another special meeting of the council, of which the record material to the inquiry is substantially the same as that of the meeting of July 1, with the exception of the date and the hour of the meeting, and that only one of the councilmen was absent, the ordinance was put upon its third reading and passage, and was passed by the necessary number of votes.

It is contended by the plaintiffs that the ordinance is void because it Avas introduced and passed at special sessions of the city council, and that at the special sessions, so held, the object of the meeting Avas not submitted to the council in Avriting, nor Avas the object and call of the meeting spread upon the journal of the council by the clerk. This contention of the plaintiffs was sustained by the court, and the collection of the special assessments and taxes was enjoined. ' The record of the special meetings quoted above Avas introduced and received in evidence at the instance of the plaintiffs, from which it appears that the claim of the plaintiffs and the finding of the court that the call and object of the meeting were not spread on the journal of the city council by-the clerk is not Avell founded. It is argued by counsel that Omaha inherited its charter provisions from the colonies, Avhich required notice of special toAvn meetings to contain a statement of the object and purpose of the meeting, and that consideration of the construction placed upon the requirements as to the notice of such special toAvn meetings will sustain their contention in this case. A careful reading, however, of [300]*300the charter provision relied upon, leads to a different conclusion. No particular form for the notice of special meetings of the city council in Omaha is required by the charter, nor is it required that the object of the meeting shall be stated in the call. What seems to be required, if the charter provision is mandatory, is that, after the council is convened, the object of the meeting shall be stated; in other words, that the question shall be stated before the motion is put. We think that the Omaha charter has adopted the form rather than the substance of the requirements necessary to a special town meeting in the colonial period, and that the call of the special meetings of the Omaha council included a sufficient statement of the object of the meeting, and obviates the necessity of any other statement or procedure to give the meeting vitality, other than the act of spreading the call at large upon the journal as a part of the proceedings of the council. A very substantial reason might be given for obeying the provision of the charter, had it required notice of the meeting to contain a statement of the object of the meeting, but there seems to be no good reason for insisting that, after the council has. convened, the contents of the proposed ordinance should be disclosed by a statement before the ordinance is read, when a much more satisfactory exposition of the ordinance is made by the reading of the ordinance itself. We conclude that the requirements of the provisions of the Omaha charter questioned in this proceeding have been substantially complied with.

Upon the other branch of the case, relating to the assessments for permanent sidewalks, it is contended by the plaintiffs, and was found by the court, that the resolution directing the construction of the walks is invalid because the mayor and-council did not designate the kind of material with which the walks should be constructed, and that the authority to designate such material was delegated to the board of public works, contrary to the provisions of the ordinance under which the walks were or[301]*301dered to be constructed. Section 3 of the ordinance of the city authorizing the mayor and council to order the construction of permanent walks is as follows: “That the sidewalks shall be laid and constructed oí permanent material, such as brick, tiling, stone, artificial stone, macadam, slagolithic or other like material, as may be ordered by the mayor and council.” The resolution directing the construction of the walks provided that they should be constructed “of stone or artificial stone” and required them to be constructed according to the plans, specifications and requirements of the board of public Avorks, and provided that, unless the owner or owners of the premises should construct such Avalks. within 15 days, the board of public Avorks should cause the same to be done, and report the cost to the city council, to be assessed to the extent of special benefits thereto upon the lot, part of lot or real estate along or abutting with such sidewalk so constructed. The OAAners failed to comply Avith the resolution, and the walks Avere constructed by the city, and the cost of such construction assessed to the owners of the abutting property, according to the provisions of the resolution directing construction of the w alks.

The district court sustained the contention of the plaintiffs and enjoined the collection of the special assessments and taxes; the language of the decree being:

“For the reason that the city of Omaha, through its mayor and council, failed to determine or designate the material of Avliich the sideAvalks should be constructed, but unlawfully delegated the poAver to designate and determine the material to be used in said sideAvalks to the board of public Avorks in the city.”

We find ourselves unable to agree with the conclusions reached by the district court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 N.W. 172, 74 Neb. 297, 1905 Neb. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-city-of-omaha-neb-1905.