Rouse v. City of Pascagoula

230 So. 2d 543, 1970 Miss. LEXIS 1549
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1970
DocketNo. 45564
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 230 So. 2d 543 (Rouse v. City of Pascagoula) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rouse v. City of Pascagoula, 230 So. 2d 543, 1970 Miss. LEXIS 1549 (Mich. 1970).

Opinion

PATTERSON, Justice.

This is an appeal by Vernon O. Rouse and other citizens of the community of Gautier requesting this Court to reverse the decision of the Chancery Court of Jackson County and order that the appellants’ petition for incorporation of the Gautier area be held valid and that a charter of incorporation be directed to issue in accord therewith.

In support of their request for a reversal the appellants contend the trial court erred in denying their petition for incorporation in that the chancellor exercised more than a mere legal discretion in rejecting the petition and such discretion was not conferred upon the chancellor by Mississippi Code 1942 Annotated section 3374-01 et seq. (1956). It is further assigned as error that the opinion of the trial court was contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence.

The record reflects that the petitioners below, appellants here, prepared their petition and filed the same in accord with the requirements listed in Mississippi Code 1942 Annotated section 3374-03 (1956). The requisites of the section are:

(1) It shall describe accurately the metes and bounds of the territory proposed to be incorporated and there shall be attached to such petition a map or plat of the boundaries of the proposed municipality.
(2) It shall set forth the corporate name which is desired.
(3) It shall be signed by at least two-thirds of the qualified electors residing in the territory proposed to be incorporated.
(4) It shall set forth the number of inhabitants of such territory.
(5) It shall set forth the assessed valuation of the real property in such territory according to the latest available assessments thereof.
(6) It shall state the aims of the petitioners in seeking said incorporation, and shall set forth the municipal and public services which said municipal corporation proposes to render and the reasons why the public convenience and necessity would be served by the creation of such municipal corporation.
(7) It shall contain a statement of the names of the persons the petitioners desire appointed as officers of the municipality.
(8) It shall be sworn to by one or more of the petitioners.

The petition concluded with a prayer for incorporation as well as for notice to issue to the City of Pascagoula and the City of Moss Point, these municipalities being within three miles of the proposed municipal incorporation, as well as to all interested persons. The City of Moss Point did not respond to the petition. However, the City of Pascagoula, as well as E. C. Harris of the unincorporated territory and others in a capacity similar to his, filed answers contesting the incorporation. The gist of their answers was a denial that two-thirds of the qualified electors residing in the area signed the petition for incorporation. They also denied that the assessed valuation of the real property within the area was in excess of $1,350,000 as alleged. The main thrust of the answers, however, is that the respondents denied the reasonableness of the petitioners’ abilities to perform the salutary proposals alleged in the petition which are required by Mississippi Code 1942 Annotated section 3374-03(6) (1956), including the health and sanitation proposals and police protection. The respondents denied that incorporation would encourage the location of new industry and other businesses in the area and also denied that it is practicable or reasonable for the petitioners to open and maintain streets and alleyways, to install drainage systems, or to build and maintain municipal water and sewerage systems or other public utilities. They averred that the cost of provid[545]*545ing these services or any of them would be prohibitive for the proposed area of incorporation as it is thinly populated and its expanse prohibits the supplying of public utilities as mentioned since it would not be economically sound.

They also averred by the answer that Jackson County is presently developing a workable program in coordination with other levels of government. The prime function of this program is to arrange long-range plans for the orderly development of the non-city areas of the county, including the proposed area. Specific steps, it was asserted, implementing this program have already been taken as follows:

(a) Adoption of a zoning ordinance.
(b) Establishment of a County Planning Commission.
(c) Drainage of low lands.
(d) Mosquito Control.
(e) Road planning and development.
(f) Establishment of water and sewerage utility districts.
(g) Regular garbage pick-up.
(h) Adoption of Southern Codes for —Electrical, Plumbing, Heating, Fire.
County programs which are already in the planning stage for non-city areas of Jackson County, Mississippi, including the proposed area, include the following:
(a) Subdivision regulations.
(b) Major thoroughfare and road plans.
(c) Completion of comprehensive drainage program.
(d) Bridge replacement and renewal program.
(e) Updating of Zoning Ordinance and adoption of a zoning map.
(f) Highway and road traffic study.

The respondents also denied that the incorporation of the proposed area will serve the public convenience or necessity and that the petition should therefore be rejected.

The area sought to be incorporated is described in general terms as being just west of the West Pascagoula River, its northern boundary being Mary Walker Bayou, its southern boundary the Mississippi Sound and a portion of Graveline Bayou, its western boundary being the east line of Claim Section Sixteen and Claim Section Three and by the Gautier-Van Cleave Road north of Old Highway 90, the area containing approximately 4,000 acres.

The evidence adduced in support of the petition was primarily that of H, C. Mal-chow, a consulting engineer who had made a study of the area and who testified with respect to the proposed municipal government from the adoption of the budget to the bond requirements for the establishment of the water and sewer systems. It was his opinion that the proposals of the petition were reasonable and that they could be funded. Much of his testimony was based upon his thought that the municipality would receive revenue from the state sales tax once it was incorporated and that this aid when coupled with a bond issue, which he thought reasonable, would enable the municipality to begin its functions as a city in a modest way and to expand these functions as the future economic situation would warrant.

There was also the testimony of the county health officer with regard to the public need for a sewerage disposal system since most of the septic tanks in the area do not function properly and are no longer approved by the health department or by the Federal Housing Authority.

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Related

City of Pascagoula v. Scheffler
487 So. 2d 196 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1986)
City of Jackson v. Town of Flowood
331 So. 2d 909 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1976)
Field v. Jackson
280 So. 2d 837 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1973)
Matter of Incorporation of Forest Hill
280 So. 2d 837 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1973)

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Bluebook (online)
230 So. 2d 543, 1970 Miss. LEXIS 1549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rouse-v-city-of-pascagoula-miss-1970.