Schnieders v. Incorporated Town of Pocahontas

234 N.W. 207, 213 Iowa 807
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 13, 1931
DocketNo. 40357.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 234 N.W. 207 (Schnieders v. Incorporated Town of Pocahontas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schnieders v. Incorporated Town of Pocahontas, 234 N.W. 207, 213 Iowa 807 (iowa 1931).

Opinion

De Graek, J.

The plaintiffs, taxpayers and residents of the Incorporated Town of Pocahontas, Iowa, commenced the instant action against the said Town of Pocahontas and the members of the town council asserting that a certain telephone franchise voted favorably at a special election February 21, 1929, to the Northwestern Bell Telephone Company was invalid and ineffective because, as alleged, certain voters voting in favor of the franchise were for assigned reasons disqualified, and prayed that the election be declared invalid and ineffective and that the defendants be enjoined from passing any ordinance based on the said election.

The Northwestern Bell Telephone Company, being interested in the subject matter, filed its petition of intervention in which the Company alleged:

1. That the intervener was the corporation referred to in the public measure submitted to the electors.

2. That prior to February 21, 1929, there was filed with the mayor of the town of Pocahontas a petition in due form and signed by more than 50 property owners of the Incorporated Town of Pocahontas requesting said Mayor to call a special election of the electors of the Incorporated Town of Pocahontas, and to submit at said election the public meásure or question of granting to the intervener a franchise authorizing said inter-, vener to construct, maintain and operate a telephone plant within said town for the term of twenty-five years from the date of the acceptance of said franchise, and to occupy the streets, alleys and other public places of said incorporated town for said purpose.

3. That the mayor called the election.

4. That said election was held.

5. That at said election a majority of the electors voting thereon voted in favor of said public measure.

6. That thereafter and within 30 days thereof, the intervener filed with the town clerk of the Incorporated Town of *809 Pocahontas, Iowa, a written acceptance of said public measure and paid the costs of said election.

7. That the plaintiffs and defendants claim that the intervener acquired no rights by reason of the adoption of said public measure at said election and that said claim constitutes a cloud upon the title of intervener’s said franchise.

The intervener prayed that the title to the franchise, which,. as alleged vested in it by virtue of said election, be quieted and confirmed and that it have judgment agáinst plaintiffs and defendants for costs.

The defendants filed a motion to strike and dismiss the allegations numbered 2 to 7 above set out, and for the reason that said matters contained in said allegations failed to state a cause of action against the defendants or either of them, and plainly disclose that intervener is not entitled to the relief demanded, as said allegations do not state facts upon which the relief prayed could'be legally granted. The trial court in its ruling sustained the defendant’s motion to strike and dismiss the petition of intervention. From this ruling the intervener Northwestern Bell Telephone Company appealed.

The respective contentions of the parties in this case constitute the only controversial legal questions for decision. These contentions will now be stated.

The appellant-intervener contends that as a result of said favorable election that the legal effect thereof resulted in the granting of a franchise to the intervener, and that no act of the eouneilmanic body of said town is necessary to give to the intervener the right to occupy the streets and other places of said town with its telephone system. The appellee town, on the contrary, contends and claims that the election held pursuant to the petition filed was for the purpose only of advising or authorizing the town that it may enter into such a franchise contract with the intervener. In other words, the granting of the franchise must finally be by the town acting through its eouneilmanic body, and consequently the intervener-appellant acquired no right in the streets and other public places of the town by reason of the election per se. It is necessary in making, answer to the controverted question to refer to the applicable statutory provisions and to the interpretation given by this court to the said provisions.

*810 Section 5904, Code, 1927, grants to cities'and towns the power to authorize and regulate telephones by general and uniform regulation and to provide the manner in which and places where the wiring and equipment shall be placed upon, along, or under the streets, avenues, alleys, and public places of such city or town. This section is found in Chapter 304, of Title XV, captioned City and Town Government. Section 5714, Code, 1927, found in Chapter 290, of the aforesaid title, provides:

“Municipal corporations shall have power to make and publish, from, time to time, ordinances, not inconsistent with the laws of the state, for carrying into effect or discharging the powers and duties conferred by this title, * * *” (Title XV). Section 5717 of said chapter and title provides:
“No resolution or ordinance for any of the purposes hereinafter set forth, except as specifically provided by law, shall be adopted without a concurrence of a majority of the whole number of members elected to the council, by call of the yeas and nays which shall be recorded: 1. To pass or adopt any bylaw or ordinanpe. 2. To pass or adopt any resolution or order to enter into a contract. * # * ’ ’

It is true that in the granting of a franchise of the character as contemplated and named in Section 5904, Code, 1927, the legislature has said in no uncertain terms that the electors shall express their approval or dissent on the proposition involved. Incorporated Town of Mapleton v. Iowa L. H. & P. Co., 206 Iowa 9, l. c. 15. It is further said:

“The interest granted is in the streets and alleys of the municipality. True, the franchise comes from the state; but the act of the local authorities who represent the state, by its permission and for that purpose, constitutes the act upon which the law operates to create the franchise. Therefore, a franchise may be defined as a special privilege conferred by a government on individuals, which does not belong to the citizens of the body politic generally by common right. It is a privilege or authority vested in certain persons by grant of the sovereign, to exercise powers or to do and perform acts which, without such grant, they could not do or perform. * * * The council had power to enact an ordinance prior to the vote, although no action on the *811 part of the council could establish the plant without the approving vote.” ' : .

The principle is well settled that a franchise of the character involved . herein constitutes a contract between the state and municipality upon one hand and the grantee of the franchise upon the other. The franchise when granted cannot be abrogated by either party without the consent of the other. There can be no quarrel with the proposition that the police power belongs exclusively to sovereignty and inheres in the state without reservation in the constitution and is given expression by the legislature.

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234 N.W. 207, 213 Iowa 807, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schnieders-v-incorporated-town-of-pocahontas-iowa-1931.