Simpson County v. Buckley

85 Miss. 713
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 85 Miss. 713 (Simpson County v. Buckley) 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
Simpson County v. Buckley, 85 Miss. 713 (Mich. 1904).

Opinion

Truly, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On a former appeal of this case — 81 Miss., 474 (33 South. Eep., 650) — it was held that the complainants, appellees here, had such an interest in the attempted removal of the county site as permitted- them to invoke the power of equity to restrain an illegal removal. The averments of the bill of complaint were held sufficient to withstand demurrer. Answer was required, and the cause was remanded, that it might be heard and determined on the merits. Upon final hearing, after proof taken, the chancellor decreed that the attempted removal of the county-seat from Westville to Edna (now called Mendenhall) was illegal; that the orders of the board of supervisors directing such removal were null and void. The injunction against the removal was perpetuated, and the board of supervisors and those county officers who were joined as defendants were ordered to return all official records of the county to Westville, from whence they had been removed in pursuance of said void orders. From that decree this appeal is prosecuted.

[724]*724A. succinct statement of the facts material and necessary to a proper understanding of the questions here presented for decision is as follows: In 1900 the legislature of the state passed an act (ch. 149, p. 201) authorizing the board of supervisors of Simpson county, “upon the presentation before them of a petition signed by two hundred qualified electors of said county, to order an election submitting to the legal voters the question of the removal of the seat of justice of said county from ’West-ville to some convenient point on-the Gulf & Ship Island Railroad;” and after providing the form of the ballot to be used, so that an elector could on the same ballot vote for or against-removal and also signify his preference for any point competing for the location of the seat of justice, the act proceeds: “If, after the votes cast in said election have been canvassed by the board of election commissioners, it appears that removal has carried, but no point has secured the number of votes necessary to a choice, as required by sec. 259 of the constitution of the state of Mississippi, then the board of supervisors of said county shall order another election, and give ten days’ notice of the same, for the purpose of determining as to the point of location only, and the two points which received the highest number of votes at the first election shall be submitted to be voted upon, and the board of supervisors of said county shall continue to order elections until some point has secured the majority required by the constitution of this state; the point securing such majority shall be declared the permanent seat of justice of said county.” The q>etition in proper form and sufficiently signed having been duly presented, the board ordered an election, which was regularly and fairly held, and which, as appears by the canvass and return made by the election commissioners filed with the board of sujoervisors, resulted as follows: Total votes cast, 904. For removal, 644; against removal, 260; for removal to Edna, 626 — Edna being the only point competing for the location of the county site and the only point placed on the ballot to be voted for. Upon the coming [725]*725in of this report, the board of supervisors passed an order reciting that after careful consideration of the tabular statement of the vote cast, it “appearing to the satisfaction of the board that-‘removal’ carried by receiving a majority of the votes cast at said election, and that the town of Edna received a majority of the votes cast at said election,” it was therefore ordered that the seat of justice of the county be moved to the town of Edna. Before this order of removal could be carried into effect, one Weathersby, a citizen and taxpayer of said county, obtained from the chancery court an injunction restraining the removal on the ground that the removal of the seat of justice had not been authorized by the affirmative vote of the proportion of the qualified electors of the county required by Constitution 1890, sec. 259. Subsequently a final decree was rendered dissolving the injunction and dismissing the bill of complaint filed by Weathersby. Immediately upon the termination of the Weathersby suit the board of supervisors procured a temporary courthouse at Edna, and removed the seat of justice and all the records' of the county to that point. Thereupon Buckley and some hundreds of the taxpayers of the county (appellees here) filed their bill of complaint, setting out above facts and charging that the board of supervisors had sold bonds for the purpose and then were about to proceed to the construction of a new courthouse and jail at Edna; that they intended to sell the county buildings at Westville, and invest the proceeds thereof, together with the proceeds of the county bonds, in the new public buildings which they contemplated erecting at Edna. An injunction restraining such action by the board was prayed and granted. The averments contained in the bill on which the granting of the injunction was based were these: That at the election which had been ordered by the board of supervisors pursuant to ch. 149, p. 201, Acts 1900, submitting the question of removal of the seat of justice to the electors of the county, “removal” had not “carried” within the meaning of that act and sec. 259 of the constitution, because at the election so holden less than two-[726]*726thirds of the qualified electors of the county had voted for removal; that Edna, now called “Mendenhall,” was further distant from the center of the county than Westville, and, this being true, in order to authorize the board of supervisors to make any order in the premises, it was necessary that two-thirds of the qualified electors of the county should vote therefor; that the order of the board of supervisors directing removal not only failed to show that the constitutional majority did vote for the removal, but expressly negatived the existence of that fact.

It will be noted that the order directing the removal of the county site to Edna affirmatively shows that “removal” received “a majority of the votes cast at said election,” without stating that that number was a two-thirds majority of the electorate .of the entire county. It further appears that “the town of Edna received a majority of the votes cast at said election.” Upon final hearing the chancellor decreed as issues of fact that the number of votes cast at the election for “removal” did not constitute two-thirds of the electors of the county qualified to vote at the date of the election, and that Edna was further away from the center of the county than was Westville, and rendered a final decree annulling the action of the board, as hereinbefore set out.

Upon this appeal it is urged by appellants that the Weathersby suit was a “class” suit; that Weathersby was, in the eyes of the law, a representative of all other citizens or taxpayers occupying a similar relation; and that an adjudication against him in his representative capacity is conclusive against all others, including these appellees. We cannot concur in this view. The facts of this case do not bring it within the scope of the beneficent doctrine invoked. The decree of the chancery court in the case of Weathersby v. Board of Supervisors was not such a final determination of the legality of the order for removal of the county site as to preclude the present appellees from prosecuting this suit. The rule of law by which a representa[727]

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Bluebook (online)
85 Miss. 713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simpson-county-v-buckley-miss-1904.