State ex rel. Ahern v. Anders

152 N.W. 801, 30 N.D. 572, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 136
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 152 N.W. 801 (State ex rel. Ahern v. Anders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Ahern v. Anders, 152 N.W. 801, 30 N.D. 572, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 136 (N.D. 1915).

Opinion

Burke, J.

The county of Dunn was organized January 17, 1908, by proclamation of the governor, who, at said time, named Manning as the temporary county seat, under § 3-, chapter 63, Sess. Laws 1907, [574]*574now known as § 3193, Comp. Laws 1913. Thereafter the government of the county was conducted at said place, the county owning a plat of ground upon which was located a courthouse, which was destroyed by fire about the 19th of January, 1914. Since this date, rooms have been rented for the use of said county offices. About the 6th day of August, 1914, a petition for the removal of the county seat from Manning to Dunn Center was submitted to the board of county commissioners, and acting thereunder an election was designated to be held upon the 3d day of November, 1914. A canvass of the vote showed that Dunn Center had received 876 votes and Manning 507. The county commissioners thereupon decided that the said proposition had not carried by a two-thirds vote as required by § 3236, Comp. Laws 1913. This action is a writ of mandamus directed to such county commissioners seeking to compel them to certify Dunn Center the permanent county seat. Relators contend that Manning is only the temporary county seat; that the governor was only given the authority under § 3193 to designate the location of the county seat until the voters themselves had permanently located the same by a majority vote. It is their further contention that § 6, chapter 21, of the Political Code of 1877, is still in force and effect in this state (although not found in any of the laws after 1885), and thereunder the voters themselves have the right at the first general election at which county officers are chosen, to select and locate a permanent county seat.

(1) We will first discuss the question of the law under which the election of 1914 was held. We will not in this opinion set forth all of the various enactments of the territorial and state legislatures of this commonwealth, as the same has been done in Miller v. Norton, 22 N. D. 196, 132 N. W. 1080. Anyone interested in the subject will find the same exhaustively treated in such opinion.

. In such opinion, it is said: “The Revised Codes of 1895 was new legislation. It was a change from old to new, and not a continuation of the old with amendments.” Prom said opinion we further quote: “The complete change-in the statute generally, from that existing prior to 1895, is strongly indicative of legislative intent to depart from existing law and procedure. This is strengthened when we find the entire new law was borrowed in all its unusual and peculiar features [575]*575from a sister state, and the former law supplanted thereby expressly repealed.”

This view is also sustained by the following cases: Brown County v. Aberdeen, 4 Dak. 402, 31 N. W. 735; Lawrence County v. Meade County, 6 S. D. 528, 62 N. W. 131; Keese v. Denver, 10 Colo. 112, 15 Pac. 825; Notes in 4 L.R.A. 310, 1 L.B.A. 362; State v. Cooper, 18 N. D. 583, 120 N. W. 878; First Nat. Bank v. Lewis, 18 N. D. 390, 121 N. W. 836; United States v. Tynen, 11 Wall. 88, 20 L. ed. 153; Crowell v. Jaqua, 114 Ind. 246, 15 N. E. 242. It is our conclusion, therefore, that chapter 21, Political Code 1877, has been long since repealed.

The election in dispute, therefore, was held under § 3233, Comp. Laws 1913, being § 2358, Bev. Codes 1895, amended by chapter 59, Sess. Laws 1907, and was an act for the removal, and not for the relocation, of said county seat. This is in harmony with Miller v. Norton, supra, wherein it is said: “In discussing the question involved in this opinion, we have designated our present statute as a removal, as distinguished from a relocation, statute. We have used'these terms advisedly.” Such being the case, Dunn Center must have received two-thirds of the vote cast to be entitled under the statute to the relief sought in this proceeding.

(2) Upon oral argument, relator for the first time insisted that, even conceding the repeal of chapter 21 of the Political Code of 1877, the voters of Dunn county had an inherent right to locate their own county seat by an election, and that they were not afforded this opportunity under the provisions of § 3193, Comp. Laws 1913. They reason further that having this inherent right to an election for the purpose of locating the county seat, that the election held in November, 1914, though in form a removal election, should be treated by this court as though it had been held for the relocation of the county seat. We do not believe this contention has any merit. The Constitution of North Dakota, §§ 166-173, bears evidence of the intent that the legislature should not thereafter create any counties or locate the county seat by special acts of their own, which had been the practice prior to that time. As a substitute for legislative creation, it was provided that the legislature should enact laws under which the people of the different counties might organize. Section 167 reads: “The [576]*576legislative assembly shall provide by general law for organizing new-counties, locating the county seats thereof temporarily, and changing county lines. . . .” Section 169 : “The legislative assembly shall provide, by general law, for changing county seats in organized counties, but it shall have no power to remove the county seat of any organized county.” The legislature is thus commanded to provide laws where-under the people of the county may organize the same. The legislature, in obedience to this mandate, has enacted § 3193, Comp. Laws 1913, which applies to territory which is for the first time being organized into counties, and reads: “Upon the granting of the petition for the organization of such county and within thirty days thereafter, the governor is empowered and it is hereby made his duty by written order to locate a temporary county seat therein at such place as the greatest number of bona fide residents of such county shall designate by petition. . . .” It has also provided at § 3208, Comp. Laws 1913, for new counties which are created by a division of an old county, which section reads: “The county commissioners of such county shall have power temporarily to fix the county seat and such location shall remain the county seat until the first general election thereafter when the qualified voters of such county are empowered to vote for and select the place of the county seat by ballot as provided by law. . . .”

Whether the legislature believed that new and unorganized territory which is about to be formed into a county has certain distinctions from old territory which is already settled up with full election machinery and the towns permanently located, we can only surmise, but that such a difference does exist is apparent in this case, where the county seat in the first place was named before any railroad was built, and now finds itself 12 miles inland. In any event, the legislature has seen fit to allow counties organized by division of an old county, to locate their county seat by election at the first general election held thereafter, while in the case of new territory to be formed into a county, no provision is made for such election, but the county seat is temporarily named by petition.

The relator contends that the legislature inadvertently failed to provide for the holding of an election for the location of county seats in counties created from unorganized territory. The respondents, on the [577]

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Related

United States v. Tynen
78 U.S. 88 (Supreme Court, 1871)
Keese v. City of Denver
10 Colo. 112 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1887)
Brown County v. City of Aberdeen
31 N.W. 735 (Supreme Court of Dakota, 1887)
Lawrence County v. Meade County
62 N.W. 131 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1895)
First National Bank v. Lewis
121 N.W. 836 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1909)
State ex rel. State Farmers Mutual Hail Insurance v. Cooper
120 N.W. 878 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1909)
Miller v. Norton
132 N.W. 1080 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1911)
Crowell v. Jaqua
15 N.E. 242 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1888)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 N.W. 801, 30 N.D. 572, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-ahern-v-anders-nd-1915.