State Ex Rel. Burnquist v. Village of North Pole

6 N.W.2d 458, 213 Minn. 297, 1942 Minn. LEXIS 519
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 27, 1942
DocketNo. 33,237.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 6 N.W.2d 458 (State Ex Rel. Burnquist v. Village of North Pole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Burnquist v. Village of North Pole, 6 N.W.2d 458, 213 Minn. 297, 1942 Minn. LEXIS 519 (Mich. 1942).

Opinion

Julius J. Olson, Justice.

Quo toarrcmto upon the relation of the attorney general to test the corporate existence of the village of North Pole. Upon issues duly framed, the trial court found the facts to be substantially as claimed by the state, and judgment was ordered declaring the “purported incorporation and organization of said Village” to be “wholly null, void, and of no effect,” and that “its purported officers” should be “ousted and excluded” from “acting and functioning in any manner as such.” From the judgment entered pursuant thereto, defendants appeal. We shall hereafter include all defendants as the “village,” since, upon this record, if the village is lawfully organized, the right of the individual defendants to hold office cannot be questioned.

The writ required the village to respond to the allegations thereof “by answer, plea, or demurrer” on February 11, 1941, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon at the courthouse in Bemidji, and to “show by what warrant” it was incorporated and organized, also by what warrant the individual defendants assumed to hold their offices. No judge being available on the return date, counsel by stipulation and order of the court changed it to February 18, which was the opening day of the February general term of the Beltrami county district court. On that day the state moved that the matter be set for trial on a day certain. The village, appearing specially, objected to the power of the court to order the matter tried at said term or to fix a day certain for trial, either in or out of term, on the ground that the matter was not on the calen *299 dar for trial; also, that in any event the case was not triable without service of a notice of trial. The court overruled the objections and set the date for trial as April 8. This was later changed to May 7 on stipulation, which, however, reserved the rights of the village under the previous objection. On the adjourned date, the village again appeared specially, interposing the same objection which theretofore had been overruled. The court, being of the same opinion as before, proceeded to hear the case, the village duly excepting.

An election was held October 30, 1940, within the area proposed to be incorporated, at which 44 votes were cast for the formation of the corporation and 30 votes against it. The territory proposed to be included within the village limits consists of about 233 acres and lies along the westerly and northwesterly shore line of Lake Bemidji. It is about one and one-half miles in length and of varying width, from about 250 feet at the narrowest portion to about 2,600 feet at the widest. Of the total acreage so included, approximately 103 acres are platted, and this is divided into two portions, one at the northern and the other at the southern end of the proposed village, thus leaving about 130 acres of unplatted land lying toward the center of the two platted ends. A large part of the unplatted area consists of low and cutover spruce swampland. Upon the platted areas, especially at the northerly end, there are many cottages used by the owners and by visitors for summer vacations. Only a few persons live within this area during the entire year, the court having found that there are but 114 such actual residents. The Birchmont Hotel, located at the northerly end of the proposed village, operates only during the summer tourist season, and that is true also of the Birchmont store. The only year-round business conducted within the municipality is a combination cafe, liquor store, and night club known as the “Oasis.” It operates under an “off and on” liquor license issued to its owner by the “new” village. There is in this area no school, post office, railway station, church, or industry of any kind — not even a barbershop or the usually ever-present gasoline *300 service station. Deliveries by those who furnish and sell such necessaries as groceries, meat, milk, ice, and other daily requirements are provided by merchants and tradesmen in the city of Bemidji, conveniently near and accessible to all concerned.

The court’s findings adequately portray all the facts. Made a part thereof is a helpful memorandum in which the court cites many of our prior cases dealing with situations similar in principle to those here presented. The court pertinently points out that the real purpose of those seeking to have this area incorporated was—

“to secure the issuance of a liquor license which could not otherwise be accomplished. This was frankly admitted by some of the witnesses for the respondents. It is to be noted, too, that almost the first order of business of the purported offices [officers] was the adoption of ordinances providing for the licensing of liquor, and within ten days of the time of the purported incorporation, liquor licenses were issued to the ‘Oasis.’

“The policy of the legislature in prohibiting liquor licenses except in municipalities requires the adhering to rather than the relaxing of those standards.” (The “standards” to which the court referred are those laid down in many of our prior cases to be discussed later.)

The court was also of the view that there was here no “compact center or nucleus of population” within the platted areas, nor elsewhere within the proposed corporate limits.

The only “nucleus,” said the court, if such it could be said to be, is “at the Birchmont Hotel, which is operated only during the summer months and closed during the remainder of the year, or the ‘Oasis’ which is principally a night club and liquor store and located in the unplatted portion of the territory. The vast majority of the lots in the platted portion of the territory are the usual summer residence properties” common to the lake region of the state, and more particularly to the lake shore areas abutting upon Lake Bemidji. “Even the schools serving the few children *301 who reside in this territory * * * are located on properties in the township outside of the territory included in the purported village. The whole area is so exclusively rural and summer resort property, so obviously and wholly other than urban in character, that it has no adaptability for village purposes and is not so conditioned as to be subjected to village government.”

There are but two questions here for determination: (1) Whether the court was authorized, over timely objection, to hear the cause without notice of trial first having been served; and (2) whether, if having such power, the evidence sustains its findings. We shall consider them in that order.

Counsel for the village contend that “a party is entitled to a notice of trial as a matter of right” (citing 6 Dunnell, Dig. § 9700, and cases under note 48), and, such notice not having been served that the court, in overruling seasonable objections raising the point, committed “reversible error even though no prejudice” resulted. Our attention is directed to Minn. St. 1941, § 546.05 (Mason St. 1927, § 9289), which provides that “issues of facts may be brought to trial by either party, upon notice served eight or more days before the beginning of a general term.”

Counsel concede that there is no statutory provision to which we may look for guidance. Nor do we find the cases they cite of much help. But, they say, there are other statutory provisions which, at least by analogy, support their theory.

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Bluebook (online)
6 N.W.2d 458, 213 Minn. 297, 1942 Minn. LEXIS 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-burnquist-v-village-of-north-pole-minn-1942.