State ex rel. Chehalis County v. Superior Court

92 P. 345, 47 Wash. 453, 1907 Wash. LEXIS 786
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 4, 1907
DocketNo. 6819
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 92 P. 345 (State ex rel. Chehalis County v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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. Chehalis County v. Superior Court, 92 P. 345, 47 Wash. 453, 1907 Wash. LEXIS 786 (Wash. 1907).

Opinions

Root, J.

At the last session of the legislature a bill was passed looking to the creation of a county to be known as Grays Harbor county, and to be composed of territory taken from the present county of Chehalis. Laws 1907, p. 62. This is an application for writs of prohibition against the superior court in and for the counties of Lewis, Pacific, and Wahkiakum, and the Honorable A. E. Rice, judge of said court, to prohibit him and them from exercising any of the functions alleged to be imposed upon him or them by said act. The first section of said act employs the following language:

“All that part of Chehalis county lying and being west and north of the following described line [here follows the entire description] shall be and is hereby created and established as the county of Grays Harbor: Provided, however, That the said Grays Harbor county is hereby created as aforesaid subject to the requirements of the constitution of the state of Washington in the respect to the establishment of new counties, and subject to an ascertainment of the fact of such com[461]*461pliance as hereinafter provided, and that the creation of Grays Harbor county hereby shall not become operative to establish said county until such compliance shall have been so had and the fact of such compliance so ascertained.”

Section 2 provides that any qualified voter within the territory of the proposed new county may, within three months, present to the governor a petition showing that it is signed by a majority of the voters within said proposed new county, and praying that the creation of the new county may be deemed fully established when the constitutional provisions are complied with; further providing that said petition shall be accompanied by a bond in the sum of $1,000 to cover costs of proceedings in case the county should not be established.

Section 3 provides :

■ “The governor shall forthwith transmit said petition to the superior judge of the next nearest judicial district adjoining the judicial district in which said county of Chehalis is now situate,”
and said judge is required to examine the petition and ascertain if it contains a sufficient number of signatures, and as to whether the striking of the territory will leave Chehalis countv with a population of less than 4,000, and whether the territory of the proposed new county contains a population of 2.000 or more; and provides that said judge may, in his discretion, appoint an elector and freeholder, or electors and freeholders, residing in the territory of the proposed new county, to enumerate the population of Chehalis county, or any part thereof, so as to show the number of people living in each portion; and the duties of said enumerator or enumerators are prescribed.

■ Section 4 provides that, if the judge finds that there are 2.000 or more inhabitants within the boundaries of the proposed new county, and that there shall remain 4,000 or more inhabitants in the remaining portion of Chehalis county, he shall thereupon make a decree setting forth that the provisions of the constitution have been complied with. Upon the [462]*462filing of such decree, the clerk of the court is to transmit certified copies thereof to the county commissioners of Chehalis county, to the governor, and to the secretary of state. Section 5 provides that the governor, on receipt of said certified copy, shall make a proclamation declaring Grays Harbor county to be established. Other sections of the act provide for the organization of the new county, the apportionment of its indebtedness, etc.

Petitioners assert that the act is unconstitutional or otherwise void, and assign many reasons .for this contention. It will be unnecessary to pass upon more than one. Article 11, section 3, of the state constitution, reads as follows:

“No new county shall be established which shall reduce any county to a population less than four thousand (4,000), nor shall a new county be formed containing a less population than two thousand (2,000). There shall be no territory stricken from any county unless a majority of the voters living in such territory shall petition therefor, and then only under such other conditions as may be prescribed by a general law applicable to the whole state.”

It is urged by petitioners that the bill could not be passed until the legislature had ascertained the population of the proposed new county and of that portion which would remain in the old county after the creation of the new. It must, of course, be conceded that the constitutional provision is a limitation upon the power of the legislature to create a county. Respondents contend, however, that the county is not “established” by the mere passing of the bill, but that the legislature expressly provided a means by which all the constitutional requirements should be met; that it must be presumed that the legislature complied with all the requisites of the constitution, and ascertained the population of these portions of the territory into which the old county was to be divided. In the case of Farquharson v. Yeargin, 24 Wash. 549, 64 Pac. 717, this court held that, where the record was silent as to what the legislature had done in the premises, it would be pre[463]*463sumed that that body had informed itself as to those matters which the constitution required it to have knowledge of, before passing the law.

It is urged by the petitioners that such presumption cannot be indulged in this case, for the reason that the provisions of the act itself show that the legislature had not informed itself as to the population of the two portions into which the territory of the former county was to be divided. We think this contention must be upheld. The act makes express provision for the ascertainment of these matters by another authority, and goes into detail as to how this shall be accomplished. It cannot be supposed that the legislature would do an idle thing. If it had already ascertained these matters, the ascertainment of which was essential-to the formation and establishment of a new county, it cannot be thought that provisions would be placed in the bill for the subsequent ascertainment thereof by another body, officer, or person. It is strenuously urged by petitioners that the legislature was obliged to ascertain the population of these portions of the county before it passed the bill, and that as it affirmatively appears that it did not do so, the act must fall; that the attempted submission of this matter to the court or to a judge of a court was an attempted delegation of legislative power that was not delegable, and that it was an imposition upon the court and the judge thereof of non judicial duties which could not be legally exercised by a court or judge. In the case of Farquharson v. Yeargin, supra, this court said:

“The creation of a new county is an exercise of legislative power subject to the limitations referred to [the constitutional provisions above quoted]. Before this power can be rightfully exercised, ,i¡t must be made to appear to the legislature affirmatively thaj: the new county contains a population of not less than two thousand, and that by the creation of the new county the population of the county from which the new county is taken is not reduced to less than four thousand. When these facts are made to appear to the satisfaction of [464]*464the legislature, then the' act creating the proposed new county may be passed.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 P. 345, 47 Wash. 453, 1907 Wash. LEXIS 786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-chehalis-county-v-superior-court-wash-1907.