State ex rel. Dawson v. City of Victoria

156 P. 705, 97 Kan. 638, 1916 Kan. LEXIS 369
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 8, 1916
DocketNo. 19,890
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 156 P. 705 (State ex rel. Dawson v. City of Victoria) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Dawson v. City of Victoria, 156 P. 705, 97 Kan. 638, 1916 Kan. LEXIS 369 (kan 1916).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mason, J.:

The board of county commissioners of Ellis ■county undertook to incorporate a city of the third class by the .name of Victoria, making an order to that effect, under which [640]*640an organization was effected. The state brought an action to have the proceedings set aside on various grounds. The district court held the incorporation to be valid, and the plaintiff appeals.

The order undertaking to create the city is not open to attack for any mere irregularity or mistake of fact. (The State, ex rel., v. Holcomb, 95 Kan. 660, 149 Pac. 684.) This court is of the opinion that none of the defects pointed out are so serious as to amount to a want of jurisdiction. They will be briefly stated, together with the grounds upon which they are regarded as not being fatal.

(1) The statute involved reads as follows:

“Whenever a petition signed by a majority of the electors of any unincorporated town or village within the state shall be presented to the board of county commissioners of the county in which such town or village is situated, setting forth the metes and bounds of their village and commons, and stating as near as may be the number of the inhabitants of such town or village, and praying that such town or village may be incorporated as a city, with satisfactory proof that such petition has been published in full in some newspaper printed in the said town or village at least once a week for three consecutive weeks, and the said board of county commissioners shall be satisfied that a majority of the taxable inhabitants of such town or village are in favor of such incorporation, and that the prayer of the petitioners is reasonable, and that the number of the inhabitants of such town or village exceeds two hundred and does not exceed two thousand, such board of county commissioners may, at any regular session thereof, by order reciting the substance of such petition and the due publication thereof, and their finding that a majority of the taxable inhabitants of such town or village are in favor of such incorporation, and that the prayer of the petitioners is reasonable, and that the number of the inhabitants of such town or village is within the limits hereby required, declare such town or village incorporated as a city of the third class, by the name and style of ‘The city of-’ (naming same), and designating in such order the metes and bounds thereof.” (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 1511.)

The petition asked for the incorporation in one municipality of the two towns of Herzog and Victoria, one on the north side of the Union Pacific railroad, the other on the south. It did not recite that the signers constituted a majority of the electors of these towns, and the commissioners’ record does not show an express finding to that effect, although it refers to the petition as showing'the fact. The statute does not require the petition to contain such a recital, so its omission to do so is un[641]*641important. The commissioners are authorized to make an order of incorporation if they find certain enumerated facts, that with respect to the number of signers not being among them. The trial court found that the petition was sufficiently signed. The action of the commissioners implied such a finding on their part (Schade v. Theel, 45 Kan. 628, 26 Pac. 38),. and this implication was supported by the recital that the petition showed the fact. The failure of the record to show a spe- • cific and express finding on the subject does not invalidate the; proceedings.

(2) The petition is required to state “as near as may be the number of inhabitants of such town or village” — that is, of the town or village the incorporation of which is sought. The plaintiff contends that this requirement was not met, because the allegation of the petition in that regard was that the combined population of such towns was about 800 inhabitants. The petition also stated that the towns and their additions had been platted, ánd the streets and alleys therein laid out and named, and the point sought to be made against the petition is that it must be interpreted to mean that the population of the platted territory was about 800, without giving any information whatever regarding the number of inhabitants of the unplatted tracts which were included within the boundaries of the proposed corporation. The reference to the plats was unnecessary, and was obviously intended as an argument in favor of the reasonableness of the request. We do not regard it as committing the petitioners to the theory that by the word “towns” in the clause relating to the population they meant solely the territory that had been platted. The petition in this respect follows the phraseology of the statute, which speaks of the number of inhabitants of the “town or village,”' plainly meaning of the territory, including such town or village, the incorporation of which is desired. The statute recognizes that the boundaries of the town or village are not precisely defined, and requires the petitioners to -set forth “the metes and bounds of their village and commons.” The requirement that the petition shall be signed by a majority of the electors of the town or village plainly means that the signers shall constitute a majority of the electors of the territory de[642]*642scribed by metes and bounds, the phrase “the town or village” being used as a convenient expression to convey that idea. The words are used in the same sense in the petition, and the subsequent reference to the platting of the towns and additions does not alter their meaning.

(3) The description of the territory comprising the proposed city, as given in the petition, is criticized as not complying with the statute for want of a statement of its “metes and bounds.” Some of the tracts to be included are described by metes and bounds, and others as the original towns of Herzog and Victoria and certain enumerated additions. The reference here is obviously to the recorded plats. The descriptions are readily intelligible and entirely definite. This constitutes a substantial compliance with the statute. It is not necessary that the description shall be literally by metes and bounds— that is, by describing the boundary line by course and distance. (The State, ex rel., v. Young, 61 Mo. App. 494; State v. Bay City, 65 Ore. 124, 131 Pac. 1038; Duquesne Borough, 147 Pa. St. 58, 23 Atl. 339; Beecher v. Parmele et al,, 9 Vt. 352; Williams v. Willard, 23 Vt. 369.)

(4) The description is also criticized as indefinite in several particulars. In one instance a course is given as “northwesterly” without indicating the angle. The fair inference is that what was intended was a line prolonging that of a lot at the corner of which it started. A change of direction to a “northeasterly” course presumptively contemplates a right angle, and this interpretation gives a connected boundary. A point in the boundary is described as the intersection of an east-and-west public highway with the north side of the railroad right of way, running northeast and southwest, without indicating whether the north or south side of the road was intended. The ambiguity is not sufficiently serious to vitiate the proceedings. The line of “First Street” is used as a boundary, without other identification. It is sufficiently obvious that First street in Victoria was intended.

(5) The petition was presented at the regular meeting of the county board in April, 1913.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 P. 705, 97 Kan. 638, 1916 Kan. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-dawson-v-city-of-victoria-kan-1916.