State Ex Rel. Kinney v. Town of Steppville

168 So. 433, 232 Ala. 407, 1936 Ala. LEXIS 250
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 21, 1936
Docket6 Div. 957.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 168 So. 433 (State Ex Rel. Kinney v. Town of Steppville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Kinney v. Town of Steppville, 168 So. 433, 232 Ala. 407, 1936 Ala. LEXIS 250 (Ala. 1936).

Opinion

TPIOMAS, Justice.

The proceeding in the circuit court was quo warranto to test the validity of the incorporation of the town of Steppville, and the legality vel non of the acts of its officials.

The minutes of the probate court in evidence disclose that the municipality 1 was organized and incorporated (as New Hanccville, the name being subsequently changed),. and has acted in good' faith as such municipality since 1921, under the terms of sec *409 tions 1053-1055 of the Code .of 1907, and ■section 1744 of the Code of 1923.

We have examined the petition as passed upon and ascertained -by the judge of probate to confer jurisdiction, and on which that official, the citizenship, electorate, and duly qualified voters resident in that territory were affected and acted upon in the premises. We hold the petition to have been a compliance with the law in the respect of incorporation.

The judgment shown by the record includes the material, ascertained facts, as conditions precedent to a valid municipal incorporation of the class of municipalities to which the statute has application. Among other things, the judgment recites:

“* * * That upon the presentation and filing of said petition or application, it was held and decided by me as Probate Judge, as shown by an order made on the 26th day of August, 1921, and entered upon the minutes of the Probate Court in Vol. - Page - and herein again reentered, stated, held and decided that the territory described in said petition and the plat thereto attached was an unincorporated community, which said unincorporated community had a population of not less than one hundred inhabitants; that said territory therein described in said petition was situated in the county of Cullman, State of Alabama; that said petition was in writing and signed by not less than twenty-five qualified electors, each of whom resides within the limits of said proposed municipality; that said petition stated the proposed name of such municipality and had attached thereto and as a part thereof, an accurate plat of the territory proposed to be embraced (by) said corporate limits; that said petition complied with all the provisions of section 1053 of Article 2 of the Political Code of 1907; that sufficient proof was made to be as Judge of Probate, by oral testimony to show that each of said persons whose names were signed to said petition resides within the limits of .said proposed corporation or municipality, and was -and is a qualified elector and votor therein, and that in and by said order an election was directed, by me, as Probate Judge, to be held on Monday, the 22nd day of August, 1921, for the purpose of, ascertaining and determining whether or not a majority of the qualified electors residing within the corporate limits of said proposed municipality as designated in the petition and the plat .thereto attached and a part thereof, and filed with the said petition, favor incorporating said territory as a municipal corporation, under the name of the town of New Hanceville, and that the store room of J. T. Drake, which said place is located within the limits of said town was designated as a place for the holding of said election. * * *
“That on the 26th day of August, 1921, * * * election inspectors or managers * * * certified to me, as Judge of Probate, the result of said election which said certificate was made and filed with me as Probate Judge by said inspectors, on the 26th day of August, 1921, same being within five days after the 22nd day of August, 1921, the day on which the election was so held; that at said election there were 41 votes cast in all and that of said 41 votes cast at said election corporation received 24 votes, and no corporation received 17 votes; that a majority of said votes cast at said election were cast for ‘corporation’; that in the order made by me, as Probate Judge filing the certificate of said inspectors, certifying as aforesaid the result of said election, C. T. Lambert, T. A. Williams and Ed Ash-wander, said inspectors heretofore appointed to manage said election were appointed and ordered to proceed to make and take an enumeration of the inhabitants residing within the territory as specified and designated in the petition and plat thereto attached and a part thereof,” etc.
“It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the inhabitants of the territory embracéd within the boundaries designated or shown by said petition and plat thereto attached and a part thereof, and also set out and shown by an order made on the - day of July, 1921, be and the same hereby are incorporated as the town of New Hanceville, Ala., that said town of New Hanceville, Ala., be and the same hereby is incorporated as town and is vested with the rights and powers granted by law to the inhabitants of such corporations.”

It is insisted that the plat recited to have accompanied the petition and conformed to the description employed of the territory to be embraced in the incorporation is not on this trial to be found of record or attached to the petition of which the judge of probate assumed jurisdiction and adjudged. Whitaker v. Kennamer et al., 229 Ala. 80, 155 So. 855.

The description in the petition is by governmental subsections, of which the *410 court takes judicial knowledge, and which did not come within the decision of State ex rel. Marsh v. Town of Boyles, 207 Ala. 59, 92 So. 250, wherein the description and plat did not correspond and it was held that the entire proceeding was void for such failure of statutory compliance.

The facts here are different from those of State ex rel. Wagnon v. Town of Al-toona et al., 200 Ala. 502, 76 So. 444. Neither is this case brought within the decision of State ex rel. Allen et al. v. Town of Phil Campbell et al., 177 Ala. 204, 211, 58 So. 905, 907, where a description of land by sections, without mentioning the township and range, and without other marks and calls to show what sections are meant, held to present a patent ambiguity which cannot be aided by parol proof, as to the intention of the parties, or as to the property intended to be embraced, and “therefore the plat is void.” See, also, Cooper v. Town of Valley Head, 212 Ala. 125, 101 So. 874; Foshee et al. v. Kay et al., 197 Ala. 157, 72 So. 391.

In the instant case the plat is recited to have accompanied the petition and to contain an accurate description of the territory by government survey. It is likewise recited in the several documents before us that the petition was accompanied by a plat, attached thereto and as a part thereof; that it was an accurate plat of the territory proposed to be embraced within the corporate limits. The court recited in its initial order that the territory proposed to be incorporated was that described-in the petition and plat thereto attached, and that the petition contained as a part thereof an accurate description and plat of the territory proposed to be embraced in said corporate limits. The decree of the court submitted the question of “corporation” or “no corporation” to thé electorate of the territory to be affected thereby. We have indicated that the decree recited the existence and coincidence of the description and plat; that it was attached to and made a part of the petition.

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Bluebook (online)
168 So. 433, 232 Ala. 407, 1936 Ala. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-kinney-v-town-of-steppville-ala-1936.