State Ex Rel. O'Keefe v. Board of Liquidation

112 So. 894, 163 La. 843, 1927 La. LEXIS 1718
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 5, 1927
DocketNo. 28541.
StatusPublished

This text of 112 So. 894 (State Ex Rel. O'Keefe v. Board of Liquidation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. O'Keefe v. Board of Liquidation, 112 So. 894, 163 La. 843, 1927 La. LEXIS 1718 (La. 1927).

Opinion

O’NIELL, C. J.

The defendant, board of liquidation, city debt, has appealed from a judgment making a writ of mandamus peremptory and ordering the board to issue and sell $7,500,000 of serial gold bonds of the city of New Orleans, as authorized by a vote of the property taxpayers at a special election held on the 30th of November, 1926. The board of liquidation, city debt, whose duty it is to issue and sell such bonds of the city, contends that the notice of the election was not published for thirty days in the official journal, and that the election was therefore invalid. The fourth section of Act No. 4 of 1916 (see Laws Ex. Sess. 1917), which act, as amended by Act 51 of 1920, was adopted and reaffirmed by the twenty-fourth section of article 14 of the Constitution of 1921, provides:

“Due notice of said election shall be published for thirty days in the official journal of said city (four weekly insertions of said notice constituting a publication for thirty days, provid.'d thirty days intervene between the date of the first insertion and the date of said election).”

The notice in this instance was published over the signature of the mayor, attested by the clerk of the commission council, in the official journal on Saturday the 30th of October and on the 6th and 13th of November, 1926; but, by some, unaccountable oversight in the newspaper establishment, over which the municipal authorities had no control, the notice was not published in the official journal on the 20th of November, or in any issue of the official journal subsequent to the 13th of November, 1926. Meanwhile, however, the mayor, being charged by the municipal ordinance with the duty of giving all necessary notices of the election, directed the chief of police to issue and publish an official notice, so as to give public notice of the location of the polling1 booths, and the chief of police did publish the notice, as directed by the mayor, in the official journal on Saturday the 20th, and on Monday the 22d and Monday the 29th of November, 1926. That notice gave a complete statement of the object and purpose of the election, as well as the location of the polling booth in each and every voting precinct in the city. The notice given by the chief of police, under instruction of the mayor, therefore, was an official notice and gave to the public the same, information which the mayor’s official notice had given, and the additional information as to the location of the polling booths.

There was also published in the official journal on Eriday the 26th of November, 1926, a proclamation of the mayor, acting-under instruction from the commission council, naming the commissioners of election to *847 serv.e at each of the voting precincts throughout the city, which proclamation also stated the purpose of the election and conveyed all of the information required by the statute, as far as that one publication could convey the information.

It appears, therefore, that an official notice of the election was published in the official journal on Saturday the 30th of October, 1926, being 31 days before the date of the election, and on Saturday the 6th and Saturday the 13th of November; and that another official notice (by the chief of police) was published in the official journal on Saturday the 20th and on Monday the 22d and Monday the 29th of November; and that still another official notice (the mayor’s proclamation naming the commissioners) was published in the official journal on Friday the 26th of November, 1926. The only irregularity in the matter of publishing the notices was that there were not four weekly publications — or four publications at all — of one or the same notice. The first publication, which was intended to be the official publication required by the statute, and which was published on the 30th of October and on the 6th and 13th of November, should have been published again on the 20th of November, 1926. Our opinion, however, is that the omission was supplied by the publication of the notice by the chief of police on the 20th of November, under instructions from the may- or ; and, if the omission had not been supplied in that way, it would have been supplied by the publication of the mayor’s proclamation on the 26th of November, 1926.

The statute, of course, requires that the notice shall be such as to inform the public of the date and purpose of the election, and state in detail the proposition to be submitted to the taxpayers for their approval or rejection; but the statute does not say what officer shall sign the notice or prescribe the form of notice. In Henderson v. City of Shreveport, 137 La. 667, 69 So. 88, 5 A. L. R. 516, it was said “that the only notice of the election was the mayor’s proclamation” appearing in four weekly publications of the official journal, and it was held or conceded that that form of notice was sufficient. The statute, of course, intends that one and the same form of notice shall be given in each of the four weekly publications, but the statute does not, in terms, require that the four publications shall all be of the same form of notice. Where, as in this case, the change in the form of notice did not affect its purport and could not possibly have deceived any one or withheld from any one the information which was required to be published, the court has no authority to annul the election merely because of the change or difference in the form of the notices that were published.

It is contended on behalf of the appellant that, even if the mayor’s proclamation, published on the 26th of November, 1926, should be deemed a sufficient substitute for and the equivalent of the official notice which was published on the 30th of October and on the 6th and 13th of November, and which should have been published again on the 20th of November, nevertheless the may- or’s proclamation was not published during the next week after the week of the 13th of November. The statute does not require that the four weekly publications shall be exactly seven days apart, nor does it, in terms, require that each publication shall be in a different calendar week ending Saturday night. In the sense that a week means seven consecutive! days, the mayor’s proclamation, published on the 26th of November, was published in the week succeeding that in which the official publication appeared for the last time, which was on the 13th of November. That publication was in a week which commenced at midnight on Friday night, the 12th of November and ended at midnight on *849 Friday night, the 19th of November. The publication of the mayor’s proclamation, on Friday, the 26th of November, was in the week which commenced at midnight on Friday night, the 19th of November and ended at midnight on Friday the 26th of November. The statute does not forbid a lapse of more than seven days between any two of the four so-called weekly publications. On the contrary, by requiring only four weekly publications and requiring that thirty days shall intervene between the date of the first publication and the date of the election, the statute allows a lapse of more than seven days either between two of the publications or between the date of the last publication and the date of the election, because, if the four publications are exactly a week apart, there are only twenty-one days from the first to the fourth publication, whereas there must be at least thirty days intervening between the first publication and the date of the election.

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Bluebook (online)
112 So. 894, 163 La. 843, 1927 La. LEXIS 1718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-okeefe-v-board-of-liquidation-la-1927.