State Ex Rel. Owens v. Doxey

28 P.2d 122, 55 Nev. 186, 1934 Nev. LEXIS 8
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1934
Docket3046
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 28 P.2d 122 (State Ex Rel. Owens v. Doxey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada 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. Owens v. Doxey, 28 P.2d 122, 55 Nev. 186, 1934 Nev. LEXIS 8 (Neb. 1934).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Sanders, C. J.:

This is an original proceeding in mandamus to compel the respondent, L. T. Doxey, as clerk of the town of Carlin in Elko County, Nevada, to forthwith proceed with the publication of a certain notice calling for bids for the purchase of $100,000 of bonds of said town for the establishment and construction of municipal waterworks and sewer system in conformity to the terms and conditions contained in ordinance No. 15, as enacted and approved by the board of commissioners of said town.

The matter came on for hearing upon the issues joined on the petition of the relator, W. C. Owens, a citizen, resident, and taxpayer of said town, and the answer thereto of the respondent, L. T, Doxey, as clerk of said town. Upon the presentation of the case it was stipulated that, when the court had reached its decision, its order might be entered and its opinion be filed at a later date. On November 24, 1933, the court, being advised of its decision, caused to be made and entered an order granting and ordering a peremptory writ of *188 mandamus to be issued in accordance with the prayer of the relator’s petition. Whereupon the case was assigned to me for opinion, which follows:

The town of Carlin in Elko County, Nevada, was created, organized, and now operates under a commission form of government, as provided by statute entitled “An Act to provide for the commission form of government for cities and towns.” Stats. 1915, p. 294, c. 192, N. C. L. sec. 1248 et seq. Section 1 of the act (N. C. L. sec. 1248) provides as follows: “Section 1. Any city or town in the State of Nevada may adopt the commission form of government and frame its own charter therefor.”

Section 7 of the act (N. C. L. sec. 1254) reads as follows: “Sec. 7. Any city or town adopting a charter under the provisions of this act shall have all of the powers which are now or may hereafter be conferred upon incorporated cities and towns by the laws of the state, and all such powers as are usually exercised by municipal corporations of like character and degree, whether the same shall be specifically enumerated in this act or not.”

Section 8 of the act (N. C. L. sec. 1255) provides for amendments to the charter by referendum election.

We are in the dark as to the charter framed and adopted by the town of Carlin under said act, but the ordinance under review, No. 15, is attached to and made a part of the relator’s petition for the writ. It appears that the board of commissioners of said town, in the enactment and the adoption of ordinance No. 15, availed itself of the powers conferred by a general law of the state enacted in 1907, which provides for the incorporation of cities and towns and repealing all acts and parts of acts in conflict. Stats. 1907, p. 241, c. 125, N. C. L. section 1100 et seq. Section 1 of the act (N. C. L. sec. 1100) states as follows: “Section 1. The right of home rule and self-government is hereby granted to the people of any city or town incorporated under the provision of this act.”

Section 28 of the act (N. C. L. sec. 1128) confers upon *189 the city council of such cities and towns eighty-five enumerated powers. Subdivision 5 of section 28 provides, inter alia, as follows: “5. * * * The council shall have the power to acquire or establish any public utility only in the manner herein provided. The council shall enact an ordinance which shall set forth fully and in detail the public utility proposed to be acquired or established; the estimated cost thereof as shown by the report, approved by the council and mayor, of an engineer or body theretofore appointed by the council for that purpose; the proposed bonded indebtedness to be incurred therefor, the terms, amount, rate of interest and time within which redeemable and on what fund. Such ordinance shall be published in full at least once a week for four successive weeks in some newspaper of general circulation, published in the city. At the first regular meeting of the council, or any adjournment thereof, after the completion of said publication, the council may proceed to enact an ordinance for such purpose which shall conform in all respects to the terms and conditions of the previously published ordinance, unless a petition shall be presented to it, signed by not less than fifteen per cent of the qualified electors of said city, as shown by the last preceding registration list, and representing not less than ten per cent of the taxable property of said city as shown by the last preceding tax list or assessment roll, praying for a special election in said city upon the question of whether or not the proposed ordinance shall be passed. Thereupon, no such proposed ordinance shall be enacted or be valid or effective for any purpose whatsoever, unless at a special election called and held for the purpose, a majority of the votes cast are for the ordinance.”

It appears from the petition herein that, in conformity to the provisions of section 28, as quoted, the board of commissioners of the town of Carlin, after the completion of the publication of ordinance No! 15, and no petition having been presented to it praying for a special election upon the question of whether or not the proposed ordinance No. 15, as published, should be passed, *190 did, on October 10, 1933, enact and adopt said ordinance which in all respects conforms to the terms and conditions thereof, as previously published. Section 7 of the ordinance authorizes and directs the clerk of said town of Carlin to publish the notice incorporated therein calling for bids for the purchase of $100,000 of bonds for the construction of waterworks and a sewer system, upon the terms and conditions specified in the ordinance and the notice. The notice conforms to the provisions contained in Stats. 1927, p. 194, c. 110, N. C. L. sec. 6085 et seq.

The respondent informed the board that he refused to comply with its order and direction to publish said notice of bids for the purchase of the proposed bonds, principally for the reason that the proposal for the issuance and sale of said bonds was not submitted at a general or special election called for that purpose to the electors of the town of Carlin, as required by an act of the legislature passed and approved at the last session thereof. Stats. 1933, p. 116, c. 95.

Afterward the relator herein made application for a writ of mandamus to be issued by this court to compel the respondent to proceed forthwith with the publication of the notice of bids for the purchase of the bonds. It appears from the petition that the respondent assigned a number of reasons or grounds for his refusal to comply with the board’s order and direction, which are set out in the petition.

This opinion will be confined to what is considered by the court to be the only debatable issue in the ease, namely, whether, under the constitution and the charter provisions of the town of Carlin, the act of 1933 is binding and controlling upon the town of Carlin with reference to the calling of a general or special election, as provided in the act of 1933. Section 2 of the act provides as follows: “Sec. 2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 P.2d 122, 55 Nev. 186, 1934 Nev. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-owens-v-doxey-nev-1934.