State Ex Rel. Town of Stuntz v. City of Chisholm

264 N.W. 798, 196 Minn. 285, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 950
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 24, 1936
DocketNo. 30,809.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 264 N.W. 798 (State Ex Rel. Town of Stuntz v. City of Chisholm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Town of Stuntz v. City of Chisholm, 264 N.W. 798, 196 Minn. 285, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 950 (Mich. 1936).

Opinions

1 Reported in 264 N.W. 798, 266 N.W. 689. This matter is before us upon motion of the town of Stuntz for leave to file an information in the nature of quo warranto against the city of Chisholm and certain of its officers also named as respondents. Both the municipal corporations are in St. Louis county.

According to the proposed information, the former village of Chisholm has attempted to reincorporate as a city, a special election to pass upon that question having been held September 1, 1934, at which the proposal for reincorporation was carried. The effect of that proceeding, if legally effective, is to detach from relator and include within the new limits of Chisholm thirty-five forty-acre tracts. Forty-three forty-acre tracts were in similar fashion taken from the town of Balkan and included in the new Chisholm limits.

If the allegations of the verified information are true, all the territory so detached from the towns and added to the city was not properly included within the enlarged Chisholm limits. In the interests of brevity, we refrain from detailed statement of the allegations.

September 10, 1934, ten days after the Chisholm special election and before the election of officers for the new city, relator's town board, through its attorneys, presented to the Honorable Harry H. *Page 287 Peterson, attorney general, a petition and information asking him to apply for a writ of quo warranto to test the validity of the incorporation of the city of Chisholm. There is no claim that the petition was defective either in form or substance. It was formally denied by the attorney general November 14, 1935, after notice of the instant motion was served. Although duly served with notice, the attorney general has not appeared in this proceeding. The motion is opposed by the city of Chisholm and the other respondents, its officers.

1. The first and highly important question raised on behalf of respondents is this: Does the refusal of the attorney general to file the information or even to consent to its filing effectively bar the doors of the courts to a municipal corporation, asserting that another such corporation is unlawfully absorbing a substantial portion of its domain and demanding judicial redress for the alleged wrong? We hold that it does not.

We are fully aware that there is much decision law the other way. It has had our careful consideration. It would serve no useful purpose to review the cases because the more modern rule which we follow is already well settled by our own decisions. The whole subject is considered and the authorities reviewed in the annotations in 125 A.S.R. 633, 6 Ann. Cas. 463, and 13 Ann. Cas. 1063.

In State ex rel. Young v. Village of Kent, 96 Minn. 255,104 N.W. 948, 955, 1 L.R.A.(N.S.) 826, 6 Ann. Cas. 905, the history of the original, but long obsolete, writ of quowarranto and its modern successor, the information in the nature of quo warranto, was exhaustively gone into. The conclusion reached was [96 Minn. 271]:

"The principle is thus firmly established in this state that the granting or withholding of leave to file an information at the instance of a private relator [anyone other than the attorney general], or of a private relator with the consent of the attorney general, to test the right to an office or franchise, rests in the sound discretion of the court to which the application is made, even though there is a substantial defect in the title by which the office or franchise is held." *Page 288

In State ex rel. Wah-we-yea-cumin v. Olson, 107 Minn. 136,138, 139, 119 N.W. 799, 800, 21 L.R.A.(N.S.) 685, a private relator, under indictment in the then new county of Mahnomen having made futile application to the attorney general, himself asked leave to file the information. It was denied on the ground that the relator did not have the "distinct or special right" prerequisite "within the meaning of the law" to the initiation of the proceeding independently of the attorney general. But the court, attempting definitely to settle the question, held, "in harmony with what seems the trend of judicial opinion, that leave to conduct quo warranto proceedings to test the legality of the organization of municipal or quasi municipal corporations will not be granted at the instance of private relators having no interest in the subject-matter distinct from the public." By an implication perfectly plain, if that be the rule, and it is, we may grant such an application even upon the petition of a private relator with a distinct or special right for an invasion of which he is in need of a remedy, and quo warranto is the only remedy.

In two other cases, one before (State ex rel. Dowdall v. Dahl, 69 Minn. 108, 71 N.W. 910) and one after (State ex rel. Ruesswig v. McDonald, 101 Minn. 349, 112 N.W. 278) the Kent case, we had held, in the language of the former case, that [69 Minn. 113] "the granting or withholding of leave to file an information at the instance of a private person rests in the sound discretion of the court, and is not a matter of strict legal right. When the attorney general has refused to give his consent, the case should be exceptional, and one in which it clearly appears that the public interests require it, to justify the court in overruling his judgment."

In taking leave of our own cases it should be noted that our only statute relevant to the question is 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 132. It declares that the supreme court "shall have power to issue * * to all corporations and individuals, writs of error, certiorari, mandamus, prohibition, quo warranto and all other writs and processes whether especially provided for by statute or not, that are necessary to the execution of the laws and the furtherance of justice." Obviously that statute is not merely declaratory of the common law *Page 289 because of the broad authority it gives to issue any writ or process necessary "to the execution of the laws and the furtherance of justice." Obviously it does not condition the power declared in respect to "proceedings in the nature of quo warranto" upon the consent of the attorney general.

We pass the question whether the present relator, an organized town, may properly be called a private relator. It is such if "any relator other than the attorney general" is a private relator, and such may be the correct legal view. Assuming it to be so, yet relator plainly has a very substantial and special interest when of its territory there is sought to be taken away such a substantial portion, in area and value, as that which has been included within the new Chisholm limits. (Its assessed valuation is alleged to be $1,348,687.) That a town has a very direct, special, and vital interest in retaining so much of area and assessed value is not and will not be denied by anybody. Relator is clearly within the rule declared in State ex rel. Young v. Village of Kent, 96 Minn. 255,104 N.W. 948

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State Ex Rel. Town of Stuntz v. City of Chisholm
264 N.W. 798 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
264 N.W. 798, 196 Minn. 285, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-town-of-stuntz-v-city-of-chisholm-minn-1936.