Stokes v. City of Montgomery

82 So. 663, 203 Ala. 307, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 238
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 27, 1919
Docket3 Div. 414.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 82 So. 663 (Stokes v. City of Montgomery) 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
Stokes v. City of Montgomery, 82 So. 663, 203 Ala. 307, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 238 (Ala. 1919).

Opinion

THOMAS, J.

The bill was filed to prevent the issue and sale of bonds of the city of Montgomery in the sum of $50,000 for the purpose of building and equipping a city hospital. The bill prayed that the city be made party defendant; that it and its officials be permanently enjoined and restrained “from taking any further steps toward issuing and selling said bonds under the authority now claimed by them, and that their successors, in their respective official positions, may likewise be perpetually enjoined from doing so.” The question for decision is presented by the sustaining of the city’s demurrer holding-the bill without equity.

Under the law having application in 1908 the city of Montgomery was governed by a mayor and city council, composed of aider-men duly selected from its several wards and from the city at large. Under legislative authority providing for the establishment and maintenance of a city hospital, on September 21, 1908—

“at a meeting of the city council of said city of Montgomery, duly called, and for which due notice was given and at which there was a quorum present, which meeting was regularly organized and in all respects legally authorized to transact the business of said city, an ordinance was duly and legally adopted to order and provide for an election to be held in said city on- December 14, 1908, to enable the qualified voters of said city to decide whether additional bonds of said city should be issued, including, with others, $50,000 of bonds for the purpose of building and equipping a city hospital, and said ordinance, which was duly approved by the mayor of said city, ordered that such election be held on Monday,'December 14, 1908, for the purposes aforesaid; that said ordinance further ordered that notice of said election be given for 30 days by publication in the Montgomery Times, a newspaper then published in said city, once a week for three consecutive weeks, stating the purpose, time, and place of said election, the amount of the proposed bond issue, the rate of interest, length of time said bonds should run, and purposes for which they should 'be used; that said ordinance further provided the form and substance of the ballot to be used at sucí election and the mode of indicating the voter’s choice thereon, and made all other provisions required by law for the purpose of holding said election, of making returns and canvassing and announcing the result thereof and defining the denominations, date of issue, rate ,of interest, the maturity of said bonds, and that they should not be sold for less than their face value, fixing the place of payment.”

On October 5, 1908, another meeting of the city council of said city, at which a quorum was present qualified to do business, was held, at which the committee on finance reported favorably upon the ordinance to hold the election for the purpose of voting on said bonds as hereinabove stated, ¿nd at said meeting said ordinance was duly and legally adopted and spread upon the minutes of the meeting, and duly approved by the mayor of said city and published as required by law. And on October 20, 1908, said ordinance providing for said election, as adopted on October 5, 1908, and approved October 9, 1908, was duly and legally published as required by the ordinance and the statutes governing such elections, and due allegations thereof are contained in the bill.

The bill further avers that due “resolution was presented for the appointment of managers and returning officers for said election, which resolution was duly and legally adopted” ; that there was duly and legally appropriated a sufficient sum of money to pay the expense of conducting the election upon the issue of said bonds; that “on December 15, 1908, at 6 o’clock p. m. a meeting of said city council was held, pursuant to an order of the president thereof given to each member, and at which there were present a quorum authorized to transact business; that at said meeting the votes cast in the election upon the question of the issuance of said bonds were duly and legally canvassed, and upon the opening of the ballot boxes and counting thereof it appeared and was declared that there had been cast in favor of the issue of said $50,000 of bonds for the erec *309 tion and equipment of a city hospital a majority of 490 votes, and that said election had been conducted in all respects as required by law, and said result was duly and legally declared to be in favor of issuing said bonds.”

For reasons which do not appear in the bill and which could not affect the merits of the case, several of the authorized issues of bonds (other than the hospital bonds) were issued pursuant to the authority of law and aforesaid election. The reason why said hospital bonds were not then issued is an immaterial inquiry.

In 1911 the form of government of the city of Montgomery was changed under the general law controlling the municipalities of the state, and since that time the city has been governed by a board of three commissioners. Its said officials are respondents herein. On May 7, 1919, this board of commissioners decided to issue and sell the bonds of the city so authorized, and build and equip a city hospital. This determination of the board of commissioners (respondents in the instant bill) took form on the part of said board of commissioners of the city of Montgomery in the following ordinance:

“Adjourned Regular Meeting. Board of Commissioners, -City of Montgomery, Ala. May 7, 1919. Present: President Robertson, Vice Pres. Tyson and Commissioner Stough—3. Absent: 0. The president stated that the meeting was called pursuant to adjournment of May 6, 1919.
“New Business. The following ordinance was taken from the table and placed upon its second reading:
“An ordinance to authorize and provide for the issuance of bonds of the city of Montgomery in the aggregate amount of fifty thousand dollars for the purpose of building and equipping a city hospital.
“Whereas, under and pursuant to an ordinance adopted by the city council of Montgomery on the 5th day of October, 1908, entitled ‘An ordinance to order and. provide for an election to be held in the city of Montgomery on Monday December 14, 1908, for the purpose of having the qualified voters of the said city of Montgomery vote upon and decide the question as to whether or not the additional bonds of the city of Montgomery shall be issued in the sum of fifty thousand dollars for the purpose of building and equipping a city hospital,’ which said ordinance was approved on the 9th day of October, 1908, and under and pursuant to said ordinance and the law of Alabama an election was holden in the city of Montgomery on the 14th day of December, 1908, at the voting places in the various wards of the city for the purpose of qualified electors of the said city voting upon and deciding the question as to whether or not the bonds of the city of Montgomery should be issued in the amount of fifty thousand dollars for the purpose of building and equipping a city hospital, and,
“Whereas, the voters at such election decided in favor of such bond issue, a majority of all the legal votes cast having been ‘For fifty thousand dollar city hospital bond issue’:
“Now, therefore, be it ordained by the board of commissioners of the city of Montgomery, Alabama, as follows:
“Sec. 1.

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Bluebook (online)
82 So. 663, 203 Ala. 307, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stokes-v-city-of-montgomery-ala-1919.