Tax Payers of Webster Parish v. Police Jury

52 La. Ann. 465
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 15, 1900
DocketNo. 13,018
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 52 La. Ann. 465 (Tax Payers of Webster Parish v. Police Jury) 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
Tax Payers of Webster Parish v. Police Jury, 52 La. Ann. 465 (La. 1900).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Breaux, J.

Plaintiffs sued to set aside an election at which the question of levying a five mills tax for ten years in aid of a railroad was submitted to a vote of electors having the right to vote.

The first ground is that the railroad had not been legally incorporated at the time the petition calling for the election was signed, and at the time the election was called.

The facts, as related to this point, are that the charter of the railroad was recorded on October 28th, 1897. Afterward, the Police Jury passed the ordinance calling the election.

The ordinance and the charter were published at the same time, and simultaneously became operative, as relates to publication. On the day of the election, the charter had been published the required number of days.

The second ground of plaintiffs’ attack is, that the petition for the election was not signed by one-third of the property taxpayers of the parish. Plaintiffs, in support of the attack made on the ground just stated, aver that not over five hundred and fifty names were signed to the petition, the jramber of resident taxpayers being two thousand two hundred and twelve and non-residents two hundred and seventeen; that, according to those figures, eight hundred and nine was the least number required for ordering the election.

The defendants, as relates to facts, claim that the result of the election was declared in favor of levying the tax by a majority of one hundred and twenty-four in numbers, and one hundred and seventy-seven thousand two hundred and thirty-eight dollars in amounts.

Experts, appointed by the court to examine the petition and report the names of the voters, returned, as part of their examination, that one hundred and twenty-eight names of persons who were not tax-payers appeared on the petition; that the names of forty-two taxpayers appeared on the petition twice; that there are twelve estates, twenty-four [467]*467partnerships, six corporations and two' tutorships, whose names are on the petition.

The following is a tabulated statement, which plaintiffs claim-is correct:

Number of resident taxpayers.:.2297

Non-resident . 227

Total .....!.-.2524

One-third .‘.. 841

,. 656 Number on the petition...

134 Deduct number found by experts as baying no property

• 42 Dual signatures ..

Partnerships on petition . bO ^

Tutorships . tO

Corporations.;. 05

Signed by unauthorized agents.

Property owners who did not sign the petition whose names ■ appear on the petition.'. OS 00

Names on the petition above the 134 who did not sign, or who ‘ signed but had no authority. rH i — l

Total .'. 335

Considerably less than required. Taking into account to be deducted only the dual signatures, and the1’ number found by the experts as having no property, the number remaining is less than one-third of the number of taxpayers of the parish.

PRESCRIPTION.

Defendant filed a plea of prescription, alleging that plaintiffs’ petition, attacking the election, was filed after three months following the election, and tb^ee months after the returns of election were promulgated.

Defendants plea-jl the prescription of three months, both to the original and the amended petition, on the ground that the petition was not filed in time.

The election was ordered on the 28th day of October, 1897. The [468]*468proceedings were published thirty days, and on the 30th of November, 1891, the election was held.

The Police Jury, in obedience to a writ of- mandamus, promulgated the result of the election on January 5th, 1898. Plaintiffs’ petition was filed on February 14th, 1898, clearly within'the three months.

The contention of the defendants was, at bar, that the ordinance, ordering the election, was not contested in time, and for that reason, whatever deficiency or irregularity there may have been in matter of ordinance, was cured by the prescription of ninety days; in other words, that the curative effects of the prescription applied to the ordinance, if it did not apply to the election.

It would be difficult to conclude that the'prescription of ninety days applies as a bar to any attack on the ordinance under which the election was to be held. If that view should be taken, it would follow that to each act, each step of any importance, of different dates leading to the election, a different prescription would apply. First, as to the petition, afterward to the ordinance, and to every other important step taken, leading to the election.

There is nothing, as we read the Statute No. 105 of 1892, to provide for contesting elections which sustains this. Prescriptions begin from the day of promulgation. The ordinance ordering the election is merged into and becomes a part of the election. The promulgation, as to prescription, includes the ordinance as part of the election, which may be contested in ninety days.' This was the legislative intent, as we take it, as no reference is made to the ordinance under which an election is called.

The position of the defendants, in the next place, is that no right of action is given to cause to be decreed null, and to set aside, the action of the Police Jury in adopting an ordinance calling a special election under Article 242 of the Constitution, and the cases of State ex rel. Woodruff vs. Police Jury, 41st Ann., 846; State ex rel. Davis vs. Police Jury, 43rd Ann., 1009, are cited in support of the position. Defendants insist that the Statute of 1892, just cited, was intended to give the right to contest the election, but not the rigfht to contest the ordinance of the Police Jury ordering an election, and that when this court decided as it did in Taxpayers vs. Tax Collector, 49th Ann., 3 039, that, prior to the Statute of 1892, it was without jurisdiction to entertain a ease of a contested election, and that the contesting of votes is-a judicial function only in só far as it is authorized by the [469]*469Statute; it construed the act to.apply only to a contest over the casting and the returning of the votes after an election was held, and did not authorize an attack on the right to .hold an election; and that the purpose in enacting the statute last cited was to confer jurisdiction on the courts to entertain a case of contested election proper, counting the votes and promulgating the result, and did not refer to proceedings leading to the election.

There can he no question but that, prior to the Act 106 of 1892, this court was without jurisdiction to entertain a case of contest of an election, and that it was repeatedly held, “the contesting of votes is a judicial function only so far as it is authorized by the statute”. We think that the Statute 106. of 1892, now includes authority to contest not only the election, but the ordinance of the Police Jury under which the election was called. The ordinance forms part of the election.

We do not think it was the legislative intent to limit the contest to the mere counting of votes .on the day of election, and to the “irregularity, illegality and fraud” vel non on that day.

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Bluebook (online)
52 La. Ann. 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tax-payers-of-webster-parish-v-police-jury-la-1900.