Village of Deshler v. Southern Nebraska Power Co.

277 N.W. 77, 133 Neb. 778, 1938 Neb. LEXIS 232
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1938
DocketNo 30140.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 277 N.W. 77 (Village of Deshler v. Southern Nebraska Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Village of Deshler v. Southern Nebraska Power Co., 277 N.W. 77, 133 Neb. 778, 1938 Neb. LEXIS 232 (Neb. 1938).

Opinion

Carter, J.

This is a suit in equity to enjoin the defendant company from continuing .to occupy the streets and alleys of the village of Deshler with its electric distribution system. The trial court granted a mandatory injunction ordering the defendant to remove all poles, wires, transformers, cross- *779 arms and other equipment in the streets and alleys of the village within 90 days from the date of the decree. From this order, defendant appeals.

The record discloses that in 1912 an application for a franchise permitting the construction and operation of an electric light plant and distribution system was made to the village of Deshler by the Bokenkamp brothers. The franchise was not granted, but the applicants proceeded to construct a plant and distribution system notwithstanding. In 1917 or 1918 the partnership was dissolved and a corporation known as the Deshler Light & Power Company succeeded to all the rights in the plant and distribution system formerly held by the partnership. In 1924 the defendant, Southern Nebraska Power Company, purchased the electric plant and distribution system of the Deshler Light & Power Company. On July 1, 1935, a written notice was served on defendant to remove its property from the streets and alleys of the village for the reason that it had no franchise, and, after a refusal to comply, this suit was instituted.

Defendant contends that it has a franchise to carry on its business within the village until the year 1940 by virtue of chapter 35 of the 1915 revised ordinances of the village of Deshler. A brief history of this chapter is necessary to a determination of its validity.

The record discloses that on July 6, 1915, the village board appointed Post & Post, of Columbus, Nebraska, to revise and prepare all village ordinances in printed and indexed form. It further appears that George R. Mann became associated with the firm of Post & Post and actually performed the services with reference to the revision of the village ordinances. On September 7, 1915, the village board considered ordinance No. 49, the same consisting of existing ordinances as revised by George R. Mann. It; however, included chapter 35 which purported to be an ordinance granting a 25-year franchise to the Deshler Light & Power Company. It is conceded that no prior franchise ordinance had ever been passed, but defendant *780 contends that the adoption of ordinance No. 49, purporting to reenact all previous existing ordinances and the franchise ordinance therein shown as chapter 35, constituted a grant of a franchise to the Deshler Light & Power Company.

The record of the proceedings of the village board on September 7, 1915, shows that a motion was made and seconded “that said ordinance No. 49 being an ordinance, revising, classifying and indexing all the ordinances of a general nature be advanced to its first reading and rules suspended.” The record further discloses that the rules were suspended and the ordinance placed on second and third reading and a unanimous affirmative vote noted in the minutes. The record does not show that ordinance No. 49, or any part of it, was ever read. No mention is made in the minutes of the grant of a franchise or of the specific provision of the ordinance covering that subject.

The defendant offered the testimony of George R. Mann to the effect that on September 7, 1915, an ordinance designated as chapter 35 of ordinance No. 49 was presented to and adopted by the village board which purported to grant a 25-year franchise to the Deshler Light & Power Company. The records were searched and no evidence of such an ordinance was found. The defendant offered in evidence a carbon copy of the • original ordinance claimed to have been adopted and which had been retained in the files of Mr. Mann. The trial court excluded this evidence and we think properly so. Secondary evidence is admissible in a case such as we have before us where the minutes of the board have been lost or destroyed. We know of no rule, however, that permits secondary evidence to be offered where the board proceedings are complete and plain in their meaning. In other words, secondary evidence is not competent to establish the acts of a legislative body where the minutes are available and the record merely silent as to the acts attempted to be proved. Hull v. City of Humboldt, 107 Neb. 326, 186 N. W. 78. We necessarily conclude that the trial court properly rejected this evidence.

*781 The next question is whether the passage of ordinance No. 49, in the manner in which it was passed, was valid and sufficient to grant a franchise to the Deshler Light & Power Company.

The statute governing the enactment of an ordinance such as we have here before us provides that it' “shall be fully and distinctly read on three different days, unless three-fourths of the council or trustees shall dispense with the rule; and, in case the above rule shall be suspended, such ordinances, with the yeas and nays called and recorded, shall be read by title one time, when introduced, shall be read by title a second time after the rule shall have been dispensed with, shall be read at large and then put upon final passage.” Comp. St. 1929, sec. 17-520. In the case at bar, the rules were suspended and the yeas and nays taken and noted in the minutes after each “reading.” The record does not disclose that the ordinance was ever read. Neither is there any evidence that the ordinance was not read. Under such circumstances, the presumption is that the statute was complied with and that the ordinance was read, as by statute required. Hull v. City of Humboldt, supra. Plaintiff further contends that ordinance No. 49 was not properly published. The applicable statute is in part as follows: “And all ordinances of a general nature shall, before they take effect, be published within one month after they are passed, in some newspaper * * * or by publishing the same in book or pamphlet form. * * * When ordinances are printed in book or pamphlet form * * * the same need not be otherwise published.” Comp. St. 1929, sec. 17-519. The ordinance in question was printed in pamphlet form, a copy thereof appearing in the record as exhibit No. 14. We necessarily conclude that, under the state of the record, ordinance No. 49 was regularly passed, approved and published.

There is no competent evidence in the record of the passage, approval and publication of an ordinance granting a franchise to the Deshler Light & Power Company prior to the passage of ordinance No. 49. Chapter 35 was *782 therefore in fact a new ordinance adopted by the village when it was passed, approved and published as a part of ordinance No. 49.

The title to ordinance No. 49 is: “An ordinance revising, collecting, classifying, dividing into chapters and sections and' reenacting all the ordinances of a general and permanent nature of the village of Deshler, Nebraska, in force and effect at the date of the passage and approval hereof; and providing for the publication and distribution of this revision ordinance.”

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277 N.W. 77, 133 Neb. 778, 1938 Neb. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-deshler-v-southern-nebraska-power-co-neb-1938.