Willows v. City of Lewiston

461 P.2d 120, 93 Idaho 337, 1969 Ida. LEXIS 307
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1969
Docket10469
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 461 P.2d 120 (Willows v. City of Lewiston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willows v. City of Lewiston, 461 P.2d 120, 93 Idaho 337, 1969 Ida. LEXIS 307 (Idaho 1969).

Opinion

SPEAR, Justice.

This is an action by a group of qualified electors and taxpayers residing in Nez Perce County, in which they sought judgment forever enjoining and restraining the City of Lewiston from performing any further acts and proceedings to annex an area adjacent to the City, which area includes what is commonly referred to as the “Lewiston Orchards,” under the provisions of the Charter at that time in effect, the City having existed under such special charter continuously since January IS, 1863.

The facts are not disputed and in fact the action was submitted to the trial court upon “admitted facts,” the pertinent ones of which are as follows: that the plaintiffs-appellants and cross-respondents (hereinafter referred to as appellants) are all citizens, residents, qualified electors and taxpayers of Nez Perce County, Idaho, and are owners of land within the boundaries of the area which the defendant-respondent, and cross-appellant (hereinafter referred to as the respondent) was attempting to annex; that the respondent is a municipal corporation of the State of Idaho, originally existing under the special charter granted by an act of the legislature of the Washington Territory, approved in 1863 and continued in effect by the provisions of Article I, § 2 of the Constitution of the State of Idaho; that on July 15, 1968 the city council of respondent prepared and filed an ordinance describing the boundaries of the district proposed to be annexed and caused notice thereof to be regularly published as provided in the Charter; that respondent proceeded as it did under the authority of, and pursuant to, Section 224 of the Charter which provides as follows:

“ANNEXATION
“The mayor and common council may provide for annexing to and bringing within the city, lands contiguous thereto. In such case the council shall have prepared and filed with the clerk an ordinance describing the outer boundaries of the district proposed to be annexed and shall cause the clerk to publish for five days in some daily newspaper in said city a notice giving the outer boundaries of such district and declaring the intention to annex the same to the city. If more than one half in number of the owners of land within such district do not file with the clerk within thirty days after the last publication of such notice, objections in writing to such proposed annexation, the council shall proceed to pass the ordinance therefor. Such ordinance shall not take effect until thirty days after publication, and shall be subject to referendum in like manner as ordinances granting franchises or special privileges. After the said ordinance shall have become effective, and the boundaries of the said city shall be accordingly extended to include the said lands, which shall be annexed to, and thereafter be, and constitute a part of the city of Lewiston, and be included in such city.”

that respondent made and published the following rules “for people who live in the Orchards” to follow to file their objections to annexation, to-wit:

“Notice to Lewiston and Orchards Residents
“The following rules of procedure have been adopted by the City of Lewis-ton for annexation of that portion of the Lewiston Orchards that was defined by the Notice of Intent to Annex, published in the Lewiston Morning Tribune for the five day period, ending July 21, 1968.
“1. The City has appointed two Deputy City Clerks, one of which will be located at the Nez Perce County Free Library, and the other Deputy in the lobby of the Administration Building of the Lew *339 iston-Nez Perce County Regional Airport.
“Protests will be accepted by these Deputy City Clerks, Monday through Saturday, from 11:00 A. M. to 8:00 P.M. Protests will also be accepted at the City Clerk’s office during regular business hours, between 8:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M.
“2. Only those people who are owners of real property may protest annexation by the City of Lewis-ton.
“3. A person objecting to annexation shall file his or her objection in writing with one of these Deputies, or with the City Clerk. The City recommends that people who do not file their objections in person, sign them before a Notary Public prior to having a third person file such with the Clerk or Deputies. Any person mailing in an objection should also be given this recommendation, to sign before a Notary Public.
“4. The City cannot require that objections be notarized as a condition precedent to being filed by the City Clerk.
“5. Objections may be mailed to the City Clerk by any person desiring to do so.
“6. The Deputies shall be instructed that when any person files a protest with them that is not his or her own objection, or the objection of his or her wife or husband, they are to inform such third person that the owner signing the objection will be required to verify that he or she did in fact sign such objection. Any objections received by mail, the Clerk will address a letter to, or otherwise make contact with, the person purportedly signing and mailing the same to ascertain that he or she did in fact do so.
“7. A husband may file a written objection signed by his wife, and a wife may file a written objection signed by her husband without verification of the signature of the person not actually filing the objection.
“8. If any objections in writing are received by the City Clerk through the mails or are delivered to him or to any of the Deputies, by a person other than the owner filing his own objection, or a husband or wife, as set forth in seven (7) above, the Clerk or Deputy shall stamp on the face of such objection the words, ‘received but not filed, pending the signing owner, that he or she did in fact sign the same.’
“9. A person protesting does not have to fill out an elaborate form, but need only to state that he or she protests annexation, and have it properly signed.”

and that respondent also announced its intention to include as “property-owners” those people owning burial spaces in the Lewis-Clark Memorial Gardens, and all tax-exempt property-owners.

In the trial court the appellants raised the following issues:

(1) That the area sought to be annexed is not contiguous to the City of Lewiston in that only one small area of the city touches on and is adjacent to the area sought to be annexed ;
(2) That a large area of farm land which has not been subdivided into tracts , of five acres or less lies between the city and the area sought to be annexed ;
(3) That Section 224 of said City Charter violates Article VI, Section 1 of the Idaho Constitution in that the protest provided for in said annexation section is actually and in reality an election process and said constitutional provision requires that all elections be by secret ballot;
*340

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
461 P.2d 120, 93 Idaho 337, 1969 Ida. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willows-v-city-of-lewiston-idaho-1969.