89 P. 631 | Idaho | 1907
This action was instituted for the purpose of securing a writ of mandate against the board of trustees of the village of Twin Falls, commanding them to take the action necessary to convert the village government into that of a city of the second class, under the requirements of the statutes. The inhabitants of the village sought to change their form of government under the provisions of section 1 of an act approved March 9, 1903 (Sess. Laws, 1903, p. 216), which provides as follows: “"Whenever any village containing more than one thousand inhabitants desires to discontinue its organization as a village and organize as a city of the second class, and a number of the qualified electors of said village equal to three-fifths of the total vote as shown by the last preceding general village election held in said village shall petition the board of trustees of such village therefor, upon the filing of said petition with the village clerk of said village, it shall be the duty of said board of village trustees to forthwith pass and publish a resolution, in the manner provided for the passage and publication of village ordinances.”
The complaint alleges that a petition was presented to the board of trustees on the first day of March, 1906, showing that the village of Twin Falls had a population of more than one thousand inhabitants, and that the petition was signed by a number of electors exceeding three-fifths of all the voters of the village at the time of presenting the petition.
The village organization was perfected after the time provided by law for holding election in 1905, and therefore no village election had ever been held prior to petitioning for a change to city government. It was impossible for the board of trustees or anyone else to determine by the statutory standard that the petition had been signed by a number of electors equal to three-fifths of the total vote as shown
These facts were all set forth in the complaint, and defendants, the board of village trustees, demurred to the complaint, and the demurrer was overruled and the defendants elected to stand on the demurrer, and judgment was accordingly entered, directing the writ to issue, and this appeal is from the judgment.
The only question to be determined in this case is whether the statute above quoted is mandatory or only directory, wherein it requires the petition to be signed'by “a number of the qualified electors of said village equal to three-fifths of the total vote as shown by the last preceding general village election held in said village.” The statute is undoubtedly directory only; the material and essential requirement is that three-fifths of the electors shall petition for the change; the fact that an election has or has not been previously held is immaterial, and was evidently not intended by the legislature as essential and decisive. The legislature meant to designate some ready method of ascertaining when a petition has been signed by three-fifths of the electors, and they proposed that it be determined by the vote at last general election. Where that method is impossible, it becomes proper to ascertain the fact by the usual modes of proof, and, of course, since no election has ever been held, the inquiry must necessarily be confined to the time when the petition was presented, which in every respect meets the fullest requirement of the law.
For authority in harmony with the view here expressed, see Territory v. Whitehall, 13 Okla. 534, 76 Pac. 148; Gallup
The judgment of the lower court will be affirmed, and it is so ordered. Costs awarded to respondents.