9 Wash. 269 | Wash. | 1894
The opinion of the court was delivered by
— -These cases rest upon substantially the same points as those made in Buckley v. Tacoma (No. 1233)
A fatal defect exists, however, in the treatment of the remonstrance by the council. The board of public works formally recommended the granting of the remonstrance. This recommendation was referred to the street committee óf the council, which reported advising that the remonstrance be denied. This report the council adopted, as the journal shows, but it does not show by what vote. The clerk testifies that it was probably by a viva voce vote. No other action was taken by the council in the matter. Counsel for respondent asks us to presume that the vote by which the report of the street committee was adopted was a two-thirds vote of all the members of the council, and to hold that such adoption was equivalent to the passage of a resolution ordering the improvement notwithstanding the remonstrance. Now the council consisted of sixteen members and it required the affirmative vote of eleven members to overcome the remonstrance. It could not be ascertained whether the requisite number voted in any other way than by roll call or count. The viva voce vote which the clerk recorded may have been merely the ayes of half a dozen members, the remainder keeping silent. Nothing is more common in legislative bodies than the passage of orders in this way; for so long as a quorum is maintained a majority of viva voce votes according to the judgment of the presiding officer will prevail. But in no case where a fixed proportion of members must vote to
The record being thus bare of facts to sustain the proposition that the committee report was adopted by the vote of eleven or more members, the burden was upon the respondent to establish it; but it failed therein, as the testimony of the clerk showed still more conclusively that nobody knew what the real vote was.
We have treated this question thus far as though the adoption of the report, by vote of eleven members, would have been equivalent to an order that the improvement be made notwithstanding the remonstrance. But such a procedure would not do. What would the city clerk certify to the board of public works — his conclusion, from the journal, that the remonstrance had been denied? Plainly not. On the contrary the “urafer” which the charter requires should be in the form of another resolution reciting the fact that a remonstrance had been filed, and ordering the board to proceed notwithstanding. In no other way is it possible to keep such business from falling into confusion and entailing misunderstanding of authority and consequent loss.
This was an important matter. More than ten times the representation of property petitioning for the improvement of Oak street remonstrated against it, and the board of public works, presumably after examining into the matter, recommended that it be not made, yet it was proposed to go on. Grave public reasons alone could justify the exercise of the authority vested in the council to disregard the objection made, and it was a case where, if ever, the strict letter of the charter should be followed.
Judgments reversed, and causes remanded for entry of judgments in accordance with the prayer of the complaints.
Dunbar, C. J., and Anders and Scott, JJ., concur.