143 Mo. 563 | Mo. | 1898
—This is an information in the nature of a quo warranto instituted in the circuit court of Platte county in December, 1894, by the prosecuting attorney of that county, upon the relation of Andrew J. Cook, to determine the right and authority of the defendants to exercise the powers and duties of officers of the city of Edgerton, and to determine the validity of the in
The petition alleges the original incorporation of the village of Edgerton; the due and legal disincorporation thereof, and avers that after the disincorporation of said village the county court of Platte county, without any lawful power or jurisdiction in the premises, attempted to reincorporate the territory comprised within the corporate limits of the former village of Edgerton as a city of the fourth class and extended its limits over a strip of land belonging to the relator, three hundred feet wide and about half a mile long, used for agricultural purposes, and constituting a part of a seventy-five acre farm owned by him. The petition also avers that the proceeding in the county court in attempting to incorporate the city of Edgerton was without jurisdiction and therefore null and void; and that the defendants undercolor of such proceedings and without any legal authority therefor were assuming jurisdiction over the three hundred feet strip of land so owned by the relator, and were levying and assessing taxes upon said strip, and upon the relator’s personal property situated thereon, and compelling the relator to pay such taxes by levying upon and seizing such personal property; that all of the parcels and tracts of land outside of the eighty acres originally incorporated as the village of Edgerton are lands used solely for agricultural purposes and in no wise common or in any manner appurtenant to the town, village or city of Edgerton. The petition closes with the prayer that the defendants and each of them be divested of their usurped authority and that the pretended corporation of the city of Edgerton as a city of the fourth class, or in any wise as a municipal corporation, be declared a nullity. The answer admits the incorporation of the village of Edgerton, the previous disincorporation thereof, and that
The reply denied the allegations of new matter in defendants’ answer, and the case then proceeded to trial by the court. The facts briefly stated are substantially as follows: On the fourth day of June, 1883, the village of Edgerton was duly incorporated by the county court of Platte county, and as appears from the plat thereof filed in the office of the recorder of said county, embraced and comprised within its limits the east half of the southwest quarter of section 8 in township 54 of range 33 situate in Platte county, containing eighty acres of land. On March 2, 1891, said town was duly disincorporated by an order of the county court of said county under the provisions of sections 1714 and 1715, Revised Statutes 1889, upon a petition of three fourths of the legal voters of said town. Thereafter on March 23, 1891, upon a petition duly made in accordance with the statute the county court, in compliance with the prayer of said petition, made an order incorporating the city of Edgerton as a city of the fourth class in conformity with the provisions of Revised Statutes of 1889, the order of incorporation being regular in form. The territory comprised within the limits of the city of
This strip of land has not been platted or laid out as an addition to the town, but constitutes a part of the relator’s farm, a considerable portion of said strip being used for agricultural purposes. At the time the city of Edgerton was incorporated it had a population of more than five hundred and less than three thousand inhabitants. The record shows that a part of the land included in the metes and bounds of said city, as last incorporated, consists of lands used for agricultural purposes and was outside of the limits of the platted town of Edgerton as originally incorporated. It further appeared that a portion of the land so added to the corporate limits of said city was, at the time of the order of incorporation, cut up into small tracts of less than five acres and occupied by dwelling houses and appurtenances and devoted to purposes purely urban; about an acre of the three hundred feet strip of land belonging to relator was occupied by a public graveyard; prior to the last order incorporating said city certain other portions of the added territory had been laid off by the proprietors thereof as additions to the town of Edgerton, and a plat showing the street, alleys, blocks and commons thereof duly acknowledged and recorded as required by law. It was also shown that since the incorporation of said city considerable of such added territory had been laid off into blocks, lots, streets and alleys, and plats thereof duly executed
At the close of the testimony the relator asked the following declarations of law: “If the court finds from the evidence that the town or city of Edgerton, in Platte county, Missouri, was legally incorporated on the-day of June, 1883, under the law providing for the incorporation of villages; that the plat of the town or city of Edgerton, filed in accordance with the Revised Statutes of 1879, section 6569, shows that the town or city of Edgerton includes the east half of the southwest quarter of section 8, township 54, of range thirty-three, and that said plat includes such territory and no other and that the village of Edgerton, so incorporated, as aforesaid, was legally disincorporated on the 2nd day of March, 1891; that on the 23rd day of March, 1891, the county court of Platte county, Missouri, made a pretended order of judgment purporting to incorporate as a city of the fourth class such original
The question thus presented by the record is, whether the county court of Platte county, by virtue of chapter thirty, Revised Statutes 1889, concerning the incorporation of cities, towns and villages, can incorporate the city of Edgerton and include agricultural lands outside of the limits of the original town or village so as to extend its boundaries beyond the limits of the territory originally platted and incorporated ; in other words would the inclusion of lands other than those contained in the old village of Edger-ton invalidate the intended corporation. Section 977 of the chapter just referred to, provides that “whenever a majority of the inhabitants of any city or town shall present a petition to the. county court of the county in which such city or town is situated, setting forth the metes and bounds of their city or town and
The above section is substantially identical with the section construed in the case of the State ex rel. v. McReynolds, 61 Mo. 203, so much relied upon by appellants and wherein the writ of' quo warranto was awarded upon quite a similar state of facts to those shown herein as will appear by the two statements, the one herein made, following the order of that, with only the changes necessary in dates, names and description of property. But since the opinions in the McBeynolds case sustaining the quo warranto proceedings, upon the-construction of section 1 of article I of chapter 134, Wagner Statutes 1872, which as before said, is substantially identical with the present section 977, Revised Statutes 1889, upon the authority of which the city of Edgerton was incorporated, two new sections have been added to the statutes that lead us to conclude that the legislation must have intended that the scope of the statute, as construed in the McBeynolds case, should be enlarged, and that the jurisdiction of the county court in the matter of incorporating cities and towns,
In 1887, section 4385, Revised Statutes 1879 (the same as the old section of Wagner Statutes 1872 construed in the McBeynolds case), was amended so as to read: “Any unincorporated city or town of this State may become a city of the class to which its population would entitle it under this article or any act amendatory thereof, and be incorporated under the law for the government of cities of that class in the following manner: Whenever a petition purporting to be signed by a majority of the assessed tax-paying inhabitants of such city or town shall be presented to the county ■ court of the county in which such city or town is situated, setting forth the metes and bounds of their city or town and commons, and praying that they may be incorporated and a police established for their local government and for the preservation and regulation of any commons appertaining to such city or town; the said court, if it be satisfied from the evidence presented, that such petition has been signed by a majority of the assessed tax-paying inhabitants of such city or town, as shown by the last assessment of said county, shall by its proper oi’der, declare such city or town incorporated, designating in such order the metes and bounds thereof, and thenceforth the inhabitants within such bounds shall be a body politic and corporate under the name and style of the city of-, or the town of-; and said court in said order shall also designate the first officers of said city or town, who shall hold their offices until the next general election for such officers, and until their successors shall be elected and» qualified.
“Section 48855. The word city or town, as used in the preceding section, shall be and is hereby construed to mean any collection of houses built upon contiguous and compact territory, not exceeding two
Thus it will be seen that the county court was given direct authority upon proper petition presented, to include within the metes and bounds of the city incorporated any collection of houses upon contiguous and compact territory of two square miles in superficial area, and the act further expressly declared that it shall not be necessary for, or a condition precedent to, the incorporation of such city or town that the lands within its boundaries as set forth in the petition for incorporation shall have been subdivided into blocks or lots by deed or plats filed for record, and that the court should not refuse to incorporate the city or town for the reason that the tracts of land included within the metes and bounds of the proposed, city or town exceed five acres in area and are used solely for agricultural or pastoral purposes. While the above section has been amended and in its place we now have section 977, Revised Statutes of 1889, which is quite similar in its language to