43 Iowa 252 | Iowa | 1876
This proceeding is instituted under section 431 of the Code, which is as follows:
“When any incorporated city shall desire to annex to such corporation any abutting and contiguous territory thereto which is not embraced within the limits of any city, and which territory has been laid out in lots or parcels containing two acres or less, the council of such corporation may present to the Circuit Court of the county in which such city is situated a petition setting forth the facts and describing the territory that is desired to be annexed, and that the same has been laid out as above mentioned, together with the names of each owner of any portion of such territory, without describing at length, if there is more than one such owner, the particular portion of such territory owned by each, which petition shall have attached thereto a map or plat of such territory. A notice of the filing of such petition shall be served by publication in one daily or weekly newspaper published in such city, and by posting in five public places in
“All acts and parts of acts passed subsequent to the 4th day of July, A. D. 1858, and prior to the taking effect of this code relating to cities of the first and second class and incorporated towns, or to any or either of said classes of municipal corporations, and applicable both to such corporations as are acting under special charter, and to such as are incorporated under the general act of which this chapter is an amendment, are repealed by the code only so far as they affect the latter, and not as they affect corporations acting under special charters. All rights, powers, privileges, duties, directions and provisions whatever, contained in and enacted by such acts and parts of acts, shall remain in full force and effect so far as municipal corporations acting under special charters are concerned, and the provisions of this chapter shall not apply to any city
“All public and general statutes passed prior to the present session of the General Assembly, and all public and special acts, the subjects whereof are revised in this code, or which are repugnant to the provisions thereof, are hereby repealed, subject to the limitations and with the exceptions herein expressed.”
After the passage of the general incorporation law, many statutes were passed, conferring powers upon cities organized under special charters. These statutes were in effect amendments, in necessary particulars, of their charters. An example of this kind of legislation is presented in Haskell v. The City of Burlington, 30 Iowa, 232. Chapter 10 of the Code contains general provisions respecting the incorporation of cities and towns, and provides means whereby cities and towns organized under special charters may abandon such organization, and organize under the provisions of this chapter ten.
But any city organized under a special charter may elect to remain under such organization.
To all such cities the various acts above spoken of, conferring powers amendatory of their charters, are vital and important. But, under the general repealing clause of section 47, most, if not all of them, might have been repealed. Hence the necessity for Section 551, which continues such statutes in force so far as they affect corporations acting under special charters. This is evidently the principal purpose of this section. But it goes further, and declares that the provisions of this chapter shall not apply to any city or town incorporated prior to the eighteenth day of July, A. D. 1858, unless the same be adopted as hereinbefore provided.
This chapter directs the general mode of procedure for cities incorporated, as it provides, under a general statute. These provisions do not apply to cities organized prior to the 18th day of July, 1858, nearly all of which must, of necessity, have been organized under special charters, unless they
Section 551 excepts all such cities from the general provisions of Chapter Ten; 'and were it not for Section 431, perhaps no provision of this chapter would apply to such cities. Rut Section 431 expressly provides that its provisions shall apply to cities acting under special charters. The general must yield to the particular.
Nor is it proper to designate the thing to be accomplished by this statute as the creation of a corporation. A corporation is an artificial being, clothed with certain powers. In the present case such a corporation exists, known as the City of Burlington. When the act sought in this petition is accomplished, no new corporation will have been created. All that is sought is to extend the territorial limits of the City of Burlington, so as to embrace territory not already included within it. That this may be done, see Langworthy v. The City of Dubuque, 16 Iowa, 271. The most practicable way of accomplishing this end is to provide by general statute the conditions under which contiguous territory may be attached to a city, and then authorize some local tribunal to determine whether the conditions exist, and whether, under all the circumstances, justice and equity-require that the territory should be annexed. The statute submits these questions to the Circuit Court, and we have no doubt that they are so far of a judicial character that they may properly be vested in the judicial department of the State, under our constitution.
The cases cited by appellee are not in conflict with the foregoing views.
Reversed. .