This is an action in ejectment. On the trial it was admitted that plaintiff was the owner of the premises in controversy and entitled to the possession, unless her right was divested by the condemnation proceedings given in evidence. The judgment was for the defendant, and the plaintiff appeals. The defendant is a city of the fourth class; the strip of land in controversy was condemned and taken for the purpose of widening an alley in said city by virtue of an ordinance thereof. The -only point made against the condemnation proceedings is that no notice was given of the intention to pass the ordinance widening said alley.
By section 4932, Revised Statutes, 1879, of the act in regard to cities of the fourth class (amended Acts of 1883, p. 37) power is given to the mayor and board of aldermen of such cities to extend the corporate limits thereof with the consent of a majority of the legal voters of such city voting therefor at an election to be held in accordance with the general election law of the state upon such notice, and at such time and place as may be prescribed by ordinance.
By section 4940, power is given to the mayor and board of aldermen by ordinance “to pass ordinances,
By section 4942, power is given the; board of aider-men by ordinance to levy and collect a special tax for the improvement of its streets and alleys, and, after providing the manner in which it shall be levied and collected, concludes with the following provision unrelated to the matter previously treated of in the section: ‘ ‘ The board of aldermen shall have the power, by ordinance, to vacate any alley, road, street or avenue, or any part thereof, within the city limits ; provided, that notice of the intended change of the limits of such city, or of the opening, locating, vacating or changing of any street, alley, ward or avenue in such a city be given by publication for four weeks successively next preceding the day of such election.”
When the whole scope and tenor of the act is considered, it is perhaps impossible to tell what the legislature really did mean by this incongruous proviso, nor shall we attempt to discern that meaning further than is necessary to the decision of the case in hand, in view of the fact that in the recent revision the act has been so amended as to relieve it to some extent of the obscurity cast upon it by this proviso. R. S. 1889, sec. 1592. We see no way of giving it force and making it consistent with the other provisions . of the act except by restricting its limitations to the power granted in the clause immediately preceding it in the same section, and to which it is appended, which we may well do. Endlich on Con. of Statutes, sec. 186. This construction is more readily adopted as a correct interpretation of the meaning of the legislature from the fact that it is in-harmony
The judgment is affirmed.