298 N.W. 717 | Minn. | 1941
Lead Opinion
Since an election held December 5, 1939, at which 99 votes were cast for and 24 votes against incorporation, the village of Leetonia has been functioning as a municipality with duly elected officers. The territory embraced by the village consists of 15 forty-acre tracts, rectangular in formation, arranged in three horizontal rows of five forties. Only one forty, which is the middle one in the bottom row, is platted. This was platted in 1913 as a place of residence for the miners then employed in near-by mines and was known as Leetonia Townsite. The mining activity in the area continued until the early 1920's, and while it did Leetonia accommodated more than 200 transient miners in addition to its regular population. The need for additional places of residence for the miners of the Morton mine, located somewhat to the east, resulted in Morton Location, where more than 200 miners resided. When the mines closed, Morton Location was abandoned and all houses were removed. Leetonia lost residents to such extent that *406 the referee has found that only 450 people now live there. The 1940 census found only 396 persons.
The platted forty is divided into lots, blocks, streets, and alleys. It contains 89 buildings and about 200 vacant lots. Its only places of business are two grocery stores, three taverns, a liquor store, two gasoline stations (one of which deals in automobile accessories and miscellaneous merchandise), a barbershop, and a public hall. While the adult males are ordinarily miners by occupation, only a few are now employed in mines outside the village. Two are employed as janitors at the public school east of the townsite, some work for the railroad, and most are employed on WPA. The public services for the village — water, electricity, and street lighting — are provided by the village of Hibbing and by the town of Stuntz.
The other forties in the village are described by the referee as "vacant and barren" consisting "mostly of mining lands, indefinitely abandoned, with dumps and fills, roads, tracks, and drainage ditches, and more or less wet, boggy ground." Further reference to facts material to decision will be made hereafter.
The only village incorporation requirement of 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 1111, involved in this proceeding is the one prescribing what unplatted, adjoining lands may be incorporated as part of the village. The provision is that "the unplatted part of such territory must adjoin the platted portion and be so conditioned as properly to be subjected to village government." In considering whether the incorporation of the village of Leetonia should be disturbed, it is well to keep in mind what this court has said this provision means.
"The final test is whether the platted territory and the adjacent territory are so limited in area and have such a natural connection, and the people residing thereon have such a community of interest, that the whole may be properly subjected to village government." State ex rel. Simpson v. Village of Alice,
Basically, whether the particular incorporation involved measures up to this statutory test is one of fact for the people concerned, and their judgment is not lightly to be ignored. State ex rel. Simpson v. Village of Dover,
Upon numerous occasions in the past, we have recognized that the incorporation into a village of unplatted mineral lands presents a special problem distinguishable from the annexation of agricultural lands. State ex rel. Smith v. Village of Gilbert,
In their inclusion of unplatted territory, the incorporators of Leetonia were much less ambitious than many of the other incorporations which have been the subject of previous review by this court. The inclusion of 15 forties, totaling 600 acres, does not at first blush seem excessive. Cf. State ex rel. Hilton v. City of Nashwauk,
Since the approach to the problem of the inclusion of unplatted mineral lands starts from the premise that the existence and operation of the mines has made a special rule necessary (State ex rel. Hilton v. City of Nashwauk,
With respect to the mining activity within the boundaries of the village, the referee has found that: *409
"The remaining forties are mining properties. Two of them are owned by the state, and the others by mining companies. There have been some exploratory operations in the past and some actual mining, but nothing is being done at the present time. The land is being held by the owners and lessees until such time as it will appear profitable to mine it. Under present conditions ore can be obtained more cheaply at other places. It is quite uncertain when operations will be resumed. It may not be for many years. The unmined tonnage is estimated at 29,000,000 tons. It will have to be done as a large operation. Some of it will be open pit mining and some underground."
This picture of a suspended industry should be contrasted with those disclosed by such cases as State ex rel. Simpson v. Village of Alice,
Another major difficulty with the attempted incorporation is its failure to meet the requirement that the unplatted areas be suburban in character. See, for example, State ex rel. [Childs] v. Minnetonka Village,
The fact that the unplatted forties contain no inhabitants, "except in one house near the north line of the village," squarely raises the question of the extent to which the annexed areas must contain people. See State ex rel. Hilton v. Village of Buhl,
Leetonia Townsite is described by the referee as having "no sewers, sidewalks, or pavements, except a bit of sidewalk in front of one house and another at a filling station. It has no post office, no bank, no railway station, no church, no library, no garage, no jail, no movies." There "is nothing in the townsite or in the village area to make it an attractive place to live." Considering this in connection with a further finding that the assessed valuation of the 14 forties is $883,622 and of the townsite only $15,728, it seems highly possible that a potential tax source was of much greater concern to the incorporators than potential territorial needs. "Land cannot be brought into a village arbitrarily just to increase its revenues or to add taxable property." State *412
ex rel. Hilton v. Village of Buhl,
Let writ of ouster issue.
Dissenting Opinion
The determination of the people that the lands have such natural connection and the people residing thereon have such a community of interest that the whole might properly be subject to village government is presumed to be correct and is not to be lightly set aside. The facts are stated in the majority opinion most strongly against the incorporation. It is our duty to view the facts in that light which will sustain rather than upset the determination of the people. Speaking of the inclusion of the mineral lands as "unlikely to develop for many years, if ever" is mere prophecy for which there is no basis in the record. The people in the affected area have as much right to indulge in forecasting the future of the mining industry as our referee or we have. Their prophecy is as likely to be fulfilled as one by those who are not familiar with local conditions. Characteristic of prophets is their proneness to err. If there is to be any error it ought not to be ours. The fact is that the whole Iron Range country was supposed to be incapable *413 of development, but that supposition has been refuted by the development of an industry which produces two-thirds of the nation's iron ore. In view of the changes in the industry brought about by world-wide conditions creating unprecedented demands for iron ore and the claims of the mining industry of the near exhaustion of ore now being removed in other areas, it is not unreasonable to believe that 29,000,000 tons of iron ore in such a small and compact area as that involved here might soon be mined.
On the whole, the evidence sustains the view that the entire area is industrialized by present mining industry.
The mining operations carried on in the mines on the land included in the village and other industrial activity in connection with the mines have created conditions which make an incorporated village necessary and desirable. The men living there, except those engaged in some business, are all miners. The fact that some of them have been unemployed because of conditions in the mining industry does not change the fact that the mines attracted the men to that locality and keep them there. The extensive railroad switching and freight transportation operations in connection with the mining industry have resulted in the construction of numerous spur and switching tracks to connect with main-line tracks through the village, all of which have grade crossings. There are no sewers in the village. These are needed. Relator's own witness testified that the village should control drainage for some distance from the platted areas.
Many main highways as well as mere lateral roads converge in and about the village, thus bringing a considerable traffic to the locality.
The fact that some of the land was mining property, so far from preventing the inclusion of it in the village, was a reason for doing so under the circumstances. In State ex rel. Simpson v. Village of Alice,
"The fact that the lands included in this village are suitable for mining purposes might be a reason why it would be proper so to *414 include them; for lands of that class may, and usually do, derive a benefit in many ways from being included within the limits of a municipality, such as the benefit of police protection, water, lights, and sewage."
While our decisions have been reviewed in the majority opinion and the instant case has been distinguished from those sustaining similar incorporations, the distinctions rest upon accidental reasons which are not controlling. The incorporation in the instant case should be sustained upon the authority of State ex rel. Simpson v. Village of Alice,
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GALLAGHER took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.