209 N.W. 6 | Minn. | 1926
The Oak Hill Cemetery Association, duly incorporated as a public cemetery association under the laws of this state, owned 83 acres of land in the northeast corner of the city, which it surveyed and divided into burial lots, and on March 19, 1924, filed a map of such survey in the office of the register of deeds of Hennepin county for record, as required by G.S. 1923, § 7561. Thereafter the relator Merrick requested of respondents a permit to inter a body in a lot purchased in the cemetery thus platted. The request was refused and this action followed. Before the trial the city council of Minneapolis enacted an ordinance, approved November 21, 1924, the parts here pertinent reading:
"Sec. 1. That no new cemetery or place for burial of the dead shall be established or set apart within the City of Minneapolis and no existing cemetery shall be enlarged or extended without the consent of the city council.
"Sec. 2. That no permit shall be issued for the interment of any dead body except in a cemetery now existing or duly established according to the provisions of this ordinance."
There is no question of the power of the city council to enact the ordinance, for the charter grants the power to "regulate or prevent the burial of the dead within the city limits." Charter, c. 4, § 5.
Since July 2, 1897, there has been an ordinance in force providing in § 24 thereof: "No new cemetery, burying ground, vault, or tomb, for the reception and burial of dead human bodies, shall be established within said city or under the control of any organization within said city, without a permit so to do shall first have been granted by the Department of Health of said city." The board of public welfare is by law made the successor to the department of health. Section 24 is claimed by appellants to be invalid as delegating legislative power to a department. It will not be necessary to pass on that question, since we are of the opinion that, under the above quoted sections of the ordinance enacted before this case was tried, the judgment of dismissal herein was justified. *412
Although burial lots had been sold in the cemetery of relator, no body had been interred therein when the trial took place. Neither the purchase of land by a cemetery association, nor a survey and division of the same into burial lots, nor the filing for record of a map of such survey, nor a sale of lots therein for burial, is within the control of the city council. As to each and all of those matters a cemetery association proceeds under the statutes, but when it comes to the use of any grounds dedicated and set apart by it for actual interments, the city council's consent must be obtained, where as here there is an ordinance to that effect. A similar ordinance of the city of St. Paul, the statutory law being the same as now, was so construed in State v. District Court,
Entertaining this view of the meaning and effect of the ordinance we think the court, when the case was reached for trial, did not have the proper parties before it. The board of public welfare was forbidden by the ordinance to issue a permit, until the city council had consented to the use of this cemetery for burials. No application has so far been made to the city council. Relators may obtain their desire by applying to the proper authority. It is not to be presumed that the action of the city council will be other than proper in the premises. At any rate respondents are not the parties which by mandamus should be required to do a futile act. We think Dexner v. Houghton,
The judgment must be affirmed.