30 Neb. 493 | Neb. | 1890
This is an application for a writ of mandamus to require the board of supervisors of Knox county to submit to the electors of said county the proposition to erect the county of Union out of the territory now within the boundaries of the county of Knox. On the 9th day of July, 1890, a petition, signed by the relator'and 606 other legal voters of Knox county, was filed with the county clerk of that county, and on July 15, 1890, another petition, signed by thirty-one electors of said county, was filed with said clerk, which petition prayed that the respondents, the board of supervisors, submit to the electors of
On July 14 thirty of the persons who signed the above petitions filed with the county clerk a remonstrance, and requested that their names be erased from said petitions. On July 15 these ¡petitions were presented to the board of supervisors while in regular session, and were by said board referred to a committee appointed from the membership of the board, to ascertain and report to the full board whether said petitions contained the names of a majority of the electors residing in the proposed Union county. On the next day the committee reported to the board that said petitions contained the names of a majority of the legal voters residing in the territory proposed to be stricken from Knox county, after deducting the names of the thirty petitioners who asked to .have their names stricken from the petitions. The respondents refused to grant the prayer of said petitions.
On July 14, 1890, a petition was filed with the county clerk signed by 259 electors of Knox county, and on July 15 there was filed with sai(l clerk another petition signed by thirty-seven legal voters of said county praying for the erection of Alliance county out of three of the eastern tiers of government townships of Knox county. On July 16 the respondents ordered submitted to a vote of the people at the next general election the proposition to create Alliance county, .which county includes in its boundaries a
Sections 1, 2, and 3 of article 10 of the constitution are ai follows:
“Section 1. No new county shall be formed or established by the legislature which will reduce the county, or counties, or either of them, to a less area than four hundred square miles, nor shall any county be formed of a less area.
“Sec. 2. No county shall be divided, or have any part stricken therefrom, without first submitting the question to a vote of the people of the county, nor unless a majority of all the legal voters of the county voting on the question shall vote for the same.
“ Sec. 3. There shall be no territory stricken from any organized county unless a majority of the voters living in such territory shall petition for such division, and no territory shall be added to any organized county without the consent of the majority of the voters of the county to which it is proposed to be added.” * * *
Section 10 of article 1, chapter 18, of the Compiled Statutes of 1889 provides that, “Whenever it is desired to form a new county out of one or more of the then existing counties, and a petition praying for the erection of such new county, stating and describing the territory proposed to be taken for such new county, together with the name of such proposed new county, signed by a majority of the legal voters residing in the territory to be stricken from each county or counties, shall be presented to the county board of each county to be affected by such division, and it appearing that such new county can be constitutionally formed, it shall be the duty of such county board, or county boards, to make an order providing for the submission of
It is conceded by the respondents that the petitions presented to the county board for the creation of Union county meet all the requirements of the above quoted sections of the constitution and the statutes excepting one. It is insisted by the respondents that it does not appear that these petitions contain the signatures of a majority of the qualified voters residing in the territory out of which it is proposed to erect the new county. If this be true, it is an insurmountable objection to the granting of the relief demanded by the relator, for, without the requisite number of petitioners, the county board would be without jurisdiction to. act.
The relator, in his petition for mandamus, alleges that the petitions submitted to the county board, asking for the creation of Union county, contained the signatures of a majority of the legal voters residing in the proposed county, and that there are not more than 1,000 legal voters in said territory.
The respondents in their answer “ deny that the two petitions for the creation of Union county contained any greater number than 607 names after deducting the names of those who asked to have their names stricken therefrom in their said remonstrance, and deny that said number was, at the time of their action thereon aforesaid, or now is, a majority of the legal voters residing in the territory comprising the said proposed Union county; deny that the proposed Union county did not, at the time of filing said petitions, or does not now, contain more than 1,000 legal voters.” If there were before us nothing but the petition
It is urged that it was not for the best interests of the citizens of Knox county that the proposed Union county should be created, and that the petitions for the creation of that county conflict with those granted by the respondents for the erection of Alliance county, in that part of the same territory is included in both sets of petitions. The law is mandatory. When a petition is presented to a county board asking for the creation of a new county which in all respects complies with the law, and contains the requisite number of petitioners, it is the duty of the county board to submit the question to a vote of the people of the county. The law confers no discretion in the matter upon the county board.
There is another very good reason why both propositions could not legally be submitted at the same election. The territory embraced in the proposed new counties of Union and Alliance would reduce the area of the county of Knox below that required by the constitution. The constitution provides that no new county shall be formed which will reduce the county to a less area than four hundred square miles, nor shall a county be formed of a less area-It logically follows that the petitions to create new counties cannot be submitted when the territory included therein will leave the original with an area less than the constitutional limit.
Having reached the conclusion that the county board had no authority to require a vote to be taken on both propositions, the question arises, Which one should have been submitted to a vote? It is conceded that the petitions for the creation of Alliance county were signed by a majority of all the legal voters residing in the territory embraced in the petitions; that such territory has over four hundred square miles, and that the remainder of Knox county was more than the constitutional requirements. The question of creating Alliance county could, therefore, have lawfully been submitted had not the petitions praying for the formation of Union county been presented. The record shows that the Union county petition, containing 607 names, was filed with the county clerk of Knox county on July 9, and after deducting the names
A peremptory writ of mandamus will issue as prayed.
Writ allowed.