Ken Casady, Prosecuting Attorney 22d Judicial District
102 South Main Street Benton, Arkansas 72015
Dear Mr. Casady:
I am writing in response to your request for an opinion on the following questions:
*Page 21. When the governing body of a municipality approves an annexation ordinance under A.C.A. §
14-40-503 , should the county assessor begin applying city millage to the real property in the newly annexed area immediately upon being notified by the municipality, or should the assessor wait until the thirty (30) day time period for challenging the annexation in circuit court has elapsed?2. When the governing body of a municipality approves an annexation ordinance under A.C.A.
14-40-503 , should the county clerk change the voting precincts of the newly annexed area immediately upon being notified by the municipality, or should the clerk wait until the thirty (30) day time period for challenging the annexation in circuit court has elapsed?3. If suit is brought in circuit court within the thirty (30) day challenge period mentioned in A.C.A.
14-40-503 , should the county assessor and the county clerk wait until final adjudication of the matter is complete and all appeals are exhausted before taking any of the above-cited actions?
4. When the governing body of a municipality approves an annexation ordinance under A.C.A.
14-40-503 and suit is filed challenging that decision in circuit court within the 30-day period, does the county court hold in abeyance any decision on petitions filed and pending before the county court for voluntary annexation under A.C.A.14-40-601 , where a decision regarding such petitions would affect the distance of city limits adjoining the unincorporated area's perimeter under A.C.A.14-40-501 (a)(1)(B)?
RESPONSE
With respect to your first question, although the issue invites legislative clarification, it is my opinion that the county assessor in all likelihood should begin applying city millage to the real property in the newly annexed area immediately upon being notified by the municipality that an annexation ordinance under A.C.A. §Question 1: When the governing body of a municipality approvesan annexation ordinance under A.C.A.
In my opinion, although the answer to this question is not entirely clear, I believe a court might well conclude that the county assessor should apply the city millage upon the date of annexation rather than awaiting the lapse of the 30-day period during which the annexation may be challenged. *Page 3
Subsection
The timetable for effecting the annexation — and, by possible extension, for applying a city millage on the affected real property — is set forth in A.C.A. §§
The issue underlying your question is whether the directive that the city "proceed to render services to the annexed area" upon an approving vote of the council authorizes the city immediately to impose a millage upon the residents of the annexed area to defray the costs of those services or whether the assessor must wait to impose this millage until the 30-day period to challenge the annexation has passed. Unfortunately, I have found no statutory or case law that directly addresses this question. Although the statutory directive that the city proceed to provide services to the annexed area clearly implies that the annexation — and, presumably, the authority to charge for services rendered as a result of the annexation — is triggered purely by the council's vote approving the annexation, *Page 4 the issue is somewhat muddled by the statutory provisions declaring that the vote establishes only a prima facie case for annexation, which may be challenged within a period of 30 days from the vote.
As noted in 62 C.J.S. § 64, Municipal Corporations (1999):
In the absence of a statute to the contrary, territory annexed to a municipal corporation becomes a part thereof immediately on annexation, and comes under the power, control, and jurisdiction of the municipality, insofar as powers of a political and governmental nature delegated to the municipality by law are concerned, and the municipality assumes the burdens attached to the territory annexed. All parts of the city, annexed as well as original territory, are entitled to the same advantages, and they must also bear like burdens.
(Emphasis added; footnotes omitted.) Section 66 of this treatise, captioned "Time of Taking Effect," likewise declares:
Annexation of territory to a municipal corporation ordinarily occurs on enactment of the statute providing therefor or at such other time as may be prescribed by the legislature, and the added territory becomes subject to municipal benefits and burdens immediately on its annexation. . . .
(Emphasis added; footnote omitted.) The section further remarks:
New territory annexed to a municipal corporation becomes entitled to the benefits of the facilities of the municipality, and subject to its share of municipal burdens, immediately on the taking effect of the annexation.
(Footnote omitted.)
This section further notes, however, that "under some statutes," the annexation, with its attendant benefits and burdens relating to the annexed territory, is effective "on the expiration of a complaint against the annexation."
In applying these general principles, the question appears to be whether the provision in A.C.A. §
In addressing this question, I am inclined to conclude that the provision of the statute obliging the city immediately to provide services to the annexed area upon a vote approving the annexation indeed triggers not only the authority, but an obligation, to charge the residents of the annexed area for the costs of municipal services rendered. In this regard, I believe a reviewing court might well be inclined to read subsection (b) of the statute not as a restriction on the effective date of the annexation ordinance, but rather as a restriction, in the interests of "finality," on the availability of a judicial challenge by the residents of the annexed area. Compare Jackson v. City of Little Rock,
The chancellor held that the appellee City of Little Rock was under the responsibility to furnish services to the annexed area. Therefore, the City properly collected franchise taxes from appellants in the area during the pendency of the appeal to the Supreme Court from a circuit court order approving the annexation.
Id. At 51-52. In the present case, the statute imposes upon the annexing municipality an obligation immediately to provide services to the annexed area, which I believe means the municipality is conversely obliged to assess the residents of the annexed area for the rendering of those services. In my opinion, then, a reviewing court would in all likelihood conclude that the county assessor should apply city millage to real property in a newly annexed area immediately upon being notified by the municipality. Having offered this opinion, I must note *Page 6 that legislative or judicial clarification on this issue would be welcome within the specific context of the annexation of surrounded land.
Question 2: When the governing body of a municipality approvesan annexation ordinance under A.C.A.
For the reasons set forth in my response to your previous question, I believe the county clerk should change the voting precincts of the annexed area upon being informed of the city council's approval of the annexation, which would appear to become effective as of the date of the council's vote, rather than upon the lapse of the 30-day period to appeal that vote.
Question 3: If suit is brought in circuit court within thethirty (30) day challenge period mentioned in A.C.A.
In my opinion, the answer to this question is, in all likelihood, "no." Nothing in the statute or any other authority I have found suggests that the consequences of a city's immediate annexation of property, accompanied by an immediate provision of services to the annexed area, should be stayed or superseded pending the disposition of an appeal challenging the annexation. Until a circuit court declares otherwise on appeal, I believe an annexation effected by an appropriate vote of a city council should be treated as a faitaccompli, meaning that the city is obliged to provide municipal services and the residents of the annexed area are obliged to pay their proportional share of the expenses to provide those services.
Question 4: When the governing body of a municipality approvesan annexation ordinance under A.C.A.
The provisions of A.C.A. §
If the incorporated limits of two (2) or more municipalities have completely surrounded an unincorporated area, the governing body of the municipality with the greater distance of city limits adjoining the unincorporated area's perimeter may propose an ordinance calling for the annexation of the land surrounded by the municipalities, unless it is agreed by the adjoining municipalities that another of the adjoining municipalities should propose an ordinance calling for the annexation.
Section 4-40-601 of the Code (Repl. 1998) provides:
(a) Whenever a majority of the real estate owners of any part of a county contiguous to and adjoining any city or incorporated town shall desire to be annexed to the city or town, they may apply, by petition in writing, to the county court of the county in which the city or town is situated and shall name the persons authorized to act on behalf of the petitioners.
(b) The "majority of real estate owners" referred to in this section shall mean a majority of the total number of real estate owners in the area affected, if the majority of the total number of owners shall own more than one-half (1/2) of the acreage affected.
In reviewing these two statutes, I am struck by the fact that they both address the annexation of unincorporated areas. As reflected in my response to your previous questions, I believe the Code appears to direct that an annexation pursuant to A.C.A. §
In my view, the mere fact that an appeal is pending challenging an annexation effected pursuant to A.C.A. §
Underlying this analysis, of course, is an assumption, which I believe is justified in light of the text of A.C.A. §
As the foregoing should suggest, all of your questions would be readily answered with more certitude than I feel comfortable advancing if the legislature clarified what is the effect of the 30-day window to appeal set forth in A.C.A. §
Assistant Attorney General Jack Druff prepared the foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve.
Sincerely,
DUSTIN McDANIEL Attorney General
DM/JHD:cyh
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