Marengo County v. Matkin

SHARPE, J.

Under an act of the General Assembly passed in 1820 lands described as the southwest quarter of section thirty-two in township 16 of range 3 east in Marengo county were fixed by the commissioners as the county seat and were platted as a town called Linden. On a lot reserved for that purpose, a, court house was built, which remained the seat of justice until December' 4, 1868, when by am act of the General Assembly, the county seat was removed to Demopolis and the court house lot at Linden was sold. At its session in 1869-70 the legislature passed an act which with an amendment at the same session provided for a vote of tire people to permanently locate the county seat, but no effective action was had thereunder.'

*278The foregoing has no important bearing on the case under consideration, but! what follows has more pertinence. - On 'March 1, 1870, an act of the General Assembly incorporated' for the first time the town of Linden, and enlarged its limits so as to include with the quarter section originally platted, ad.ja.cent lands in township 16. While the corporate limits so stood, andón February 8, 1871, an act of the General Assembly was approved and went into effect, whereby it was provided among other things, “¡that the court house of Marengo county be and the same is hereby removed from Demopolis to Linden in said county and that the same be permanently located at Linden in said county;” and providing further for the removal thither within sixty days of the records and furniture belonging to the county offices, and thereafter the court house site in Linden was repurchased by the county, and has ever since been used as such site. On February 9th, Í871, another act was approved and went into effect, amending the incorporating act so' as to add to Linden certain territory theretofore adjoining it and situated in township 15. The county commissioners having lately resolved to build a new court house on the territory last added to Linden, the complainant tax payers filed) this bill to enjoin that action.

It has been declared as a general principle that “when a city or town is selected as the county-seat the boundaries of such city or town, as they then exist, become the boundaries of the county seat, and the subsequent inclusion of more territory in such city or town, does not enlarge -the county seat.” — 7 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 1013. This statement is not opposed by any authority brought to our notice, and is supported' by the decisions rendered in State v. Smith, 46 Mo. 60; Way v. Fox, 109 Iowa, 340; State ex rel. etc. v. Harwi, 36 Kan. 588 and State ex rel. etc. v. Board Co. Commr's Atchison Co., 44 Kan. 186. Each of tírese cases involved the authority of county commissioners or supervisors to- change the place for1 county offices and sittings of court, to an addition which had been made to a town previously constituting a county seat, and in each the existence of such *279authority was denied. In respect of the manner in which the county town was incorporated and enlarged, the case last above cited wa,s strictly analogous to the present case.

In Way v. Fox, supra, the town of Garner ambitious to become the county seat, extended its limits over uninhabited lands so as to include the county town of Concord. The county board of supervisors then sought to .substitute a county site in the original limits of Garner for the one used at Concord. The Supreme Court, in passing’ on the legality of the board’s proceedings, held, that Garner was not the county seat, and that the supervisors had no> power to' change the site of the county buildings to that place, and this notwithstanding there was in Iowa, a statute defining powers of the board which the court said “seems to authorize a change of site for the court, house, provided the place selected is within the limits of the town at which the county seat is located.” In the opinion there rendered is was also said: “Had Concord incorporated and extended her limits so as to take in Garden, there would be little doubt of the legality of the proceedings,” and that expression is referred to" in appellant’s brief as favoring the legality of their action. We have no such statute as the one there considered, and that the court’s utterance respecting the case supposed was based on the terms of that statute', appears from its preceding statement that “In the absentee of statute it seems to be well settled that, when a city or town is selected as the county seat,, the boundaries of such city or town, as they then exist, become the boundaries of the couhty seat, and the subsequent inclusion of more territory does not remove the county seat.”

These authorities recognize as true that:' ordinarily the term county seat, applies not merely to the lot and buildings, used for transacting public business, but to the territory occupied by such town as may be designated as a. county seat. They assume, however, that'a county seat is not necessarily coextensive with the town of its location, is not identical with the municipality, anld does not; move by force of the latter’s expansion. We think this principle is correct, and furthermore that *280its application is essential to the full maintennamce of that part of section 41 of the constitution, which provides that “no court house or county site shall be removed except by a majority vote of the qualified electors of said county voting all an election held, for such purpose” etc. Judicial notice of proceedings in the late constitutional convention discloses that this clause was inserted in the organic law in response to public sentiment engendered by supposed abuses by the legislature, of the power it formerly had to change a seat of justice by direct enactment; hence the imperative prohibition of such changes except by the method defined. How this prohibition might be evaded if the General Assembly should extend a county town, as it undoubtedly can, to a distant part of the county, and if the commissioner’s court could follow with the court house tio the farthest limit of the extension!, is apparent. If the removal by such method should be effected, the mischief intended to be forestalled by the constitution would have been fully, wrought. In such case the theoretical identity of the old with the new site, would not afford consolation to those from whom the court house might depart, nor would the barren theory of legal identity he left to those persons, if subsequently the legislature should divide the municipality so as -to leave tire old site separated from tire new.

The case is not affected by the fact that the two enactments — the one fixing Linden as the county seat, and the subsequent one adding thereto' territory in township 15 — were near to each other in point of time or by tire fact set up by tire aniswer that the actual reestablishment of the court house and county offices in Linden, occurred after the enlargement of that town. The limits of the county seat were fixed by the act of February 8, 1871, and of the events which thereafter happened whether early or late, were ineffectual to alter the effect of that act.

The conclusion is that the proceedings here assailed were in excess of the powers possessed, by the court of county commissioners, and that the decree overruling tire demurrer to the- hill and the motion to dissolve the temporary injunction, should he affirmed.