Hall v. City & County of Denver

Mr. Justice Jackson

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiffs in error sought a restraining order enjoining defendants from selling block No. 208, Denver, com*540monly known as the “old courthouse square,” and a judgment declaring and adjudicating said square to be a public park. The trial court dismissed the cause and ordered judgment entered in favor of defendants and against plaintiffs for costs, to reverse which the latter bring the case here by writ of error.

Defendants, admitting that the city is proceeding to sell, answer it is under authority of a duly-passed city ordinance. Interveners allege that they have “submitted their certain' sealed bid or contract to purchase said property,” and that the mayor of Denver, acting in pursuance of a city ordinance, accepted said bid or contract for sale and purchase'of the property, and that they are ready, able and willing to comply with the terms and conditions thereof.

The contentions of plaintiffs in error, urged in the trial court and here, are: (1) That Denver cannot legally sell block 208 because it is a public park or square; (2) That a sale of block 208 would be the granting of a franchise, and therefore contrary to section 4, article XX of the Colorado Constitution; (3) That a vote of the people is necessary before block 208 can be sold, because in 1921 they had defeated an initiated charter amendment creating a building commission with power to sell said block. The specifications of points include these three propositions and we deem it proper to pass on all of them, if the judgment of the trial court is to be affirmed.

1. Is block 208 a public park? In 1875 the board of county commissioners of Arapahoe county, after rejecting a site on the corner of Larimer and Fourteenth streets as not being “adequate to the future needs of said county,” purchased block 208, East Denver, for the purpose of erecting a county courthouse thereon. No legislative authority then existed giving counties the right to purchase lands for a park. A courthouse was subsequently constructed on this block. In 1902, by amendment to the state Constitution, the City and County of Denver was created out of a part of the old *541county of Arapahoe; at that time block 208 passed to the newly formed city and county and the courthouse thereon became that of said City and County of Denver. The annual report of the park commissioner for 1905 does not include block 208 in the list of park lands. The fact that the park department may later have laid out flower beds, by way of beautifying the grounds surrounding the courthouse, did not, in our judgment, convert the block into a public park.

After the completion of the new city and county building in 1932, the City and County of Denver took steps looking toward the disposal of block 208. The board of county commissioners had previously, in 1926, authorized the mayor to receive offers to purchase the old courthouse property. A sign, requesting bids for block 208, was placed thereon in 1932 and remained there until about January 1, 1934. The 1933 report of the city auditor contains the statement that block 208 “will be landscaped, beautified and cared for as a park until such time as the land can be sold by the city and county at a reasonable figure.” In October 1934 Mayor Begole, in a letter, states: “This beauty spot is but temporary and must'be sold, if and when. possible, to apply on retirement of new Court House bonds.” Although there is a statement of Mayor Begole that in January 1934 “the property was taken from the commissioner of supplies, who has charge of public grounds and buildings appropriations, and passed over to the manager of parks and improvements,” the record shows an invoice, dated January 16, 1935, in which the parks department asks reimbursement from the public grounds and buildings department for Christmas decorations on block 208, and auditor McNichols testified that no parks money had been expended on block 208. The evidence showed that at the end of 1934 a special budget was set up under the commissioner of supplies for block 208, in which manner the matter has been handled ever since. Block 208 never was laid out as a park by the park com*542mission. It was assessed like other non-park property to raise money for the acquisition of park lands. It would appear, therefore, that during the seventy-one years from the time when the property was first bought for a courthouse site it has been uniformly treated first, as a site for the courthouse up to the year 1932, and thereafter as real estate to be disposed of as soon as a satisfactory price could be obtained. At no time was it treated as a park.

It is contended that, during the eleven years between the razing of the old courthouse in 1934 and the commencement of this litigation, block 208 has been used by the public as a park, and that such user has converted the block into a park. This contention is at variance with our ruling in Starr v. People, 17 Colo. 458, 30 Pac. 64, where we held that mere user without acts or declarations indicating an offer to dedicate cannot be sufficient to vest a roadway in the public,' unless continued for a period of time prescribed by the statute of limitations. Since the old courthouse building was removed in 1934 there has been neither, (a) a charter dedication of the land as a park; nor (b) a user by the public for the period provided by the statute of limitations; nor (c) a common-law acceptance of an offer to dedicate.

We conclude, therefore, that block 208, from the time it was purchased by the county of Arapahoe in 1875, never has been a public park in the legal acceptance of that term, and that therefore section 86 of the charter of the City and County of Denver, which provides: “No portion of Congress park, or of any other park now belonging to or hereafter acquired by the city and county, shall be sold or leased at any time,” is not applicable and does not act as a bar to the sale of the block.

2. Plaintiffs in error also rely upon that portion of section 4, article XX, Colorado Constitution, reading as follows: “No franchise relating to any street, alley or public place of said city and county [of Denver] shall be granted except upon the vote of the qualified tax*543paying electors.” They contend that this proposed sale is the granting of a franchise, prohibited by the foregoing provision, and cite Baker v. Denver Tramway Co., 72 Colo. 233, 210 Pac. 845, and Denver & Swansea Ry. Co. v. Denver City Ry. Co., 2 Colo. 673. These cases pertain to the granting of a special privilege in highways which the public is continuing to use. But in the instant case we have a property which never was dedicated to the public use, as is a public street. This property, which in the meanwhile has served its purpose, the city now proposes to sell, just as it had bought it some seventy years earlier in its proprietary capacity. This it may do. Fussell v. Forrest City, 145 Ark. 375, 224 S.W. 745, quoting from McQuillin on Municipal Corporations. It has been held that, “Where a city is empowered to build a new city hall, and the money which can be realized from a sale of its old hall will be of material aid to it in so doing, it ought to have power to sell its old hall for that purpose, and we are aware of no good reason for holding that it has not.” Marshall v. Mayor of City of Meridian, 103 Miss. 206, 60 So. 135. Also to like effect is Carter v. City of Greenville, 175 S.C. 130, 178 S.E. 508. In another similar case, City of Williamsburg v. Lyell, 132 Va. 455, 112 S.E. 666, the court said: “It is manifest that the lot in question was held by the city in its private capacity and has never been dedicated to public uses, and that the city has full power and authority to lease or sell the same.” McIntyre v. El Paso County, 15 Colo. App. 78, 61 Pac. 237, is not applicable here because in that case, as the court said: “It is. conceded in their argument, by counsel on both sides, that there was a dedication of the square to public use, and that it is sufficiently pleaded.”

We conclude that the quoted portion of section 4, article XX, Colorado Constitution is no bar to the sale of block 208. .

3. It is further contended that, even though the city has the power to sell block 208, such a sale must be authorized by the voters of the City and County of Den*544ver, without which the city council has no such authority. This contention is based upon the fact that section 272 of the Denver charter contains a provision that, “No ordinance defeated by a vote of the people shall be reenacted or passed by the council,” and that in 1921 a measure was submitted to the voters of Denver which provided for the creation of a building commission. This proposed commission would have authority, among other powers, to sell block 208. This measure was defeated by the electorate by a vote of 7,784 for and 32,302 against. It is argued that ordinance No. 29, passed by the council in 1945, authorizing the sale of block 208 by the city to the interveners is, in effect, a re-enactment of the 1921 measure, and therefore is barred by the quoted portion of section 272 of the Denver charter, supra. Reliance also is placed upon that part of section 5, article XX of the Colorado Constitution, reading as follows: “No charter, charter amendment or measure adopted or defeated under the provisions of this amendment shall be amended, repealed or revived, except, by petition and electoral vote.”

It would appear from an examination of sections 272 and 273 of the Denver charter that the former applies to ordinances that have been referred by voluntary action of the city council to the electorate for approval or disapproval, and the latter pertains to measures that have originated through the use of the initiative, in which case the action of the city council becomes automatic. A reading of ordinance No. 29, series of 1945, will disclose that it originated as an initiated measure by obtaining the signatures of five per cent of the total number of votors in the election district. It further appears that it was submitted to the voters, not through the voluntary action of the city council, but as a result of the use of the initiative. Section 273 of the charter provides, inter alia: “No ordinance adopted by vote of the people shall be repealed or amended by the council.” Ordinance No. 34, series of 1921, was not adopted by *545vote of the people, and therefore it would seem that section 273 of the Denver charter does not apply to this case any more than does section 272.

It therefore remains to be decided whether ordinance No. 34, enacted in 1921, is revived by ordinance No. 29, as enacted in 1945, as the word “revived” is used in section 5, article XX of the Colorado Constitution, supra.

The.title of ordinance No. 29, series of 1945, reads as follows: “A Bill for an ordinance authorizing the sale of block 208, East Denver, in the City and County of Denver, for not less than the sum of $765,000.” The title of ordinance No. 34, series of 1921, is as follows: “A Bill for an ordinance for the submission to a vote of the qualified electors in the City and County of Denver, at an election to be held on the 17th day of May, A. D. 1921, of a certain proposed amendment to the Charter of the City and County of Denver, to be known as Section 14 A, creating a ‘Municipal Building Commission,’ defining its powers and duties and naming W. A. Hover, Harold W. Moore and Harry C. Davis as the first members of such Commission.” In accordance with the specific direction in ordinance No. 34, the ballot used by the voters in the election contained the words of the title of the bill that have been italicized. These words were twice printed — the first printing following the words “For An,” and the second preceded by the words “Against An.” A lined square was printed opposite the words “for” and “against” in which the voter could indicate his choice by marking an X therein.

It will be observed that the titles of the two ordinances are quite dissimilar. There is. nothing in the titles, in fact, to indicate that the'two measures even deal with the same subject matter in any degree; and nothing on the ballot submitted to the voters in 1921 even intimated that the sale of block 208 was involved. Another striking difference between the two measures is that the title of the 1945 ordinance bears no imprint of *546invalidity; whereas that of the ordinance voted down in 1921 shows that it is invalid on its face for the reason that it discloses an attempt to legislate named personnel into office. People ex rel. v. Stapleton, 79 Colo. 629, 247 Pac. 1062. Counsel for plaintiffs in error are therefore placed in the position of arguing that the latter ordinance, valid according to its title, revives an earlier ordinance showing a different subject matter and clearly invalid under its title. We do not believe that this situation is embraced in the term “revived,” which may be defined as bringing back to life an object that has become moribund.

It is argued, however, that, although the titles of the two ordinances are different, the measures themselves contain somewhat the same subject matter, in that there is a provision in both for the sale of block 208. An examination of the 1921 ordinance discloses that of its eleven subdivisions nearly all are given over to the rights, duties and powers of the proposed building commission and its relation to various officers of the city administration. Subdivision 3, in enumerating the powers of the commission, contains, inter alia, the following:

(a) “To devise and adopt a plan and method for the erection of a new municipal building or buildings * * *;

(b) “To fix and determine a site for the erection of such building * * *;

(c) “To exercise the power of Eminent Domain * * * whenever necessary;

(d) “To sell the present Court House building and the block bounded by Fifteenth and Sixteenth Streets and Tremont Street and-Court Place, in the event the Commission shall decide on a different location for a new building or buildings, * * *;

(e) “To remodel the present City Hall building at Fourteenth and Larimer Streets, or to construct a new building on the site of the present City Hall * * *.”

*547There follows a recitation of other powers which normally would be corollary to those above mentioned. Subdivision 9 contains the provision that: “If this charter amendment is authorized by a majority of the qualified electors, of the City and County of Denver voting thereon, then the acquiring of a building site or sites, and the sale of the present Court House and City Hall properties, or either of them, as may be determined upon and made by the Municipal Building Commission, is hereby expressly authorized * *

It is contended that the sale of block 208 is the principal subject matter of the 1921 ordinance, and that therefore the 1945 ordinance is an attempt to revive it. We do not approve this line of thought for two reasons: first, because we regard the matter of the sale of block 208 in the 1921 ordinance as merely an incident to the main purpose of creating a building commission, as the name implies, for the purpose of obtaining new, larger and more adequate municipal buildings. It will be noted from the portions of subdivisions 3 and 9 of the 1921 ordinance that have been italicized that, although the building commission was given authority to sell block 208 by the ordinance, it was not directed or compelled to do so. In fact, in adopting subdivision 9, it was contemplated that block 208 might be retained and the city hall property at Fourteenth and Larimer streets sold; or that the block might be sold and the old city hall site retained. A third possibility was that both properties might be retained. But whether to sell or not was left to the discretion of the commission, whose first object was (a) “To devise and adopt a plan and method for the erection of a new municipal building or buildings * * The second reason why we do not agree with counsels’ argument is that if the principal matter in the 1921 ordinance was the sale of block 208, as contended, then there is a variance between the title of the ordinance and its subject matter, and the 1921 ordinance would therefore violate section 21, article Y of the Colo*548rado Constitution. In other words, we are asked to hold the 1945 act unconstitutional because it revives the 1921 ordinance; but the only way the 1945 measure could properly be so construed would be to place an interpretation on the 1921 ordinance that would make it also unconstitutional. This would be just the reverse of the approved procedure in construing statutes, i. e., to hold them constitutional if possible. We are not inclined to hold that a later ordinance revives an earlier one which, because of two fatal prenatal defects, has never been brought into being.

But even if the legal sufficiency of the earlier ordinance were unquestioned, we still do not believe there would be a revivor as contemplated by the Colorado Constitution. This point seems to be here first presented for judicial decision in this state. The cases in other jurisdictions appear, without exception, to hold that the prohibition lies against the reenactment or revivor of the particular ordinance or measure, and not against all legislation on the subject matter thereof. The test laid down in State ex rel. v. Meining, 133 Minn. 98, 157 N.W. 991, was, “Is the ordinance for violation of which Megnella was imprisoned different in any essential features from the ordinance against which the referendum petition was filed?” (italics ours). In In re Statham, 45 Cal. App. 436, 187 Pac. 986, the rule is laid down that unless the second ordinance is so plainly an attempt to evade the referendum, that it can be so determined as a matter of law, the prohibition against revivor does not apply. In Ginsberg v. Kentucky Utilities Com,., 260 Ky. 60, 83 S.W. (2d) 497, an ordinance approving a loan agreement between a city and the United States Government for a federal loan of $328,000, to be secured by six per cent revenue bonds, to provide for a municipally owned electrical system was prevented from being carried into effect by injunction. The city council thereupon passed an ordinance similar to the first in essential details, but reducing the amount of revenue bonds to be issued to *549$262,000 and lowering the interest rate from six to four per cent. The second ordinance was upheld, the court saying: the council “may legislate on the same subject matter provided it acts, in good faith and not with a purpose to evade the referendum and providing further that the new ordinance differs in essential features from the old one.” The court in McBride v. Kerby, 32 Ariz. 515, 260 Pac. 435, reached the same conclusion, saying: “We think there can be no escape from the conclusion that the reference is of the specific. measure and nothing more.” In Utah Light & Power Co. v. Ogden City, 95 Utah 161, 79 P. (2d) 61, it was held that the filing of a referendum petition against a city ordinance does not “prohibit a new contract or ordinance remedying defects or objections made to the suspended contract and ordinance.”

In the foregoing cases the similarities between the second measure, and the first, claimed to have been revived, were much more striking than those between the two measures involved in the instant case. To adopt the theory urged by counsel for plaintiffs in error would make it possible, over a period of time, for a small percentage of the electorate to place on a ballot by petition a series of measures on various subject matters, and so framed as to turn the majority vote against them, and thereby remove from the field of legislative action by the council large and important subjects of legislation.

Both on principle and authority we are of the'opinion: that ordinance No. 29, series of 1945, does not'operate as a revivor of ordinance No. 34, series of 1921; and that the City and County of Denver, acting through its council, has the power to sell block 208.

Whether the action of the council in executing the agreement here under investigation was, under the circumstances, for the best interests of the city, is not a question properly to be determined by this court. Our duty is not to pass upon the wisdom of legislation, but to determine its legal sufficiency, if and when the mat*550ter is presented for our consideration. In the instant case, we hold that the ordinance in question is valid.

The judgment is affirmed.

Mr. Justice Burke and Mr. Justice Hilliard dissent.

Mr. Justice Luxford does not participate.