Conway v. Miller County Highway & Bridge District

Decision Date02 October 1916
Docket Number157
Citation188 S.W. 822,125 Ark. 325
PartiesCONWAY v. MILLER COUNTY HIGHWAY & BRIDGE DISTRICT
CourtArkansas Supreme Court

Appeal from Miller Chancery Court; Jas. D. Shaver, Chancellor affirmed.

Decree affirmed.

William H. Arnold, for appellant.

1. The legislature has attempted to give jurisdiction and control to the commissioners over such public roads as they may select not exceeding 60 miles in length, etc. This attempt is in conflict with § 28, Art. 7, Constitution. It is an usurpation of the jurisdiction of the County Courts. 89 Ark 513; 118 Id. 294.

2. The five roads and bridges do not constitute a single improvement. No such "roving" commission can be created legally. 118 Ark. 294; 118 Ark. 119. See also the former decision in 120 Ark. 510.

3. Treating the act as constituting a single district the cost including the bridges, exceeds 15 per cent. of the assessed value of real property in the district. 120 Ark. 510.

4. The act is unconstitutional because it gives the commissioners power to lay out roads, condemn right of way and build a bridge beyond the center of the channel of Red River, or in Hempstead County. Further, the act forbids the opening paying out and construction of any roads that shall not be taken over by Miller County Court, when a part at least is in Hempstead County, and is an attempt to take away the constitutional rights of said county over its own roads and bridges.

Rose Hemingway, Cantrell, Loughborough & Miles, also for appellant.

1. Two or more roads, having no connection with one another and serving entirely different territory, cannot be combined into one improvement. 118 Ark. 294; 176 S.W. 676.

2. All property directly benefited must be embraced within the district. 48 Ark. 251, 370; 119 Id. 203.

M. E. Sanderson, for appellee.

1. The act is not unconstitutional. 92 Ark. 93; 96 Id. 416; 103 Id. 533; 104 Id. 425.

2. The five roads connect and form a single district. 97 Ark. 330; 108 Id. 419. It does not invade the jurisdiction of the county courts. 96 Ark. 417; 104 Id. 427; 50 Minn. 248; 52 N.W. 858.

3. Counties and towns are but subdivisions of the State. The legislature is supreme, subject only to the limitations of the constitution. 28 Ark. 329; 33 Id. 497; 37 Id. 339; 56 Id. 138; 99 Id. 103; 118 Id. 304.

4. It was lawful for the legislature to give authority to the commissioners to go beyond the confines of the district and extend the bridge into another county, as an outlet. 103 Ark. 272.

5. In reply to points made in brief of Rose, Hemingway, Cantrell, Loughborough & Miles cites 114 Ark. 328; 59 Id. 528; 96 Id. 410; 52 Id. 107; 67 Id. 37; 110 U.S. 558; 102 Id. 69; 23 Conn. 416; 130 Mass. 528; 68 Conn. 131.

MCCULLOCH C. J. HART and KIRBY, JJ., dissent.

OPINION

MCCULLOCH, C. J.

This suit involves an attack on the validity of a special statute enacted by the General Assembly of 1915 (Act No. 153, Session of 1915, page 617) creating an improvement district known as the Miller County Highway & Bridge District, and it also calls in question the validity of the proceedings under said statute. The same case was here on a former appeal, where we held that the improvements of the highways and the construction of the bridge mentioned in the statute constituted a single improvement, so as to fall within the limitation to the effect that the cost of the improvement shall not exceed fifteen per centum of the assessed valuation of real property in the district. That question was raised by demurrer to the complaint, and we reversed the decree with directions to overrule the demurrer. 120 Ark. 510.

When the case was remanded, an answer was filed which raised an issue concerning the point decided here on the former appeal, and on the final hearing of the cause the chancellor found that the cost of the whole improvement, treating as a unit the cost of improving the highways and construction of the bridge, would not exceed the percentage of assessed value mentioned in the statute. Another appeal has been prosecuted to this court, and after reviewing the evidence we are of the opinion that the chancellor was correct in his findings. There are however, other questions raised on the appeal.

Section 2 of the statute, which prescribed the powers of the district, reads in part as follows: "Said district shall have the power to construct and maintain sixty (60) miles of free public highways of such material as it may deem best, leading from the City of Texarkana to such point on the Red River between Fulton and Index, at which it may deem desirable and suitable to construct a bridge over and across said Red River in connection with the plan and system of such highways, and at such point so selected on Red River, said district shall have power to construct and maintain a free public bridge in connection with said highways over and across said Red River, and within the boundaries of the territory constituting said district in Miller County, and said district shall have the power to construct and maintain other free public highways in connection with the highway leading to said bridge, in the territory of said district, of such material as it may deem best, leading from the City of Texarkana to such other points and localities in said territory to which it may deem desirable and best calculated to serve the best interests of the people as a whole in said territory, but not to exceed in the aggregate in connection with the highway to said bridge, sixty (60) miles in length."

The statute described the boundaries of the district, which constitutes about one-third of the territory of the county, and it appears from the pleadings and proof that plans have been made by the board of commissioners to construct roads not exceeding sixty miles in length, the principal road being one running East from the city of Texarkana to the location of the bridge on Red River, which forms the boundary between Miller and Hempstead counties. Another branch of the road runs North from Texarkana to the river, and there are other roads running out from these two main stems.

It is contended that the authority conferred by the statute upon the board of commissioners constitutes an encroachment upon the jurisdiction of the county court as held by this court in the case of Swepston v. Avery, 118 Ark. 294, 177 S.W. 424. The distinction between the statute condemned in Swepston v. Avery and the statute now under consideration is obvious, and the decision in that case is not controlling in the present. That statute constituted substantially the whole of Crittenden County into a road district, and authorized the board of commissioners to improve any road or roads in the county which they might select, and imposed the cost thereof upon the lands in the district in proportion to the assessed value. It did not provide for assessment of benefits to arise from the construction of any particular road, but constituted a legislative determination that the benefits from any road would accrue to all the lands in the district in the same proportion. We said that the statute attempted to confer an authority which constituted an invasion of the jurisdiction of the county court, and that it was necessarily an erroneous determination concerning the accrual of benefits.

The statute now before us is not nearly so comprehensive in its terms as the one dealt with in the former case. In the first place, the Miller County District only includes about one-third of the county, and the statute provides for an actual assessment of the benefits to accrue from the improvement of any of the roads which the board may select to improve. The act does not attempt to determine the ratio of benefits that will accrue, but on the contrary authorizes a proceeding to ascertain the actual benefits.

Nor does the statute fall within the objections sustained by this court in the recent case of Cox v. Road Imp. Dist. No. 8 of Lonoke County, 118 Ark 119, 176 S.W. 676, as contended by counsel for appellant. Counsel assail that portion of the statute which authorizes the board of improvement to select the roads to be improved, and say that this gives a roving commission which was condemned in the case just referred to. An examination of the opinion in that case discloses the fact that we were dealing with a statute which authorized the county court, on the petition of...

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