after stating tbe facts, as above: Tbe particular contention of tbe defendant is tbat tbe acts of 1919 are in violation of tbe Constitution, Art. II, sec. 29, wbicb prohibits tbe enactment of “any local, private, or special act . . . authorizing tbe laying out, ojjening, altering, or discontinuing of highways,” but we are of tbe opinion tbat this is a misconception of tbe object and purpose of those laws. It was not intended to require tbe local authorities to lay out, open, alter, or discontinue any road or highway, but they were passed by tbe Legislature for the purpose of enabling the local authorities designated in them to issue bonds, and out of tbe proceeds to pay tbe expense of constructing roads in tbe various townships of tbe county, in order, by special directions, to complete tbe scheme of road building wbicb was authorized by Public-Local Laws 1915, ch. 345, and this will be apparent to any one who will read tbe four acts together. Tbe exact location of tbe roads was left to tbe good judgment and discretion of tbe local authorities named in tbe acts, but in order to equalize tbe benefits to accrue to each and every part of tbe county, tbe Legislature considered it wise and expedient tbat tbe money raised by a sale of tbe bonds should be distributed upon some fixed basis, or according to a fixed rule, so tbat this equal apportionment might be tbe better enforced. It was not passing laws to lay out or construct roads, but to pay for these things by issuing and selling bonds, just as was done in
Brown v. Comrs.,
*397
Tbe general road system of Wilkes County was established by the act of 1915, passed before the constitutional amendments of 1916-17 were ratified and took effect, and the statutes in question only provided the means whereby the roads could be constructed and maintained in the most rational and equitable way for the general benefit of the county, and to this end the. Legislature authorized the issue of bonds to raise a fund of $275,000, and required that it should be so apportioned to the different sections of the county as to give each one its fair share of the benefit to accrue. The framers of the Constitution certainly did not intend to withhold their sanction from so beneficial a scheme for road improvement. As said in
Brown v. Comrs., supra:
“Such provisions are construed not to destroy or weaken the power of the General Assembly in its necessary control over the subordinate divisions of the State Government, but to prevent cumbering the statute books with a mass of purely private and local legislation.” The
Brown case
has been approved in
Mills v. Comrs., supra; Parvin v. Comrs.,
If the Legislature may provide a fund necessary to lay out and construct roads, we are unable to perceive why it may not also prescribe the rule by which that fund shall be disbursed and distributed in order to effect the best results, when it confines itself, as it has done in this instance, to the control and management of the fund, and does not essay to have done any of the acts prohibited by Art. II, sec. 29, of the Constitution, but leaves these things to be performed by the local authorities in the due exercise of their proper functions. What we have said applies as well to the bonds for $25,000, issued to construct or complete the Eoone Trail Highway.
There was one other question presented originally in the case, as to whether the ten per cent clause of the “Revaluation Act of 1919” would apply to the bonds for $275,000 issued under the acts of 1919, -and upon the validity of which we are passing. We understand from the appellant’s brief that this question has been withdrawn from our consideration, and we, therefore, do not further refer to it.
We have stated fully the provisions of the statute of 1915, not only because it was enacted before the adoption of the amendments of 1916-17, which took effect on 10 January, 1917
(Reade v. City of Durham,
The result is that the bonds in question are valid obligations of Wilkes County, and there was no error in the judgment of the court to this effect upon the case agreed.
Affirmed.
