56 So. 131 | Ala. | 1911
Lead Opinion
Appeal from an order awarding mandamus to compel the court of county commissioners of Pike county “to pay to petitioner, the city of Troy, for the uses and purposes set forth in said petition, and said sum be charged by said commissioners’ court to its fund raised and collected by it through and by its special'road tax. * * *”
The order appealed from is therefore reversed, and the petition is dismissed.
Reversed, and petition dismissed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). — I cannot concede the sufficiency of. the reasons assigned for declaring the act unconstitutional. The provision of the Constitution is “that to pay any debt or liability now existing against any county, incurred for the erection, construction, or maintenance of the necessary public buildings or
For authority the main dependence for the theory of unconstitutionality is found in the case of McCain v. State, 62 Ala. 138. In that case the defendants, who were supervisors of the public streets of the town (then) of Anniston, were indicted for failing to keep a certain road or street in repair. The corporate authorities had passed an ordinance abolishing or discontinuing the road. The ruling was that the ordinance abolishing the street, was within the power of the municipal authorities. In the course of the opinion the court used this language: “To hold such public roads (referring to roads through rural districts which had been incorporated into the town), thus brought within the boundaries of an incorporated town, to be still under the jurisdiction of the court of county commissioners, would be very unnatural, and might lead to conflicts of authority, which should always be avoided. For the court of county commissioners to exercise jurisdiction over such highways as a road, and the corporate authorities to exercise jurisdiction over them as a street, would be impossible. They cannot be both a 'public road’ of the county, as that phrase is understood, and a street of an incorporated village at one and the same time. One character must yield to the other.” It is said, in effect, that this ■decision fixed a meaning for “roads” and “streets”
. The word “road” has acquired no definite and fixed meaning in judicial decision or in ordinary use which makes necessary an interpretation of the Constitution against the. power of the Legislature to pass the act in question. I have already referred to Gaston v. State. According to the lexicographers it is a general term, including highways, streets, and lanes. — 24 Am. & Eng. Encyc. 985, 986. A street is nothing but a road in a city, town, or village, having houses and town lots on one or both sides. Cent. Dig. A road is specially a highway. Standard Diet. “Public road” and “highway” are commonly understood to mean the same thing, and include all ways which of right are common to all the people. — Abbott v. Duluth (C. C.) 104 Fed. 833. This court said, in State v. Mobile, 5 Port. 279, 30 Am. Dec. 564: “While the streets of a town are its highways, they may also be the public highways of the country.” “The word ‘road,’ in a proper connection, may be fitly used to designate a city or borough street.” — In re Vacation of Osage Street, 90 Pa. 117. In Sharett’s Road, 8 Pa. 89 : “It is, however, objected that a street or alley in an incorporated town.is not a ‘road’ within the meaning of the resolution. But this objection, which is somewhat hypercritical, is fully answered by the decision of this court in the case of the Moyamensing Road, 4 Serg.
No valid reason can be assigned, as I think, why the people, in the adoption of the Constitution, and when dealing with a fund to be raised by taxation upon all the property of the county, including that within the municipality, should be held .to have used the word ‘roads’- in that narrow and restricted sense which would deny to the Legislature the power to permit taxes levied upon urban, property to be expended in part at least in the improvement of the highways Avhich lie before the doors of those avIio pay the tax. In the interpretation of this section of the Constitution, designed to promote the convenience of all the people, I see no occasion for-ignoring every equitable consideration by holding that Avhere there must be equality of burden there may not be equality of benefit.
Further, Avhat Avarrant can there be for holding that the Legislature may not permit the levy of a special county tax for the building of bridges within the limits of towns or cities? There is none; and yet bridges and roads are yoked together in the Constitution, as they are in necessity, and identical considerations must influence legislation concerning them, for a public bridge is nothing unless it be a part of a public road. “A public bridge is an essential part of a road, and the erection of a bridge is but the laying out of a highway.” — Elliott on Roads and Streets, § 27.
The well-considered case of Duval County Commissioners v. Jacksonville, 36 Fla. 196, 18 South. 339, 29 L. R. A. 416, said by the editor of the series to be the first case to present the constitutional question of the power of a county under statutory direction to turn ovér
In response to the suggestion that under the construction which the Legislature has put upon section 215 of the Constitution a “county might levy and collect the special tax in order to discharge the county liability, as ihe Constitution clearly intends,'and yet a-part of the gross special tax sum would, by legislative action, he
• In my judgment there is nothing in the word itself, nor in its context, nor in the policy of the state, nor in the justice and equity of the situation, which requires a construction of the word “roads” as excluding streets, which are but roads through thickly populated areas, whether incorporated or not, and I see no sufficient reason for so1 holding.