94 Neb. 112 | Neb. | 1916
This action was brought by Dawson 'county against the county of Phelps to recover for repairs made to a bridge across the Platte river at a point south of the village of Overton, where the river divides the two counties. In the trial of the case, after the evidence had been submitted by the parties, the plaintiff county and the defendant county each submitted a motion for an instructed verdict. The court thereupon instructed the jury to return a verdict for the defendant county.
One of the contentions of the defendant county was that the village of Overton, in the plaintiff county, was near the bridge, while in the defendant county there was no town nearer than ten or twelve miles. From this it would seem that the supervisors of the defendant county took the view that, because the bridge was a convenience to the residents of the defendant county to enable them to trade in the plaintiff county, and because the plaintiff county by reason thereof secured a portion of defendant county’s trade, defendant county should be relieved of its share in the maintenance of the bridge. While bridges across a river may be built with a view to the convenience of the people, and their construction may enable the people of one county to receive more trade than another, it is doubtful if such fact can be successfully urged as a reason why the law imposing upon two counties the joint obligation of keeping up a bridge should be abrogated. The plaintiff has appealed from a judgment in favor of defendant. The bridge as originally constructed was a toll bridge, and in 1890 was surrendered by the bridge company which constructed it to Dawson county, and was accepted by the same, and that county declared the bridge to be a free bridge.
The claim was rejected by the county on July 13, and notice of the action of the board was mailed to the county clerk of Dawson county July 14, and was received by him July 15. Notice of appeal was given the county clerk of Phelps county, and an appeal bond given and approved July 24. It is contended by appellee that an appeal was not taken in time, and that the court was therefore without jurisdiction, and that whether the appellant is right or wrong on the merits of the case is immaterial, because the appeal was not taken in time. An examination of tin* statute covering appeals for disallowed claims against counties does not disclose that any time is now provided by the statute when the notice of appeal must be served
. Was the court right in directing a verdict for the defendant? The statute fixes the north boundary of Phelps county and that part of the south boundary of Dawson county (Avliicli lies north of Phelps county) “as the middle of the south channel of the Platte riArer.” It is urged by appellee that the “south channel” of the Platte river at the point where it is crossed by the bridge in question is a very narrow channel, being bounded by the soutli bank of the Platte river on the south, and an island in the Platte river on the north, Avhich said island lies wholly within said DaAVSon county; and it is contended that, inasmuch as it was not shoAvn that any part of the repairs made on tbe bridge were made upon the part thereof between the south bank and this island, the verdict is right.
The statute governing the construction of bridges over streams between counties (Comp. St. 1909, ch. 78, secs. 87-89) provides:
“Section 87. Bridges 0A7er streams Avhich > divide counties, and bridges over streams on roads on county lines, shall be built and repaired at the equal expense of such counties; proArided. that for the building and maintaining of bridges over streams near county lines, in Avhich both are equally interested, the expense of building and maintaining any such bridges shall be borne equally by both counties.
“Section 88. For the purpose of building or keeping in repair such bridge or bridges, it shall be lawful for the
The words “streams which divide counties” have received consideration from this and other courts, and it seems to have been uniformly held that, in arriving at the meaning of the words, not only their literal meaning is to be considered, but the purpose of the statute. Literally the Platte river does not divide Dawson and Phelps counties, •because the dividing line is made the middle of the south channel, and part of the river therefore lies in Dawson county and part in Phelps county, and the actual boundary is an imaginary line in the river; but in the statute under consideration, which deals with the construction of bridges across “streams which divide counties,” the legislature employed the words in their ordinary sense and for rivers, not to an imaginary line in the stream, but to the whole stream, consisting of its bed, the water flowing therein, and the banks or shores thereof confining the water, on one side of which stream lies one county, and on the other side of which stream lies another county. Cass County v. Sarpy County, 63 Neb. 813; Keiser v. Commissioners of Union County, 156 Pa. St. 315; State of Alabama v. State of Georgia, 23 How. (U. S.) 505; Dodge County v. Saunders County, 70 Neb. 442.
Nor does it make any material difference that all the
In the body of the opinion on the rehearing it is said:
The Overton bridge is none the less a bridge over a stream which divides counties, Avithin the meaning of section 87, ch. 78, Comp. St. 1909. It Avas undoubtedly the intention of the legislature to make such bridges, which may be equally used by the inhabitants of both counties, a charge upon both counties. These bridges form an important part of the highways of the state, and these highAvays are very properly made the subject of legislative action. The counties are municipal subdiAusions of tin; state, the creatures of the legislative will, with which the legislature, Avithin constitutional limitations, may deal as in its discretion seems best. When the bridge was acquired from the Overton Bridge Company, DaAvson county, by a resolution, undertook t-lie maintenance of the bridge. Wo do not think this makes any difference, because Phelps county Avas not a party to the contract- betAveen the bridge, company and Dawson county, nor was the contract made between the bridge company and DaAvson county for the benefit of Phelps county. The inhabitants of Phelps county equally Avith those of DaAvson county enjoyed the use of the bridge, and the bridge is only a part of the public roads of the state, and the legislature has charged the counties on either side of the Platte river with a share of the maintenance of the bridges built 0Arer that river. The
It therefore follows that the judgment of the district, court for Phelps county is wrong, and that it should be reversed.
Reversed and rexaianded.