Gaston v. State Highway Department

132 S.E. 680 | S.C. | 1926

Lead Opinion

April 14, 1926. *405

The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is an action brought in the original jurisdiction of this Court by the petitioners, suing on behalf of themselves and other citizens and taxpayers in like situation along the National Highway, on route 8, in Spartanburg County, against the State Highway Department of South Carolina, asking that the State Highway Department be enjoined from constructing and hard-surfacing a certain proposed road connecting the Town of Duncan with the City of Spartanburg, which the petitioners allege the defendant is attempting to do in violation of law, and praying for an order to compel the State Highway Department to hard-surface a certain road known as route 8, or the "lower route," connecting the Town of Duncan with the City of Spartanburg, and to keep and maintain it as a part of the highway system of the State, alleging that the law designates said route 8 as the route or way along which such highway should go.

The petition, in substance, alleges: That the State Highway Department of South Carolina is a body corporate, created and constituted under that name by the Acts of the General Assembly and charged with the power and duty of taking over, constructing, hard-surfacing, and maintaining a certain system of public highways throughout South Carolina, subject to the provisions and limitations provided by statute; that on March 21, 1924, the General Assembly passed an Act for the purpose of incorporating into a connected system certain described and specified highways in the various counties of the State, and providing for the taking over and maintenance of the said system of roads by the State Highway Department, and that the Act describes and specifies the routes to be so taken over and maintained; that as to Spartanburg County the Act specifies and describes the particular roads to be so taken over, constructed, *406 hard-surfaced, maintained, etc., as a part of the said highway system, and among other roads so specified and described is the following named road, in the following language:

"Hard-Surface or Other Dependable Types. * * * National Highway from Greenville County line near Greer northeasterly on route No. 8 by way of Duncan, Tucapau, Spartanburg, Dayton, Converse and Cowpens to the Cherokee County line."

That at the time of and before the approval of the Act, there existed, and still exists, in Spartanburg County a much-traveled road, in excellent repair, leading from the Town of Duncan to the City of Spartanburg, designated as route 8, National Highway, accepted as such by the State Highway Department, and that this road is the one specified and described in the quoted language and intended by the Legislature to be taken over and maintained by the State Highway Department as part of the said connected system of highways; that in violation of the Act the State Highway Department proposes to abandon said route 8 as a part of the state highway system and to substitute therefor a new road for travel between the said points, and to designate the substituted road as route 8; that the proposed road would involve the original excavation of a new construction of several miles of entirely new road through rough territory, requiring the erection of culverts and bridges, and involving the expenditure of $200,000 or more to even grade the proposed road, which would be a useless, reckless, and an extravagant expenditure of the public funds without adequate recompense to the taxpayers and the traveling public; that the existing route 8 passes through fertile and well-settled communities, and that the petitioners and many others in like situation, being landowners and taxpayers along or near said route, or in the large territory served thereby, are vitally interested in its continued recognition and maintenance *407 as a part of the permanent system of connected highways as contemplated by the Act and in its being hard-surfaced as required therein, and are vitally interested in the matter of finances that would be involved in the substitution therefor, between Duncan and Spartanburg, of another and entirely new and different road proposed to be constructed by the State Highway Department at enormous additional expense to the taxpayers; and that the petitioners and such others in like situation have no adequate remedy at law against the wrongs complained against and will suffer irreparable loss unless this Court intervenes through its equitable powers on their behalf.

Upon this verified petition Mr. Justice Cothran issued an order, directing the State Highway Department of South Carolina to appear before the Supreme Court, on the 1st day of February, 1926, to show cause why the prayer of the petition should not be granted and why the defendant should not be permanently enjoined from doing the things complained of.

The defendant appeared and demurred to the petition on two grounds: (1) That the complaint or petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; and (2) that the petitioners have no legal capacity to sue. The defendant also submitted, by way of return and answer, that the highway which the defendant proposes to build and hard-surface between Greer and Spartanburg — which does not follow between Duncan and Spartanburg the road contended for by the petitioners — is the highway described and defined in the statute and is in accord with the intent of the Legislature; that the highway desired by the petitioners is not the highway described in the statute, in that it does not follow the control points named, the prescribed direction, or the National Highway; that the defendant is required by the statute to secure Federal Aid in the construction and hard-surfacing of the road from Greer to Spartanburg, and *408 that the proposed route of the State Highway Department has been approved by the federal authorities as a project to receive Federal Aid, while the road contended for by the petitioners has been disapproved as such project, and without such aid the defendant cannot secure sufficient funds to construct and hard-surface any road between Greer and Spartanburg; that the failure of the defendant to hard-surface the road contended for by the petitioners does not mean that road will be abandoned or closed; that the highway department has discretion to locate the roads between the control points mentioned in the statute, and has used this discretion in the construction and hard-surfacing of highways throughout the State; and that the route proposed by the defendant goes by way of Tucapau, one of the control points named in the statute in the location of this road, which could not be done if the contention of the petitioners prevails.

The petitioners and the defendant filed a number of exhibits and affidavits in support of their respective contentions.

We will first consider the demurrer of the defendant to the petition, considering the grounds thereof in inverse order. The second ground of the demurrer is "that the petitioners have no legal capacity to sue." This ground is overruled on the authority ofMauldin v. City Council of Greenville, 11 S.E., 434; 33 S.C. 1; 8 L.R.A., 291. See, also, Rawl v. McCown, 81 S.E., 958; 97 S.C. 5. Lamar v. Croft, 53 S.E., 540;73 S.C. 411. Butler v. Ellerbe, 22 S.E., 425; 44 S.C. 276; and High on Injunctions, § 802. The defendant, relying on the doctrine of public nuisances and wrongs, contends that in order to maintain their action the petitioners must show that they will suffer, through the actions complained of, special or peculiar injury differing in kind, as well as in degree, from that which the public generally *409 will sustain. This doctrine, however, has no proper application to this case, and the authorities cited by the defendant are therefore not controlling.

The first ground of the demurrer, "that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action," cannot be sustained. The petitioners allege that the defendant is a body corporate of South Carolina, designated by law to do and perform certain acts and things of a public nature named in the law, and that the defendant is about to engage in the reckless and extravagant expenditure of public funds, and is acting in violation of the law, through acts of commission and omission named in the petition, and contemplates doing such things and acts, set out in the petition, as will bring irreparable injury to the petitioners and others as citizens and taxpayers of the State. A cause of action is stated, and the demurrer is overruled.

We now come to a consideration of the question on its merits. Of recent years the building of good roads has become of increasing importance throughout the country. An ever growing population, the diversification of industry, the enlargement of the demands of civilization, and the transition from the ox cart to the motor vehicle as a means of transportation, all mark the growing necessity for the construction and maintenance of improved and adequate highways. During recent years legislation has been enacted in this State along this line, looking to the establishment of a connected system of state highways without regard to county lines. For that purpose the Legislature has created what is known as the State Highway Department, with certain duties and powers prescribed by law. In 1924, the Legislature passed what is known as the "Pay-as-You-Go" Act, in which it undertook to outline a system of state highways and to provide funds for the construction and hard-surfacing of the same over a period of years. Acts of the General Assembly 1924, p. 1193. This is the *410 Act the construction of which is involved in this action. The title of the Act, which is as follows, sets forth the scope and purpose of the law:

"An Act to provide for a state system of hard-surfaced, top-soil and other dependable types of highways in this State, to define and describe said roads, and to provide funds for construction, for maintenance and for reimbursements to counties in certain cases."

The Act provides, among other things, that the state highway system shall consist of highways on certain routes described and designated therein. Among the routes so designated and described for hard-surface or other dependable types of roads in Spartanburg County is:

"National Highway from Greenville County line near Greer northeasterly on route No. 8 by way of Duncan, Tucapau, Spartanburg, Dayton, Converse and Cowpens to the Cherokee County line."

Where the language of the Act under consideration is clear and certain as to the routes to be followed, etc., the State Highway Department is bound to conform to the terms of the statute, which, in such cases, neither the highway department nor the Courts themselves have any authority to vary.

The defendant lays great stress upon its contention that it is bound to build the proposed highway from Duncan to Spartanburg with Federal Aid, alleging that it is directed and required by the statute to secure Federal Aid for that purpose. There is no merit in this contention. The Act does not require the defendant to secure Federal Aid for the construction of this or any other highway designated therein, but only to use such Federal Aid when it is available.

The Legislature has the right, in providing for a system of state highways, to say just where the roads shall be built, just what kind of roads shall be constructed, how they shall *411 be built, etc., and when such provisions in the statute are clear and certain the highway department is bound to obey the mandate of the law.

Where an Act or any part of it, however, presents inconsistencies or ambiguities, appearing from the language itself or in relation to the physical facts of the case, the Courts, in construing it, will undertake to reconcile such inconsistencies or ambiguities, if possible, and in so doing will give to the words used in the Act their ordinary, everyday meaning, if that can be done. In this case the plats and exhibits furnished the Court by the parties to the action show that the language of the Act, referring to the route in question, is, in its application to the physical facts, ambiguous and impossible of being carried into effect.

We are confronted with this situation: The Act provides that the highway in question shall extend in a northeasterly direction from the Greenville County line at or near Greer on route No. 8 by way of Duncan and Tucapau to Spartanburg. The petitioners contend that upon reaching Duncan, route 8 extends in a southeasterly direction, and that, although Tucapau is not on such route, but is near it, the Legislature intended, from the words of the Act, that the highway should go in a southeasterly direction from Duncan, even though it does not go by way of Tucapau. The defendant contends that Tucapau is one of the control points on the route designated as route No. 8, and that the only way to comply with the intent of the Legislature is to go in a general easterly direction by way of Tucapau.

Further, there is a conflict in the record as to what is meant by the word "Tucapau" as used in the Act. The petitioners contend that it refers to a mill village, while the defendant asserts that it refers to a station on the P. N. Railroad, the village and station being some distance apart. To the same effect are the affidavits filed by the parties to the action in support of their respective contentions. *412

It is apparent, therefore, that the differences and ambiguities referred to cannot be reconciled in determining just what the Legislature intended. We cannot say that the Legislature meant that the highway should go on route 8 in a southeasterly direction from Duncan, as contended for by the petitioners, without touching Tucapau, when the Act specifies that the highway shall go in a northeasterly direction by way of Tucapau. In the emergency created by such an ambiguity, the State Highway Department, which is the body charged by the Legislature with the construction, maintenance, etc., of the state highways, may exercise its discretion in determining the location of the particular route specified in the Act; and where such discretion is not abused, the Courts will not interfere. We cannot say that in this case the State Highway Department has abused its discretion.

It follows, therefore, that the judgment of this Court is that the prayer of the petitioners be denied, and that the petition be dismissed. And it is so ordered.

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GARY and MESSRS. JUSTICES WATTS and BLEASE concur.






Dissenting Opinion

The statute provides that the highway shall be constructed on route 8, by way of Tucapau. Route 8 goes by Tucapau, though not through it. A specific location on route 8 should control the direction by Tucapau, even if the road cannot be said to run by (through) Tucapau.

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