97 So. 427 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1923
This case was submitted to the court, sitting without a jury, on the following agreed statement of facts:
"It is agreed that on the 23rd day of February at a regular meeting of the board of revenue of Jefferson county at which all the members of said board were present, that a resolution was unanimously passed that three members of the board of revenue, together with the county engineer and the superintendent of roads, visit the city of Indianapolis at the expense of the county and view at that place certain roads constructed of a new type of pavement and a new type of road material and also what is to this district a new method of construction of roads; that the purpose of this visit is to determine the advisability and practicability of putting the same type of road material and same kind of construction on roads in Jefferson county and of ascertaining whether or not said roads are suitable in Jefferson county. Said resolution further carried a provision ordering a warrant to be drawn, in favor of the C.J. Rogers as county highway engineer, on the treasurer of Jefferson county for the sum of $300.00 to be paid out of the road fund of Jefferson county to defray the expense of said trip.
"It is further agreed that said sum of #300.00 is the true amount for the expense of said trip; and further that the treasurer has in his hands a sufficient amount in the road fund to pay said warrant; and further that said warrant was duly and regularly presented to the treasurer and payment thereof refused." *377
The power to bind the defendant, treasurer, to pay the warrant called for by the resolution of the board is dependent on section 1 of an act of the Legislature, known as the Goode Law, adopted Sept. 22, 1915 (Acts 1915, p. 573). By said act the several county boards are invested with general superintendence of the public roads, bridges, and ferries within their respective counties, and may establish and change and discontinue old roads, bridges, and ferries, so as to render travel over same as safe and convenient as possible. To this end such boards are given "legislative, judicial and executive powers," except as is limited in the act, and for the purposes named in the act have "unlimited jurisdiction and powers."
With the express limitations named in the Act, we are not here concerned, as none of them apply to the issues of this case.
If the act in express terms or by necessary inference authorizes or empowers the county board to pass the resolution, the plaintiff should recover and the judgment of the lower court be affirmed. If, on the other hand, the board by its resolution exceeded the powers conferred by the act, the plaintiff must fail.
By the act the board is given power to construct, maintain, and improve roads, etc. That carries with it the necessary power to plan, to select material, to determine as to the best material to be used and the method of applying such material to the best advantage. To do this they must have information, which ought to be had from the best obtainable sources. If, to obtain this information, it is deemed advisable to visit a piece of road, completed with the materials contemplated, it is their duty to do so, to the end that they may more intelligently execute the trust placed in them as commissioners. This is executive. Under their legislative authority they may make appropriation for the necessary expenses in making such investigations. Where boards of revenue, and like bodies, exercise legislative jurisdiction, and such action is within the express or implied of the act granting the power to them, and there is an absence of "fraud, corruption or unfair dealing," our courts are committed to the doctrine that in no case involving the exercise of discretionary power will their action be controlled by any judicial tribunal. Ensley M. C. Co. v. O'Rear, Treas.,
The expense provided for in the resolution is for the benefit of the county in the construction, maintenance, and repair of the roads of the county, and, being such, the wisdom of the expenditure is with the board, and in the absence of fraud, etc., with an accountability only to the people.
There is no error in the record. Let the judgment be affirmed.
Affirmed.