118 Ga. 635 | Ga. | 1903
The plaintiff in error brought an equitable petition against the commissioners of roads and revenues of Chattooga county, in which he sought, as an individual, to enjoin them from trying and punishing him, as a road defaulter, for refusing to obey a summons to work upon a new road in that county which had ■been partially laid out and opened up, and, as a taxpayer, to enjoin them from spending any portion of the road funds of the county in the completion of such road. At the interlocutory hearing the court refused to grant an injunction, and the petitioner excepted. The case was submitted to the court upon the petition and answer and an agreement of counsel that only two designated questions, both questions of law, were involved. The questions raised involved a construction of the alternative road law of 1891 (codified in sections 573 to 583, inclusive, of the Political Code), which had been adopted in Chattooga county and was in force when the proceedings were had to lay out and open the road in question. One of these questions involved the legality of the action of the board of commissioners of roads and revenues in establishing the road as a public road. The petitioner contended that the order of the board issued, for this purpose was void, in that section 520 of the Political Code, which is a part of the old road law, had not been complied with; while the defendants contended that, as to Chattooga county, the provisions of that section were repealed when the alternative road law was adopted for that county. That section provides, that, on application for any new road, “the ordinary shall appoint three road commissioners residing as near where such road is intended to pass as possible; and if they find it of public utility, they must proceed to mark it out, and make’their report under oath to such [ordinary] that it was laid out and marked conformably to law.” Instead of appointing three road commissioners residing as near the proposed route of the new road as possible, to perform the duties indicated in this section of the Political Code, the commissioners of roads and revenues directed the person whom they had appointed superintendent of roads for the district wherein the new road was sought to
Again, the act of 1891 makes no provision whatever for obtaining the land necessary for the opening of a new road, while the old law provides for the condemnation of land for such purpose- and the assessment and payment of damages for the land to be taken. Surely the legislature never intended that when the alternative road law should be adopted in a county, section 522, which provides for notice to persons in possession of land which the new road is to pass through, in order “that they may put in their claim for damages or be forever after estopped,” and sections 557 to 568,.
Counsel for the defendants in error insist that whenever the alternative road law of 1891 is adopted, section 520 of the Political Code is repealed, because under such road law “ the sole right to lay out, open, change, or discontinue public roads ” is vested in the commissioners of roads and revenues, or the ordinary, of the county. Pol. Code, § 573. We do not think that section 573 conflicts with the old law. Under the old law the sole right to lay out, open, change, or discontinue public roads is vested in the ordinary, or the commissioners of roads and revenues, as the case may
For the above reasons, we are of opinion that when the alternative road law contained in the Political Code goes into effect in a county, it only repeals, as to that county, so much of the old law as is inconsistent with it; and that ás the provisions of the old law in reference to the opening of new public roads are not only com sistent with such alternative law, but seem to be necessary for its full operation, they are still in force in a county where the latter law has been adopted. It follows that as section 520 of the Political Code was not complied with, the road in question in this case has not been lawfully laid out and established as a public road.