181 Mich. 599 | Mich. | 1914
The legislature, at its session in 1913, passed Act No. 334, with this title:
“An act to provide for the establishment, survey, improvement and maintenance of State reward trunk line highways, to provide for the payment of double State reward thereon, to define the duties of State, county, good roads district and township officers in regard thereto, and to appropriate funds to carry out the provisions thereof.”
Section 1 of the act provides as follows:
“Provision is hereby made for the establishment of State reward trunk line highways. These highways which are laid out as hereinafter provided shall be improved, surveyed, maintained and rewarded in accordance with the provisions of this act.”
Section 2 is in part as follows:
“The State reward trunk line highways shall be composed of the highways and bridges constituting the routes indicated in the following statement of divisions.”
Then follow 10 divisions, which provide for con
“Provided, that upon petition of two or more contiguous counties through their boards of county road commissioners in counties under the county road system, or through their boards of' supervisors in other counties, or upon his own action, the State highway commissioner shall make preliminary surveys and such other investigations as he shall deem necessary of one or more routes for State reward trunk line highways, through such counties. After investigation the State highway commissioner shall submit to such county road commissioner, boards of supervisors, good roads district commissioners or township boards as the case may be, maps showing feasible routes and approximate estimates of cost of building over each of said routes, when the said boards shall concur upon one of such routes which shall then be known as a part of the State reward trunk line highway system. The maximum number of miles of trunk line highways which may be established in any county, shall be computed by multiplying the number of surveyed townships by three fractional townships to be computed pro rata.”
It is the construction of this proviso which occasioned the present controversy. Relators contend that this proviso is practically a separate enactment providing for the establishment of additional trunk line highways other than those mentioned in any one or all of the 10 divisions in section 2 of the act. The counties of Branch, Calhoun, and St. Joseph, being three contiguous counties under the county road system, made application through their respective boards of county road commissioners to the State highway commissioner for a State reward trunk line through their respective counties, which line was no part of the lines specifically designated in the several divisions of the act. The county authorities took the preliminary steps for the establishment of the high
The construction placed upon the proviso by the attorney general is that its purpose was simply to provide a means of settling conflicting claims of various counties through which the divisions pass as to the exact routes to be selected, and that the trunk line system is confined exclusively to the 10 divisions enumerated in section 2. Relators claim that section 9, which provides as follows:
“The State highway commissioner shall as soon as practicable after the taking effect of this act cause preliminary surveys to be made and establish the routes of the several divisions of the State trunk line highways herein provided for, and he is hereby empowered to employ such engineers, clerks and other employees as may be necessary to carry out the provisions of.this act”
—gives the State highway commissioner the sole and arbitrary power to select the highways. The legislature did not attempt in the act to define exactly the course of each trunk line highway, but simply indicated the general direction by referring to various cities and villages along the proposed route. The greater part of the burden of improving these high
Before being advised by the attorney general, it appears that the State highway commissioner construed the act as now contended for by relators, and it is urged that the construction placed upon a statute by the officer whose duty it is to execute it is entitled
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed, with costs.