92 So. 860 | La. | 1922
This is a proceeding by mandamus to compel the police jury to repeal or rescind a resolution dispensing with the services of a draftsman in the office of the engineer of the Macon Ridge highway district, and dispensing with the services of an inspector of the highway. It is said in the briefs filed on behalf of the plaintiff, appellant, that the draftsman and the engineer, whom the police jury discharged, had been employed by the plaintiff, supervising board. But there is no such allegation in plaintiff’s petition. The defendant, police jury, filed exceptions to the suit, contending: (1) That the plaintiff, supervising board, was not a corporation, and had no authority to sue or be sued; (2) that the board was only an agent or agency for the police jury, the latter being the governing authority of the 'highway district; (3) that the petition did not disclose a cause or right of action, because of the failure to allege that the men who were discharged had been employed by the board; and '(4) that the only persons who might have a right to complain of the discharge of 'the draftsman and engineer were the individuals who were discharged. The district judge dismissed the suit, maintaining, as he correctly described it, “the exception as to want of authority on the part of plaintiff to prosecute this suit.” By Act 199 of 1916, p. 448, the governing authority over each road district was conferred upon the board of supervisors of the district. The board was declared to be a political or public corporation, with authority to sue and be sued, and to exercise all other ordinary powers of a corporation. By the Act 30 of 1917, p. 43, the governing authority over road districts was conferred upon the police juries of the parishes, respectively. The police jury is, by the statute, termed “the board of administrators or the governing authority of the road districts created in their' respective parishes.” Section 4 of the statute declares that, on a- request of half or more of the property owners residing in a' road district, the police jury shall appoint a supervising board, composed of not less than three nor more than five property owners. In that section alone does the statute define the authority of the supervising .board, viz.: After a bond issue or road tax has been
In the statute of 1917, under authority of which the plaintiff supervising board was appointed the Legislature has studiously withheld from the boards the authority to sue or be sued, or to exercise any of the powers that are usually conferred upon public or political corporations. The boards are not now, as they were under the statute of 1916, public or political corporations. Being mere agents or agencies of the so-called “board of administrators or governing authority” of the road districts, the supervising boards have only such limited authority as is specified in the statute that created' them. They have no authority to institute lawsuits, in a corporate or representative capacity, with regard to matters in which they serve only as agents or agencies of the political corporation that is invested with the governing authority.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.