McClintock v. Bovay

163 Ark. 388 | Ark. | 1924

McCulloch, C. J.

This is a proceeding originating in the county court of Prairie County on the petition of appellees, citizens of the county, to open up a public road, or, rather, a lateral to an established public road, so as to connect with a bridge to be constructed over White River, near Devalls Bluff.

Pursuant to statute (Crawford & Moses’ Digest, § 10255 et seq.) the county court granted to Harry E¡ Bovay, one of the appellees, a franchise covering a series of years, to construct and maintain a toll-bridge across Wbliite River, near Devalls Bluff. The location of the bridge was selected, under requirements of the War Department of the United States, about five hundred yards south, or down-stream, from the present bridge of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company.

Appellant J. M. McClintock owns land on both sides of White River from the Rock Island bridge down to and including the site of the proposed bridge, and he operates a licensed ferry about, or nearly, midway between the Rock Island bridge and the site of the proposed bridge.. There is an improved public highway running east and west, which connects with the ferry on each side of the river, and the effort in the present proceeding is to lay out a public road on each side of the river, running from the end of the bridge to the improved highway.

Bovay assigned his -franchise to the White River Bridge Company, a corporation, which proposes to construct and maintain the bridge' under the franchise. Bovay appears in this proceeding, not as a representative of the holder of the franchise, but as a citizen.

The -petition was filed by numerous citizens, and described the proposed route of the new roads, or laterals,' running from the established highway to the bridge, accurately describing the route, and asking that the county court make an order laying out -the route as a public highway. The petition was filed pursuant to act No. 422 -of the General Assembly of 1911, p. 364 (Crawford & Moses’ Digest, § 5249), and the court made an order on October 25, 1922, granting the prayer of the petition and laying out the road two.hundred feet wide. Later during the term appellant filed his petition, alleging that the order opening the road had been made without notice to him, and asking that the order be set aside, and that he be permitted to intervene for the purpose of protesting against the granting of the petition. The court set aside the order, and, upon a hearing of appellant’s petition, reentered the order, with changes with respect to the giving of a bond, which are unimportant in the present status of the case. Appellant prosecuted an appeal to the circuit court, where the case was heard anew on oral testimony, and judgment was rendered by the circuit court on March 20, 1923, opening the road in accordance with the prayer of the petition and in accordance with the previous order of the county court. The order of the circuit court, after reciting.the appearances and the issues involved and describing in detail the route of the road,- reads as follows:

“It is thereupon ordered, considered and adjudged by the court that a public road, having for its center line the line above described, said road to be 200 feet in width, being a strip 100 feet wide on each side of said center line, be and the same is hereby opened as and declared to be a public road and highway of Prairie County, to be a first-class road; and that said Harry E. Bovay, and his successors and assigns under the franchise above mentioned, are hereby authorized and empowered to enter upon and improve said public road at their own expense, in such manner as will make the same suitable for passing to and from said bridge and for connecting said bridge with the improved highway of Road Improvement District No. 1; and under no condition shall Prairie County be liable for the payment of any part of the opening, improving or surfacing of such road as provided for. ’ ’

Appellant filed a motion for a new trial, and also filed a bill of exceptions bringing the oral proceedings into the record, and has prosecuted an appeal to this court.

Appellant appeared in the proceedings only as a protestant against the opening of the proposed road, and not as a property owner claiming damages. He contends, as a reason why the order is erroneous, that his property is being wrongfully taken by a private corporation, but he has filed no claim for damages, and the question of damages for the taking of the right-of-way is not involved.

The statutes of .this State provide that a corporation organized under the laws of the State to construct a toll-bridge over a navigable stream shall have the right to construct suitable approaches and ways, and to condemn land under the State’s power of eminent domain, the same power as is conferred for railroad purposes (Crawford &¡ Moses’ Digest, §§ 10261, 10263), and the contention of appellant is that this proceeding is nothing more nor less than an attempt on the part of the holder of the bridge franchise to condemn appellant’s property for the use and benefit of the corporation which holds the franchise. It is unnecessary for us to determine what the effect would be if such were the character of the proceeding.

It is a rule of general application that a State may delegate its power of eminent domain to public carriers and other corporations conducting a business in which the public has an interest, and that rule has been adopted by this court. Neimeyer & Darragh v. Little Rock Junction Ry., 43 Ark. 120; Mountain Park Terminal Ry. Co. v. Field, 76 Ark, 239. In those cases it was held that the statute makes no provision for raising an issue at laiy concerning the necessity and propriety of the condemnation, but that a court of equity could entertain jurisdiction on an allegation of fraud in the attempt to condemn private property for private use under the guise of public use. This case was tried at law, on appeal from the county court, and there has been no attempt to carry the case into a court of equity on allegations that would give that court jurisdiction. It is unnecessary to pursue this part of the discussion, for we are clearly of the opinion that the condemnation invoked hy petitioners is under the statute referred to above ('Crawford & Moses’ Digest, § 5249), which authorizes the county court to open new roads or to make changes in old roads without notice to the property owners, and gives a certain time within which claims for damages may be presented. The validity of this statute has been upheld in the case of Sloan v. Lawrence County, 134 Ark. 121. In disposing of that case we said:

“The statute under consideration meets every constitutional requirement. It authorizes the county court to determine without notice the necessity for taking lands for public use, but contains ample provisions concerning notice and hearing upon the question of compensation, or damage, which mean the same thing in that connection. There is no provision for formal notice, but the order itself and the taking of the property thereunder are, in the very nature of things, acts of such publicity as to constitute notice, and the property owner is given twelve months within which to apply to the county court for an allowance of compensation, and the hearing is then given on that question. Of course, all that has been said in this opinion has reference solely to condemnation for strictly public uses in its broadest sense, and has no reference to condemnation for the benefit of private corporations exercising a public or g"wasi-public function.”

The condemnation was not, in this instance, made for the benefit of the bridge company, but for the benefit of the public, and the county is responsible for the compensation found to be due owners for the right-of-way for the public road. It is true that the form of the order of the circuit court was that the petitioners — Bovay and others' — should proceed to open the road, and that “under no conditions shall Prairie County be liable for the payment of any part of the opening, improving* or surfacing of such road as provided for.” This puts the expenses of improving the public road on the holder of the franchise, and the evidence shows that there had been an agreement between the holder and the county court that the former should pay the expense, but this judgment does not relieve the county of the cost of paying compensation to the landowner whose property is taken under condemnation. The fact that the expense of opening and improving the road is to be paid by the bridge company, even if treated as a mere gratuity, does not affect the validity of the order of condemnation, for the rights of the public are not prejudiced thereby. We are unable to see where appellant’s rights have been invaded by this order of condemnation. The lands are sought to be taken, not for private but for public use, and are taken under a valid statute which affords a means of compensation. What compensation appellant is entitled to, and whether or not he has waived his rights to compensation by delay, is not involved in the present inquiry, as no such question has been raised in this proceeding.

Something is said in appellant's brief about the width of the proposed road being excessive, but the answer to that contention, or rather suggestion, is that it is a matter of discretion for the county court to determine the necessary width of the road. It is shown that the roadway is to be twenty-six feet in width and that a very high dump is to be constructed, which makes it necessary to have plenty of earth for raising the dump. The evidence is not sufficient to show that the court abused its discretion in determining that 200- feet right-of-way was necessary in the construction of the road.

We find no error in the proceedings, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.