86 Fla. 577 | Fla. | 1923
The complainants are alleged to be resident owners of real estate and tax payers of Madison County. The defendants are county commissioners and' trustees of county bonds of Madison County. The objects of the suit are, primarily to restrain the expenditure by the defendants of funds derived from the sale of county bonds, issued for the purpose of constructing “paved, macadamized or other hard-surfaced highways,” in the construction of sand-clay roads, the theory of the bill being that sand-clay roads are not paved, macadamized or other hard-surfaced roads and therefore such use of the funds is not an authorized expenditure 'and -should be enjoined; and secondarily, if such funds are to be expended by the defendants in the construction of sand-clay roads, to prevent an alleged discrimination in favor of one as against another designated road contrary to the alleged terms of the resolution calling the election authorizing the issuance of the bonds.
The paragraph of the bill of complaint containing the allegations upon which complainants’ primary reliance rests is as follows:
“Complainants further say that the said Board of County Commissioners, contemplating the use of a portion of the proceeds arising from- the sale of the said $330,000.00 of bonds for the construction of said clay
The prayer is that the defendants be restrained from making any contract, pursuant to the published notice, for the construction of sand-clay roads in the county payable from proceeds derived from the sale of such bonds; from making or entering into any contract or agreement involving the expenditure of any of such fund for the construction of any sand-clay roads without at the same time appropriating an equitable proportion of said fund for a certain designated road; from levying any tax to pay such bonds, principal or interest; and for general relief.
By answer the defendants admit that it is their purpose •and intention to pay for the construction of sand-clay roads out of the proceeds of the sale of said bonds. They deny that there is no authority under the law for the issuance by the County of Madison of bonds for building, constructing ■or maintaining sand-clay roads, and deny that a sand-clay road is not a paved, macadamize'd or other hard-surfaced road within the meaning of the law.
There was a hearing on application for a temporary restraining order on bill, answer and evidence in the form of affidavits. Complainants produced an affidavit of an engineer then in the employ of the Highway Department of Georgia and an affidavit of the then State Highway Engineer of Florida, in each of which,the opinion is expressed that a sand-clay road is not and cannot properly be termed
The court denied the application and dismissed the .bill.
The record discloses that the bonds have been validated' and their validity is not questioned. The decisive question is whether the contemplated- use of the funds, as alleged and admitted, derived from the sale of the bonds is an authorized appropriation of such funds. The answer depends upon whether sand-clay roads are comprehended by the term “paved, macadamized or other hard-surfaced roads.” (See. 1531 et seq. Rev. Gen. Stats.) If they are, this fund may be expended in their construction. If not, it cannot. This record discloses that reputable experienced engineers differ in opinion on the point. The term “hard-surfaced” as applied to roads probably has no technical significance. The Chief Engineer of the Bureau of Public Roads is quoted in the record to the effect that it has not. It should probably be regarded as a relative term. If so, a road, when surfaced with a proper mixture, or combination of sand and clay, suitable for such purposes, may, when compared with a road not so surfaced, be regarded as a hard-surfaced road. That many roads in this State have been improved by adding a surface of sand and clay, and that this combination of materials has in many instances been successfully used, resulting in excellent roads with firm, hard, compact surfaces, are matters of common knowledge of Avhich courts
Because of the conflicting professional opinion and a practical experience tending to the contrary, it would not, we think, be in accord with sound reason to hold, as a legal conclusion, that a road surface, which may properly be classified as “hard-surfaced” within the meaning of the statute, is incapable of fabrication by an application in sufficient quantity and proper combination, of sand and clay suitable for the purpose. On the other hand, it is perfectly apparent that an improper or unbalanced mixture or combination of sand and clay; or what would otherwise be a proper combination, but of unsuitable material for the purpose; or an insufficient quantity, even though of suitable material and in proper combination; or a sufficient quantity of suitable material in proper combination built without adequate foundation for the proposed road or proper drainage when necessary, would not produce a hard-surfaced road in fact, and therefore not hard-surfaced within the meaning of the statute. These, howevere, are practical considerations of fact, depending for their solution upon each case as it arises.
It should, at this stage of the proceeding, be assumed that in accepting bids and awarding contracts for the work proposed, the defendant officers will require the use of such material, and a character of construction such as will comply with the terms of the law and the resolution adopted and notice published calling the election, to the end that the burden asumed will not be unproductive of the contemplated improvements and incidental benefits. The threatened injury is therefore not such as to require a holding that the court below erred in denying the application for a temporary restraining order. Nor was there error, upon
The order appealed from is affirmed.