67 Miss. 470 | Miss. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant filed his original bill in first district of Yalobusha county to enjoin the board of supervisors from making any contract for the building of a new court-house, and to have declared void the various orders of the board of supervisors, made and entered on their minutes in the year 1889, condemning the old court-house, purchasing a new site for a new court building, and taking steps looking to the erection of it, and for the cancellation of the contract of purchase and sale made between said board of supervisors and George Boswell, for the site selected by the board for the erection thereon of a new court-house. The allegations of the bill were fully met in the answers made by Boswell and the president and three members of the board. Much testimony was taken, and the matter was at length submitted to the chancellor, on a motion of defendants to dissolve the injunction which had been granted complainant on his bill. The chancellor dissolved the injunction and granted an appeal to this court, in order to settle the principles of the cause.
Looking at the entire case, we see nothing but the question of the jurisdiction of a court of chancery over the lawful exercise of the powers belonging, under our constitution and laws, to the boards of supervisors exclusively. The power of the board of
It is seriously contended, however, by counsel for appellant that the county of Yalobusha, in the first district, has already one site for a court-house, and that, therefore, the purchase of another from Boswell was a bold act of usurpation of power, and wholly unauthorized in law. We are unable to give our assent to the proposition.
In the absence of legislative limitation upon the powers of the board, in the original instance, it will not be insisted that any lot might not have been selected, on which to erect the court-house, at
We are clearly of opinion that the board of supervisors was clothed with the power, to be exercised at its discretion, to select a new site on which to erect a new court-house beneficial to the public and helpful to the general convenience and safety.
The decree of the chancellor dissolving the injunction is affirmed, and the cause remanded.