108 Kan. 634 | Kan. | 1921
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The state asks for a writ of mandamus directing the county clerk of Barton county to perform certain clerical duties pertaining to an issue of road bonds authorized by the board of county commissioners. The state highway engineer is impleaded because of his official concern therewith and may have some official duties to perform in relation thereto.
' It appears that in 1919 the board of county commissioners of Barton county undertook to build a hard-surface highway across Barton county from east to West through Ellinwood and Great Bend. Such was the main plan, but as the work was founded upon the initiative of separate groups of petitioners, necessitating the creation of separate benefit districts to be charged with distinct parts of the cost of the improvement, the work was undertaken as four distinct projects, “A,” “B,” “C” and “D,” totaling twenty-nine miles — the latter project, “D,”
Owing to the seemingly high bids filed by road-building contractors, the board of county commissioners decided to purchase road-building machinery and construct the road itself. This the board had statutory authority to do. (Laws 1919, ch. 246.) Pursuant thereto, and having in contemplation the construction of a highway extending across the whole county, the board purchased road-building machinery and equipment to the amount of $168,000.
About this time the legality of the proceedings under which the county board were assuming to act was called in question in a taxpayers’ suit, and the work was enjoined because the expense of the highway was in excess of the maximum cost specified in the petitions of the landowners which were the basis for the authority of the county board to construct the highway. (Hines v. Barton County, 106 Kan. 682, 189 Pac. 368.)
Following the judicial determination that the county board could not construct a road at $40,000 or $60,000 per mile or any other excessive price, while using as a basis therefor a taxpayers’ petition for a road costing not more than $30,000 per mile, the resident landowners who were particularly interested in that part of the proposed highway designated as project “D” filed a new petition with the county board praying for the construction of the highway, without any specified limitation as to its cost. On this petition the county board set to work anew on the work of road-building, and as the work has progressed bonds to the amount of $190,000 have been issued. But owing to the abandonment of the other road projects, “A,” “B” and “C,” because of initial infirmities, the county board decided to charge the entire cost of the road-building machinery to renewed project “D”; and, consequently, even the large amount of bonds already issued has not raised sufficient money to buy all this equipment and to complete the construction of project “D.” The board’s intention was only to charge this great sum temporarily against project “D,” and it intended to sell this road-building machinery after project “D” is completed, or to charge it at some properly reduced
“Now, therefore, be it resolved that the bonds of Barton County, bearing 5%, be issued to the amount of $168,000.00 or so much thereof as may be necessary to pay for the equipment being used on project ‘D.’ That when said project is finished the cash value of such equipment be ascertained and the equipment sold, unless it is to be used in some other road project, and the depreciation of the equipment together with the interest thereon shall be charged to and made part of the cost of project ‘D.’ Said bonds to be issued and sold at once.”
The county clerk balks at this large bond issue against project “D” and refuses to sign and register the bonds and coupons. The state highway engineer, who must sanction the outlay, also declines to give his official approval that all this vast sum be charged against project “D.” Hence this lawsuit.
So far as the county clerk is concerned, he has neither responsibility nor discretion in the matter. His functions in the matter of this bond issue are only clerical; and yet it has been held that a public officer will not be required by mandamus to perform an act which in itself is merely incidental and ministerial to that which other officials are unlawfully seeking to accomplish. Thus in National Bank v. Heflebower, 58 Kan. 792, 51 Pac. 225, the board of school fund commissioners, who are charged with the responsibility of managing and investing the state school funds, purchased some county bonds at a price somewhat but not greatly in excess of their market value, and drew orders on the state treasurer for the payment of the agreed price. The treasurer declined to register the warrants and pay them. This court declined to compel the treasurer to perform these merely ministerial duties. The court said:
“The treasurer cannot be compelled by mandamus to perform any act necessary to carry out this contract; not because he is vested with authority to supervise the action of the Board of School Fund Commissioners, but because the statute says that such a contract shall not be made as the evidence introduced on the.trial shows this one to have been. We do not know upon what information as to the market value of the bonds the commissioners acted. There is nothing in the transaction indicating bad faith on their part or a purpose to disregard the law. Nor is the showing with reference to the value of the bonds such as would have warranted us in refusing the writ on the ground that the purchase is an improvident or undesirable one.” (p. 795.)
It is altogether proper that a reasonable amount of the cost of the machinery should be charged against project “D”; but it seems likewise obvious that it would be unreasonable that the whole amount should be charged against it. The machinery was not purchased for the use alone of project “D.” It was purchased for use in the proposed construction of 29 miles of road-making. An investment of $168,000 for machinery to construct 29 miles of road would only cost pro rata about $5,800 per mile. That might be and probably was a prudent and economical investment, haying the construction of 29 miles of road in contemplation.
Nor is there any doubt that the county board could lawfully purchase suitable machinery for road-building, since it has power to build the road. While the powers of a public officer or board are those and those only which the law'confers, yet when the law does confer a power or prescribe a duty to be performed or exercised by a public officer, the powers granted and duties prescribed carry with them by necessary implication such incidents of authority as are necessary for the effectual exercise of the powers conferred and duties imposed. In Throop on Public Officers, § 542, the correct rule is stated:
“The rule respecting such powers is, that in addition to the powers expressly given by statute to an officer or a board of officers, he or it has, by implication, such additional powers as are necessary for the due and efficient exercise of the powers expressly granted, or as may be fairly implied from the statute granting the express powers.” (See, also, Comm’rs of Brown Co. v. Barnett, 14 Kan. 627.)
The state highway engineer in the exercise of his discretion has determined that not more than $42,000, about $8,000 per mile, could reasonably be expended for road machinery for project “D.” No fault is found with the engineer’s estimate. We discern no fallacy in the method by which he arrived at that estimate. We think the engineer has taken the right attitude in this difficult situation. The plaintiff suggests that the whole cost of the machinery should be temporarily charged against project “D” and later charged at a proper figure to succeeding road projects in Barton county. If succeeding projects were actually impending, we are not prepared to say dogmatically that that method of handling the matter could not be followed — if the state or some complaining taxpayer did not interrupt it before it was accomplished — but mandamus would hardly issue to compel some public officer to perform an official service to give that method effect, for certainly that particular method of providing payment for the road-making machinery has not been prescribed by the legislature. But neither will we say that such a method of dealing with the matter by the county board would be interfered with by injunction. When the legislature confers power in general terms upon an official body, without prescribing the details for the exercise of that power, the courts will not be officious to interfere with the official body’s discretionary methods of performing the public duty intended by the legislature in granting such powers. (Fairchild v. City of Holton, 101 Kan. 330, 333, 166 Pac. 503; The State, ex rel., v. Travis, ante, p. 257, 260, 195 Pac. 182.) But here, so far as the pleadings disclose, there is no other road project impending in Barton county.
The court is not unmindful of the present embarrasing situation in which Barton county is placed. The court will gladly consider any proposed solution of this difficult situation when properly 'submitted for our consideration, but we cannot perform the functions of both court and counsel. Unless included in those already issued, there appears to be no reason why such amount of bonds as the engineer’s estimate will allow, $42,000, should not be issued if that will help the county’s dilemma. But the writ prayed for cannot be issued.
Writ denied.