161 Ark. 79 | Ark. | 1923
Lead Opinion
Appellants, real estate owners in Special Road Improvement District No. 7, in Polk County, instituted this suit against appellees in tbe chancery court of said county to prevent tbe commissioners from constructing tbe improvement. Tbe district was created by Special Act No. 312 of tbe General Assembly for tbe year 1920. • The basis of tbe injunction proceeding is tbe alleged invalidity of the act creating tbe district and the assessment of benefits made thereunder.
The constitutionality of tbe act is questioned; first, because no provision was made therein for tbe approval by tbe county court of changes that might be made in tbe route; second, because tbe act did not make provision for tbe construction of the bridges to be let to tbe lowest responsible bidder; third, because tbe effect thereof was to take property without due process of law; and fourth, because tbe commissioners were authorized to maintain tbe road after being built, and to make contracts for that purpose.
The validity of assessments is assailed, first, on account of the basis adopted in making them; and second, because arbitrary and confiscatory.
Appellees filed an answer denying all the material allegations of the bill for injunction, and the cause was presented for hearing upon the pleadings and- testimony of G-. L. Clement, one of the assessors for the district, whose testimony was agreed to as facts in the case and incorporated in the decree. The trial resulted in upholding the validity of the act, but enjoining the commissioners from making the improvement without advertising for bids, as being contrary to public policy. Both appellants and appellees have prosecuted an appeal from the decree in so far as same is adverse to them, and the cause is before this court for trial de novo. For convenience we have followed, and will continue to follow, the style of the case by referring to the property owners as .appellants and to the district and commissioners as appellees.
We first proceed to a consideration and determination of the several attacks made upon the constitutionality of the act in the order set forth in our statement of the ease. The principal attack is made upon section 2 thereof, which is as follows:
“Said district is hereby organized for the purpose of building, improving and maintaining the public road in Polk County, Arkansas, beginning near what is known as the Waltman place, or near the section line between sections nine and sixteen, township 2, south, range 30 west, thence in an easterly direction to the Montgomery County line, following as near as practicable what is known as the Mena-Cherry Hill public road. The said public highway extends to Ink, Egger, and thence to the Montgomery line. (Then follow the numbers of the townships through which it runs). Said highway is to be ■constructed of macadam or of such other materials as the commissioners deem best, or the same may be improved as, in the judgment of the commissioners, is best, without rebuilding all the way, and they are authorized to build such bridges and culverts as they may find desirable. Any bridges built shall be built and approved by the county court. In building and improving said highway, the commissioners may proceed by letting the work as a whole, or in sections, or they may build same, or a fractional thereof, by day labor, or they may use county and State convicts as may be conceded them by the State or by Polk County. In case bids are advertised for, the commissioners shall have the right to accept or reject any bid. ’ ’
(1) Appellants interpret § 2 of the act as giving permission to the commissioners of the road to materially deviate from the Mena-Cherry Hill public road, designated in the act as the route to be improved, and to construct a private road in part, which would impair the jurisdiction of the county court over same after completion for purposes of maintenance, etc., in violation of article 7, § 28 of the Constitution of 1874. This interpretation is placed upon the act because the commissioners are directed to follow as near as practicable what is known as the Mena-Cherry Hill public road in constructing the improvements between the points designated. This construction of the act would invalidate it, and should not be adopted if some other construction can be placed upon it, not inconsistent with any of its parts, which would enable it to take effect. Wells Fargo & Co. v. Crawford County, 63 Ark. 576; St. L. I. M. & S. R. Co. v. State, 102 Ark. 205. Effect may be given to each part of the act, and to the act as a whole, without creating any inconsistency between the parts, by construing it to mean that authority is vested in the commissioners to improve the Mena-Cherry Hill .public road, making only immaterial changes in the route thereof. The Legislature could confer this authority without encroaching upon the exclusive jurisdiction of the county court over public roads, and a careful reading of the whole act indicates that this was the intention of the Legislature. Of course, under this construction of the act, material changes cannot be made in the route unless made by an order of the county court. Bennett v. Johnson, 130 Ark. 507; Sallee v. Dalton, 138 Ark. 549; Summers v. Damascus Road Dist., 139 Ark. 227; Easley v. Patterson, 142 Ark. 52.
(2) The act provides for a private letting by the commissioners of a contract to build the bridges, and, for this reason, appellants insist that it is in conflict with § 16, article 19, of the Constitution of 1874, which in part is as follows:
“All contracts for erecting or repairing public buildings or bridges in any county, or for material therefor, * * * shall be given to the lowest responsible bidder, under such regulations as may be provided by law.”
The language used in the act conferring authority upon the commissioners to build bridges has been construed by this court to mean bridges incident to the improvement or necessary appurtenances thereto (Van Dyke v. Mack, 139 Ark. 524; Bullock v. Dermott-Collins Rd. Imp. Dist., 155 Ark. 176), so they are district improvements and not county improvements in the sense of being built with county funds. The section of the Constitution referred to is a limitation upon the expenditure of county funds for bridges, etc., in any county, and was not intended as an inhibition against districts building bridges incident to the main improvement, by pri-' vate contract.
(3) . The effect of the act is not to take property without due process of law, as contended by appellants. They argue that, because no provision is made for an appeal, their property is taken without due process of law. Ample provision is made in the act itself for a judicial review of the assessments made by the board of assessors. Section 10 of the act is, in part, as follows: “Any person, firm or corporation aggrieved by the action of the board of assessors fixing the assessment list, as herein provided, shall have the right for twenty days from the adjournment of said board of assessors sitting as a board of equalization, as before said, to apply to any court of competent jurisdiction to set aside assessment list, or to correct any void or erroneous assessments, and, after the expiration of twenty days, the said list shall become final and incontestable either in law or equity. ’ ’
Appellants also argue that, because no provision is made in § 11 for notice to them when assessments are revised by the assessors, their property is being taken without due process of law. Section 10 of the act provides that assessors shall make assessments of benefits when directed to do so by the commissioners, and, when such assessments are made, shall place same in the hands of the president of the board of commissioners, who shall thereupon cause notice to be published. This requirement in § 10 necessarily applies to revised as well as original assessments. As the notice provided for in § 10 applies to all assessments, we think it unnecessary to have repeated the direction for notice in § 11.
(4) The act is not void because it contained a provision continuing the board of commissioners for the purpose of repairing and maintaining the road after the completion thereof. This precise question was before the court in the case of Dickinson v. Reeder, 143 Ark. 228, and was decided adversely to the contention of appellants. The court said, in that case, “that maintenance is, after all, a local improvement, and is done for the betterment of the contiguous lands, and it does not interfere with the general authority of the county court over public roads. The two powers go hand in hand, that of the county court being superior in event of possible conflict. It is a mere choice in the form of the legislation as to whether the authority to maintain the road shall be embraced in the same statute and conferred upon the same agency as that which concerns the original improvement, and in neither case is the jurisdiction of the county court invaded.” See also Van Hook v. Wallace, 143 Ark. 203.
We next come to a consideration of the attack made upon the assessments of benefits. Ample provision is made in the act to defend against assessments upon all the grounds made the basis of attack in this proceeding., This suit was brought before the day fixed in the notice for the assessors to meet and hear complaints against the assessment of benefits. The property owner should appear at the time and place designated to show that his property is not benefited, or that the tax amounts to a confiscation thereof. Bush v. Delta Road Imp. Dist., 141 Ark. 247; Van Hook v. Wallace, supra.
The decree is affirmed, except in so far as it enjoined the commissioners from awarding any contract for the construction of the improvement, including bridges. In that particular it is reversed, and remanded with direction to dismiss the bill for injunction.
Dissenting Opinion
DISSENTING OPINION.
While I am still of the opinion that, in regard to the specific subject of county bridges, the duties relating to them are laid upon the county court, under art. 7, § 28, of the Constitution of 1874, so that, in making contracts for bridges and in all proceedings relative to the same, the county court alone is the representative of the county, I do not think our f ormer holding to the effect- that county bridges -may be included in road improvement districts warrants the further holding that contracts for the construction of them may be let privately.
Section 16, art. 19, of the Constitution provides that all contracts for erecting or repairing public buildings or bridges in any county, or for materials therefor, shall be given to the lowest responsible bidder, under such regulations -as may be provided by law.
I am of the opinion that -this clause of -the Constitution refers to bridges across running streams and watercourses, and not to the ordinary culverts in the public road's for surface drainage. The constitutional provision was designed to secure economy in the line of the public improvements to which it relates, and to secure competitive bidding upon equal terms, to the end that extravagance and collusion between the officers authorized to construct the bridges and the bidders may be prevented. Fones Hardware Co. v. Erb, 54 Ark. 645. See also Woodruff v. Berry, 40 Ark. 251, where it was held ■that contracts for public printing must be let in conformity with the statute.
It is a well settled rule that public officers cannot ■ do by indirection that which they might not do directly. There is nothing in the section of the Constitution above referred to to exclude bridges which form a part of an improvement district from the provision of the section of the Constitution.
The restriction and prohibition of the Constitution against letting contracts for building county bridges privately are of no avail if they can be brought to naught by the indirect action of building bridges by private contract by improvement district methods. There is no' more reason why the county court should be forbidden to build a county bridge at private contract out of the general road taxes than that the commissioners of road improvement districts should be allowed to do so out of the taxes collected from the lands forming the improvement districts. The inhibition of the Constitution is not directed against the county judge particularly,- but it is directed against the method of building’ county bridges except upon competitive bidding.