Allen v. Board of Com'rs of Logan County

1928 OK 345, 267 P. 860, 131 Okla. 41, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 566
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 29, 1928
Docket17742
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1928 OK 345 (Allen v. Board of Com'rs of Logan County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Board of Com'rs of Logan County, 1928 OK 345, 267 P. 860, 131 Okla. 41, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 566 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

MASON, V. C. J.

The plaintiffs in error, who are resident voters and taxpayers of Logan county and owners of land in the vicinity of the town of Meridian, commenced this action against the board of county commissioners and tlie individual members thereof, and the clerk and treasurer of said county, asking that a writ of mandamus be issued requiring the defendants to construct a permanent or hard surface road east from Guthrie through the town of Meridian, and further praying that the defendants be enjoined from ordering, issuing, or paying any warrant for the construction of any road other than the one involved herein against the balance of a fund created by the sale of certain road bonds of said county.

Upon the filing of the petition, an alternative writ of mandamus and a temporary restraining order were issued. Thereafter, upon trial of the case, the trial court sustained the demurrer of the defendants to the plaintiffs’ evidence and dismissed the ease, from which the plaintiffs have appealed.

The controlling facts, which are not in dispute, may be summarized as follows:

The defendant board of county commissioners, on June. 30, 1924, passed a resolution providing for the calling of a special election in said county for the purpose of voting upon the issuance of bonds in the sum of $750,000 for the construction of permanent county roads, and authorizing the publication of a proclamation for such election : said resolution and the proclamation, which was duly published, designated and described approximately 95 miles of roads which were to be so improved, including the road “from the east line of the city of Guthrie through Meridian.” The election was held on August 5, 1924. and the bonds carried. Afterwards, the bonds were executed and sold, thereby becoming a fixed and binding obligation upon the county and upon the property of the plaintiffs.

*43 The petition of tlie plaintiffs charged that the defendants were not administering this special fund equally and fairly, but were willfully, arbitrarily, and in disregard of the plaintiffs’ rights, spending large and disproportionate parts of the proceeds of the bond issue upon other roads than the one involved herein. It is also alleged that the defendants had paid out and contracted to expend upon one of the other designated roads running north and south across said county the sum of $350,000; that they had turned over to the State Highway Commission the sum of $100,000 to be expended upon another of said roads; that they had contracted to spend the sum of $56,401 upon another of said roads, and that there remained at that time from the proceeds of said bond issue not to exceed the sum of $243,590, and that the defendants intended to use this balance upon the other roads without expending any portion thereof upon the road involved herein, commencing at the east boundary of the city of Guthrie and extending eastward through the town of Meridian.

The defendants answered, admitting the resolution and proclamation of election and the contracts) for the other roads, as alleged by the plaintiffs, but alleged that the bond issue was insufficient to build all the roads designated, and further answered, admitting, in effect, that it was not the intention of the defendants to spend any of said bond money upon the Meridian road, but alleged that money to be subsequently derived from other sources would be used to eventually construct said road.

The plaintiffs also alleged that they had endeavored to get the board of county commissioners to take some action toward the building of said road and setting aside the pro rata share of the bond issue to be used for that purpose. The evidence of the plaintiffs bore out the allegations of their petition.

The plaintiffs contend that the provisions in the bond election, designating the roads for improvement, are mandatory and enforceable, while the defendants seem to contend that the board of county commissioners have discretionary power to spend the proceeds of said bond issue on any part or portion of the roads so designated as to them seems proper. We do not think the contention of the defendants is sound.

The board of county commissioners was without power to proceed until first granted the authority to issue said bonds by an election of the qualified voters. The board is limited in its powers to those specially granted by statute. Allen v. Board of Commissioners of Pittsburg County, 28 Okla. 773, 116 Pac. 175; Garvin County v. Lindsay Bridge Co., 32 Okla. 784, 124 Pac. 324.

The board in passing its resolution and in, publishing the proclamation for the bond election evidently deemed it not only expedient but necessary to designate the roads which were to be improved in order to secure sufficient votes to authorize the issuance of said bonds. The qualified electors, no doubt, relied upon said designation in casting their votes. The commissioners could have omitted any reference to any particular roads upon which the proceeds of the bonds would be spent, in which event they, unquestionably, would have had the discretion contended for by the defendants herein to use the money upon such roads as thej thought best. They could have asked generally for the consent of the electors to issue bonds in the sum of $750,000 for the construction of roads in Logan county, but they did not do so; on the contrary, they specified each road that was to be constructed, and their power to spend the proceeds of the bonds was thereby limited.

The board knew that 60 per cent, of the voters must be satisfied or the bonds would be defeated, and, doubtless, in order to carry the vote of that portion of the county in the vicinity of the town of Meridian, placed in the proclamation the provision foi a road “from the east line of the city of Guthrie east through Meridian.” Each elector had a right to assume that all the roads designated in the resolution and proclamation would be constructed.

In the case of Mayberry v. Gaddis, 88 Okla. 286, 213 Pac. 316, this court was considering a question very similar to the one involved herein. Bonds had been voted for the construction of roads wherein the ballots provided that the building and construction of said roads should be in conjunction with the federal and state governments, and that only so much of said bonds should be sold at any one time as would equal the amount of federal and state aid money then allowed for the purpose of contributing toward making the improvements for which said bonds were issued. The court held that such provision did not invalidate the election, but that such condition was valid and binding upon the county in tne sale of the bonds issued by authoritv of such election.

It is elementary law that when funds are *44 raised by the issuing of bonds or by taxation for a designated purpose they cannot be diverted to some other purpose. 15 Corpus Juris 584; Cooley on Taxation (3rd Ed.) 581; Doty v. Ellsbree, 11 Kan. 209.

In Pine v. Baker, County Treasurer, 76 Okla 62, 184 Pac. 445, we held;

“Where bonds are voted by a county to build permanent roads, the proceeds cannot be used by the county to simply grade roads, but must be used for the purpose of constructing permanent roads and for no other purpose.”

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Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 345, 267 P. 860, 131 Okla. 41, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-board-of-comrs-of-logan-county-okla-1928.