Baker v. Hickman County

47 S.W.2d 1090, 164 Tenn. 294, 11 Smith & H. 294, 1931 Tenn. LEXIS 35
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 47 S.W.2d 1090 (Baker v. Hickman County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Hickman County, 47 S.W.2d 1090, 164 Tenn. 294, 11 Smith & H. 294, 1931 Tenn. LEXIS 35 (Tenn. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Swiggart

delivered ‘the opinion of the Court.

This action was brought by the Commissioner of Highways and Public Works, with whom the Attorney-General and Reporter joined, to obtain a declaratory judgment with respect to the constitutionality of Public Acts 1929, chapter 145. Complainants have appealed from a decree . of the chancery court sustaining the Act.

Chapter 145 of the Public Acts of 1929 is limited in its application to Hickman County alone, by reference to population which excludes other counties. It directs that the State shall repay to said county, in the manner and subject to the provisions of the Acts of 1927, chapter 23, “all funds which may have been expended by said counties upon any road or roads which had heretofore or is now designated by the Department of Highways and *299 Public "Works of the State of Tennessee as a part of the State Highway System, and which road or roads appeared as such, or now appear as such upon the plans of said Department. ’ ’ The claim is to he allowed by the Commissioner of Highways and Public Works upon proof which satisfies him “that the funds (were) expended in the construction of said roads or highways that were at the time, or are now a part of the State Highway System.” It is provided that the amount to he assumed by the State under this Act shall not exceed $103,167.30,

The hill of the Commissioner and the Attorney-General recites that Hickman County has presented its claim under the Act of T929 for $103,167.30, the exact amount named as the maximum in the statute, expended by said county in constructing a road leading from Centerville, its county seat, to its north boundary line, a distance of seventeen miles, known as the Centerville and Dickson road; that after the completion of said road, but prior to the passage of chapter 145 of the Acts of 1929, the Department of Highways and Public Works designated this road as a part of the State Highway System, thereafter assuming its maintenance as a part of the State Highway System; and that the Commissioner is satisfied from the proof submitted that the county, from 1919 to 1923, actually expended said sum in improvements and construction work on said road. It is averred that the Commissioner is withholding his approval of the claim of the county, under the Act of 1929, for the sole and only reason that he is advised that the Act is unconstitutional and therefore void.

It seems obvious from the language of the Act and the statements of fact made in the bill of complainants, that *300 the legislative intent was to reimburse Hickman County for the sum expended by it on the particular road described, which had been made a part of the State Highway System at the date the Act was passed.

Public Acts 1927, chapter 23, applies to all counties of the State. It provides for the reimbursement to the counties of all sums paid by them to the State Department of Highways, and used by the Department in the construction of the State Highway System, including money furnished and accepted after the enactment of the statute. This reimbursement is to be accomplished by annual payments from the proceeds of the privilege tax on the sale and storage of gasoline, supplemented, if found necessary after ten years, by the general funds of the Highway Department.

The claim of Hickman County under the Act of 1929 does not come within the general Act of 1927, because (1) the money was spent in the construction of a road not then a part of the State Highway System, and (2) the money was spent by the county, through its own officers or employes, and was not “paid over ... to the Department . . . and used by the Department. ’ ’ Acts 1927, chapter 23, section 1.

In 1931, during the pendency of this appeal, the General Assembly enacted chapter 59' of the [Public Acts of 1931, amending the Act of 1927, so as to include in the reimbursement to the several counties all sums “expended by such counties on a highway, or highways, which are now a part of the State Highway System,” etc., limited in respect to each county to the amount of bonds, issued to procure the money so spent, outstanding and unpaid on June 1, 1931, and with a graduated *301 deduction according to the time elapsed between the construction of the road and its designation as a state highway. • ■ • O <[\

The record before us does not disclose the length of time elapsing between the construction of the road by Hickman County and the date of its designation as a part of the State Highway System. Nor do the pleadings disclose whether the money expended was procured by a bond issue. It is, however, stated on the brief of the county in this court: “-The money expended on this road was raised by a bond issue authorized by the legislature and these bonds will have to be paid either by taxes levied on the citizens of Hickman County or by the method provided in chapter 145 of the Acts of 1929.”

¡ Assignments of error as originally filed challenged the Act of 1929 as violative of the Constitution of Tennessee, article 11, section 8, in that it confers upon Hickman County special rights, privileges and benefits not granted to other counties, and thus creates an arbitrary class for the benefit of which the general law is suspended. It' was also argued that the inclusion of Hickman County’s claim would impair the obligation of the contract arising between the State and the counties under the Act of 1927, diminishing to the extent of the added claim the fund available for payment to the counties under that Act.

After the case had been submitted to the Court we filed a memorandum opinion, calling attention to the importance ’of the questions involved, as affecting the public interest, and directed a second argument. We requested counsel to consider and aid us in determining whether the appropriation to Hickman County is made for a state *302 purpose for which, state revenues may be used; whether it violates the constitution, article 2, section 31, inhibiting the giving or lending the credit of the state; and what, if any, effect the enactment of chapter 59 of the Public Acts of 1931, may have on the rights of the parties.

The construction of state highways has constituted a major portion of the work of the state government during the ten years preceding the enactment of chapter 145 of the Acts of 1929. It is a historical fact, within the common knowledge of all citizens of the State, that more than five thousand miles of improved highways have been constructed as a part of the State Highway System, at a, cost of many millions of dollars. This tremendous work has been accomplished by the State, through its Department of Highways and Public Works, under Acts 1917, chapter 74, and Acts 1919, chapter 149, and amenda-tory acts, with the federal government, the state, and the several counties sharing the expense of construction. The proportion of the cost borne by the counties has not been fixed by statute, and has varied according to the varying circumstances of the several construction projects. In the construction of roads with federal aid the relative burdens of the state and county have been smaller, with a corresponding increase when no such aid was available.

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.W.2d 1090, 164 Tenn. 294, 11 Smith & H. 294, 1931 Tenn. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-hickman-county-tenn-1932.