Borrowdale v. Board of County Commissioners

23 N.M. 1
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1915
DocketNo. 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 N.M. 1 (Borrowdale v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Borrowdale v. Board of County Commissioners, 23 N.M. 1 (N.M. 1915).

Opinions

EOBEETS, C. J.

(after stating the facts as above).

[1, 6] Appellants’ first contention is that'the act in question is violative of section 24, art. 4, of the Constitution, which prohibits the Legislature from passing local or special lawá in certain enumerated cases, among which is the following:

“Laying out, opening, altering or working roads or highways, except as to state roads, extending into more than one county.”

The argument advanced, if we understand appellants’ position, is that, because no provision is made for the working of that portion of the highway in the county of Lincoln, the force and effect of the act is only for the “laying out, opening, altering or working” a highway in one count}', hence falls within the constitutional inhibition. Concededly, it was competent for the Legislature, under the constitutional provision, supra, to lay out the highway in question.

“ ‘Laying out’ is, and has been from the earliest times, the appropriate expression for' locating and establishing a new highway.” Foster v. Park Com’rs., 133 Mass. 321.

By the act in question, the Legislature attempted to lay out and establish a described route extending into two counties as a state highway. Whether the description was sufficient to accomplish the purpose is aside from the question here involved, because, if the description of the proposed route was so defective that the law would Bail of its purpose, it would not for such reason be a law “laying out” a highway in one county; thus we approach the question here, which resolves itself into the simple proposition as to whether the Legislature may constitutionally provide for the working of a state highway by a special mode- in one county, not common to all the counties through which the highway is laid, out. This question is answered in the affirmative, by the Constitution, if the Legislature had the power to declare that a certain described route should be a state highway. If such power does not reside in the Legislature, we fail to see how it would be possible to create a state road extending into more than one county. The initial step must be a declaration that a given route “shall be a state road” extending into more than one county. Necessarily such a declaration must precede, or be concurrent with provisions for opening, altering, or working the same.

The territorial Legislature in 1905, chapter 7, Laws 1905 (section 2707, Code 1915), established a public highway through the then territory of New Mexico, known as the “Camino Keal.” The description of the road was no more definite than the act now under consideration.

Conceding the power on the part of the Legislature to designate a described route as a state highway extending into more than one count}1', no other constitutional provision intervening, it is competent for the legislature to provide for the opening and working of said highway in one county only. Were such not the case, a state road would necessarily be required to be opened and worked simultaneously in all the counties through which it ran.

It was plainly the purpose and intent of the framers of the Constitution to give the Legislature a free hand in the matter of state roads extending into more than one county so that the means of communication between the different parts of the state might be improved. The act in question is not violative of article 4, § 24, of the Constitution.

12] What has been said above disposes of the contention that the act in question is a local or special law regulating county affairs, in that it attempts to vest in the board of county commissioners special authority knd supervision of said proposed highway and its construction. Conceding that the highway in question is a “state road,” it was competent for the Legislature to provide for its construction and improvement in one county by any officer or agent it might select. In this act it imposed this duty upon the board of county commissioners of Socorro county. If the road is a “state road” within the meaning of the Constitution, then its construction and supervision was not an attempt to regulate county affairs. Appellant says:

“It is conceded that the Legislature has a right to intrust the laying out, opening or working of a state highway extending into more than one county, to the State Highway Commission, or', under the doctrine of the Wisconsin cases (hereinafter cited in the opinion), to any special commission or persons, or to the county road hoards.”

This concession disposes of appellants’, argument under this point, for all that the Legislature did was to intrust the working of the road in question, in Socorro county, to the board of county commissioners; not as a county matter, but as the agent of the state, which work has no relation to the affairs of the county. The argument sought to be drawn from the case of State v. Romero, 10 N. M. 1, 140 Pac. 1069, that those provisions of general law creating the county road board evidenced clearly an intent on the part of the Legislature to take away from boards of county commissioners and from road supervisors the' general control of roads and to vest that control in the road boards, is not appropos, because there has been no effort on the part of the Legislature to reinvest the board of county commissioners with any of the powers thus taken away from them by the general legislation referred to, or to divest the county road boards of any of the powers conferred upon them by such legislation. That in enacting this statute the Legislature was providing for a case not covered by either the old law vesting the control of county roads in; boards of county commissioners, or the new law transferring this control to the county road boards, but was simply providing for the laying out, opening, or working of a state highway extending into more than one county — control of which it admittedly had the power to vest where it would — is plain and logical, and in no sense an interference in any degree with local county affairs or an attempt to regulate them.

In the case of Jensen v. Supervisors, 47 Wis. 298, 2 N, W. 320, it was urged that the act there in question was in violation of the constitutional provision of the state of Wisconsin, which provided that:

“The Legislature shall establish but one system of town and county government, which shall be as nearly uniform as practicable.”

In speaking of this contention, that court said:

“That the appointment of commissioners by the Legislature to lay out and establis ha state road which shall extend into two or more counties is not a violation of tnis provision of the Constitution, is apparent from the fact that the laws respecting the government of towns and counties do not provide for laying out any roads extending from one county into another. * * * There is no system of town or county government to be violated by reason of the laying out and establishing such highways by commissioners appointed by the Legislature.”

[3] The third contention is that the act in question is a local or special law for the assessment and imposition of a special tax, in all of which particulars said law is violative of article 4, § 24, of the Constitution.

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.M. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borrowdale-v-board-of-county-commissioners-nm-1915.