Bradley County Road Improvement Districts Nos. 1 & 2 v. Jarratt

222 S.W. 14, 144 Ark. 260, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 276
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 24, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 222 S.W. 14 (Bradley County Road Improvement Districts Nos. 1 & 2 v. Jarratt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley County Road Improvement Districts Nos. 1 & 2 v. Jarratt, 222 S.W. 14, 144 Ark. 260, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 276 (Ark. 1920).

Opinion

Humphreys, J.

Appellees, E. A. Jarratt et al., property owners in Bradley County Road Improvement Districts Nos. 1 and 2, instituted suit against appellants in the Bradley Chancery Court to restrain them from making a preliminary survey of the roads proposed to be constructed in said districts, created by act No. 237 of the Legislature of 1919, and to cancel contracts ein tered into between the boards of commissioners of said road improvement districts with H. R. Carter, an engineer, to do all the engineering work connected with the improvements to be made and supervision of the construction thereof, at his own expense, for a compensation equal to five per cent, of the cost of construction not exceeding one million dollars and four per cent, in excess of one million dollars, one-half of the compensation to be paid when the plans, specifications and estimates of cost of the improvements are completed, and the balance in installments as the work progresses. The validity of the contracts was attacked on the grounds, first, that they embraced the cost of the preliminary surveys, plans and estimates of cost of the improvements, which, under the act aforesaid, were to be made and prepared for said districts by the Highway Department of Arkansas, free of charge; and, second, that the contracts were procured by taking advantage of the ignorance of the commissioners as to the meaning and terms of the act creating the districts and are arbitrary, unjust and inequitable.

Appellant, H. R. Carter, filed answer, admitting that he entered into the alleged contracts with said Bradley County Road Improvement Districts, but denying that the boards of commissioners of said districts were without authority to embrace in the contracts the charge for preliminary surveys, plans and estimates of the cost of improvements, and that the contracts were procured through a lack of knowledge on the part of the commissioners as to the meaning of the act creating the districts or that they are arbitrary, unjust and inequitable.

Appellee J. T. Tatum, alleged owner of real estate in said districts, also entered suit in said court to enjoin appellants from making a preliminary survey, plans and estimate of the cost of the contemplated improvements in said district, upon the same grounds alleged in the bill of appellees E. A. Jarratt et al., and the further ground of the alleged invalidity of practically every section of act No. 237 aforesaid, creating Bradley County Road Improvements Districts Nos. 1 and 2.

Appellant II. R. Carter filed answer to the petition of appellee J. T. Tatum, specifically denying every allegation assailing the validity of his contracts with said improvement districts and the act of the Legislature creating them.

The testimony in the two cases was the same and disclosed that, after the passage of act No. 237, creating the districts, the commissioners of each met in the office of the State Highway- Commissioner and perfected an organization; that the commissioners thereupon made personal requests of the State Highway Department to have preliminary surveys made of the roads to be made under said act No. 237, which requests were refused by the State Highway Commissioner for the reason that no funds were available for that purpose; that the appropriations were insufficient to cover preliminary surveys, plans and estimates for proposed districts under the Alexander road law, which required preliminary surveys, plans and estimates of costs as prerequisites to the organization of proposed road districts; that only $20,000 had been appropriated for the purpose of making preliminary surveys by the State Highway Department; that the general and special sessions of the Legislature of 1919 provided that 9,600 miles of roads in the State should be improved; that a preliminary survey thereof would have cost $8 per mile and a final survey to ascertain the yardage of the road would have cost from $100 to $125 per mile; that the boards of commissioners of Bradley County Boad Improvement Districts were informed by the State Highway Department that they would have to employ an engineer any way, and he could make the survey under the direction of the State Highway Department and file the surveys, plans and specifications with it for approval; that the course suggested was adopted; that three engineers made talks before the boards and applied for the position of engineer of each district, one of whom was H. B. Carter; that Carter did not tell the commissioners they would have to employ him, or use words to that effect; that, later, H. B. Carter was employed as engineer, and entered into written contracts with the commissioners for engineering services, including preliminary, as well as final, surveys, plans and specifications for the improvements and supervision of the construction thereof, for a fee of five per cent, on the cost of said improvements up to one million dollars and four per cent, in excess thereof.

The causes were submitted to the court upon the pleadings, testimony of the several witnesses, in substance detailed above, the written contracts of employment and a certified copy of act No. 237 aforesaid, from which the court found that it was the purpose and intent of section 5 of said act No. 237 to absolve the property in said districts from the cost of preliminary surveys, plans and specifications, and to place that burden absolutely upon the State Highway Department as a condition precedent to proceeding with the improvements. In accordance with this finding, the court rendered decrees against appellants, permanently enjoining them from making the preliminary surveys, plans and estimates as a charge against the land situated in said districts, and from proceeding with the improvements at all until such time as the State Highway Department •shall make the preliminary surveys, plans and estimates of cost of more than one type of surface roads and transmit them to the commissioners of said districts. By consent of all parties, both causes were consolidated for the purposes of appeal, and an appeal from the decrees has been duly prosecuted to this court.

It is insisted by appellants that the court erred in interpreting sections 5 and 6 of said act No. 237 as mandatory upon the State Highway Department to make the preliminary surveys, plans and estimates of cost of improvements to be made in said districts free of charge against the lands thereof as a condition precedent to proceeding with the improvements. The requirement in section 5 of said act for the board of commissioners in each district, after qualification, to apply to the State Highway Department for preliminary surveys, plans and estimates of cost of the proposed improvements is clearly mandatory, but it is just as clear, from the language used in said section 5, when read in connection with the other sections of the act, that the duty imposed upon the State Highway Department to make the preliminary surveys, plans and estimates of the cost of the improvement at the expense of the State was :a sound discretionary one, dependent upon the conditions, facilities, etc. In this respect, the section reads: “And the State Highway Department may make such plans and estimates on more than one type of surface for the roads, together with any recommendations that they may see fit to make.” Had the intention been to compel or force the State Highway Department to make the preliminary surveys, plans and estimates, the Legislature could have easily employed the word “shall” in this connection, as it did in the fiist clause of the section, in relation to the application to said department for such surveys.

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Related

Arkansas State Highway Commission v. Davis
434 S.W.2d 605 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1968)
Bean v. Humphrey
264 S.W.2d 607 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1954)
Carter v. Bradley County Road Improvement Districts 1 & 2
246 S.W. 9 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
222 S.W. 14, 144 Ark. 260, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-county-road-improvement-districts-nos-1-2-v-jarratt-ark-1920.