Britton v. Morris

1916 OK 431, 158 P. 358, 59 Okla. 162, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1162
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 11, 1916
Docket6295
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1916 OK 431 (Britton v. Morris) 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
Britton v. Morris, 1916 OK 431, 158 P. 358, 59 Okla. 162, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1162 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

HOOKER, C.

James Britton, in his petition herein, alleges that he is the owner of the southeast quarter of section 25. township 9, north of range 17, and of the southwest quarter of section 30, township 9, north of range 16, in Washita county, Okla., and that the defendant in error, Jess Morris, as road supervisor of Rainey township in said county, is threatening to go upon his land and take possession thereof for the purpose of building a road thereon without any authority of law, and that, unless the said Morris is restrained, he will at once proceed to tear down plaintiff's fences and go upon Ms lands and destroy his crop, and do great and irreparable damage.

To the petition, the defendant in error, Jess Morris, filed an answer denying the allegations thereof, and further answered that he was a road supervisor of road district No. 1 in Rainey township, and that prior to the institution of this action the board of county commissioners of Washita county ordered the section line between the aforesaid properties opened for travel, and that the township board of Rainey township had directed him as road supervisor to open such road as provided by law, and that the road which he intended to open was a public road and that he intended to do nothing else but to comply with the order of the hoard of county commissioners to open said road in order to accommodate the public in traveling over the .same.

Upon the trial of this cause the plaintiff in error introduced as witnesses the three members of the board of county commissioners in Washita county in the year .1909, and each of them testified that during the year 1909. constituting the board of county commissioners of Washita county, they had made an order changing the road between the two properties mentioned herein in manner and form as shown by an order of the board of county commissioners of date the 11th day of May, 1909, whereby it changed the public road east from the section line in the neighborhood of a quarter of a mile. They further testified that a petition requesting said change was filed with the board of county commissioners and that the township officers of Rainey township appeared before them and likewise requested the change to be made, and that the parties who owned the real estate through which the new road was to pass consented thereto, one by deeding the lahd and the other by receiving- compensation. The evidence discloses that the old section line was at some seasons of the year impassable on account of its low, boggy condition, and tha't, on account of this and a certain crock, it would have been necessary to have erected bridges and to do other work upon the road in order to make the same passable at all times of the year, and that the board of county commissioners, deeming it to lie to the best interests of all parties concerned, ordered a change in the location of the road.

The evidence further discloses that the new road was laid out and used and worked as a public road from 1909 up to the institution of this suit, and there is quite a conflict in the evidence as to whether the old road was abandoned by the entire public after the establishment and location of the new road; but the evidence does disclose that, for a part -of the time, owing to the erection of fences and the cultivation of certain parts of the old road, flie entire, old road was not used by the public during a great part of the lime before stated.

It is the contention of the plaintiff in error hero that the establishment of the new road *163 between the two points, ipso facto, vacated 'the eld road, and, inasmuch as a part of the new road had been donated by the owner of the property adjacent to the old road to whom the old road had reverted, and by reason of the fact that the landowners adjacent to the old road had erected their fences and had cultivated the old road, that the county had lost its right to occupy the ground formerly occupied by the old road, and was not entitled to open the old road for use without condemning the same in manner and form as provided by law.

To this contention, the defendant in error replied that the old road had never been abandoned, and that the rights of the public were still reserved to it, and that the board of county commissioners had the authority, whenever in their judgment it was necessary and proper to do so, to order the old road opened for the public without condemnation proceedings or paying any damages therefor.

Before entering into a discussion of this controversy, we deem it advisable to present several decisions of our own court upon this question. In the case of Arthur v. Board of Commissioners, reported in 43 Okla. 474, 141 Pac. 1, this court says:

“The right of the sovereign power to the exercise of eminent domain is inherent as an attribute of sovereignty, and the provisions of the Constitution and of the statute are merely a limitation upon that power. As to the necessity, utility, or expediency of the exercise of the power, that is a matter to be determined exclusively by the Legislature, in the absence of a Constitutional requirement that the same be submitted to a judicial tribunal ; and the Legislature may delegate the right to determine the necessity for the exercise of the power of eminent domain to public officials or to private corporations to carry on enterprises in which the public is interested, and their determination that a necessity for the exercise of a power exists is conclusive.”

And the third paragraph of the syllabus is:

“Where a board of county commissioners determines that the opening of a public road is necessary, that decision is conclusive upon the question of necessity.”

Also, in White et al. v. Dowell, 49 Okla. 589, 153 Pac. 1140, this court says:

“The sole question for determination in this case is whether at the date of the order (February, 1910) there existed any authority in the board of county commissioners to make such order. Section 23 of the Organic Act of Oklahoma Territory is as follows: ‘That there shall he reserved public highways four rods wide between each section of the land in said territory * * * But if the .said highways shall be vacated by any .competent authority, the title to the respective strips shall inure to the then owner of the tract of which it formed a part of the original survey.’
“This reservation of lands for public highways was accepted by an act of the territorial Legislature, effective December 18, 1890, and by the state in section 2 of article 16 of the Constitution. * * * In 1909 the Legislature revised the laws of the state relating to roads and highways, and the revision is contained in chapter 32, article 1, Sess. Laws of 1909. * * * This revision as made was substituted for all former acts on that subject, and, together with the provisions concerning eminent domain, found in article 13, chapter 15, and chapter 30, Rev. Laws 1910, constitutes the statutory law in reference to these subjects. * * * The law as revised contained no provision authorizing the board of county commissioners to vacate any highway. Section 1600, Rev. Laws 1910. which was in force at that time, provides with reference to powers of county commissioners: ‘They shall have power: * * * (3) to construct and repair bridges, and to open, lay out, and vacate highways.’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 431, 158 P. 358, 59 Okla. 162, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/britton-v-morris-okla-1916.