Brock v. City of Anniston

14 So. 2d 519, 244 Ala. 544, 1943 Ala. LEXIS 270
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 13, 1943
Docket7 Div. 743.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 14 So. 2d 519 (Brock v. City of Anniston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brock v. City of Anniston, 14 So. 2d 519, 244 Ala. 544, 1943 Ala. LEXIS 270 (Ala. 1943).

Opinions

*548 GARDNER, Chief Justice.

Complainants are the owners of residential property abutting on Quintard Avenue in the City of Anniston, and filed this bill seeking injunctive relief against the City of Anniston, the Highway Director of the State of Alabama, and the R. T. Smith Construction Company, against the widening of the paved portion of said avenue between Eighteenth and Twenty-second Streets. The equity of the bill rests upon the theory that the abutting property of these complainants will be damaged by the contemplated improvements, in the destruction of many valuable shade trees, flowers, grass and shrubbery, between the curb and the property line on both sides of Quintard Avenue between said streets, as well as a change in the curbing, gutter, and sidewalks, as a part of said improvement. The equity of the bill was not challenged, and is well sustained by our authorities. City Council of Montgomery v. Maddox, 89 Ala. 181, 7 So. 433; McEachin v. City of Tuscaloosa, 164 Ala. 263, 51 So. 153; City Council of Montgomery v. Townsend, 80 Ala. 489, 2 So. 155, 60 Am.Rep. 112; Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Francis, 109 Ala. 224, 19 So. 1, 31 L.R.A. 193, 55 Am.St.Rep. 930; Finnell v. Pitts, 222 Ala. 290, 132 So. 2; McGowin v. City of Mobile, 241 Ala. 576, 4 So.2d 161, and authorities therein cited.

The contemplated improvement touches none of the property here involved. Quintard Avenue was originally opened up for a width of eighty feet more than twenty years ago and dedicated to the public use with only a paved way of thirty-two feet. The proposed project does not widen the street, but only the paved way, so that the paved portion of the street will extend through these blocks a width of sixty feet. This necessitates not only the removal of some of the trees growing in the parkway between the curb and the sidewalk, but also the disturbance of some of the curb, and for a short distance, the removal of the sidewalk. We think it clear enough, and requires no discussion to disclose, this contemplated improvement is not a taking of any of the property of the complainants within the meaning of Section 235 of the *549 Constitution of 1901, but that the damages suffered are consequential in character, though equally protected by this constitutional provision. William N. Hunter and T. S. Hunter v. City of Mobile, ante, p. 318, 13 So.2d 656; City of Birmingham v. Graves, 200 Ala. 463, 76 So. 395; Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Francis, supra.

Upon presentation to the chancellor, and without notice, temporary injunction was issued as prayed. But upon hearing of the motion to dissolve and a consideration of the answer of the defendants and oral proof, the chancellor granted the motion and dissolved the injunction. From this decree, the complainants prosecute this appeal.

The answer denied emphatically that the City of Anniston is engaged in making this improvement, and sets out in more or less detail the facts which brought it about. Concerning these facts, there is little, if any, dispute. On the outskirts of the City of Anniston is located what is known as Fort McClellan, which is owned in fee by the Federal Government (Pound v. Gaulding, 237 Ala. 387, 187 So. 468), and where many thousand soldiers are being trained, and where, on account of wartime conditions, the volume of traffic flowing between and through the City of Anniston and Fort McClellan has greatly increased, with only one public highway connecting the fort with the city. Military authorities, therefore, are hampered and impeded in their military activities on account of this situation. Quintard Avenue beyond Twenty-second Street has not heretofore been opened for traffic, but was what is known as a dead-end street. This improvement contemplates the opening and extension of Quintard Avenue beyond Twenty-second Street on to Fort McClellan. The purpose of this project is to relieve the congested condition as above indicated.

In view of the existing emergency, Congress passed what is known as the Defense Highway Act of 1941, Title 23 U.S. C.A. § 101-117. In Section 106 is to be found detailed provisions for the construction, maintenance, and improvement of “access roads,” and for replacing existing highways and highway connections, to military and naval reservations, defense industries and defense sites, and to sources of raw material, when such roads are certified to the Federal Works Administrator by the Secretary of War or Navy as important to the national defense. Many millions of dollars are appropriated for this particular purpose, and the Commissioner of Public Roads is authorized to enter into contracts for the building and maintenance of these access roads.

In passing we note the insistence of counsel for complainants that Fort McClellan does not come within the definition of “military reservation,” citing 50 C.J. 956; 40 C.J. 568. But the act of congress upon which the above cited authorities are based is entirely different from the act here in question. The meaning of words are, of course, to be taken from their context. The United States Supreme Court in Surplus Trading Co. v. Cook, 281 U.S. 647, 50 S.Ct. 455, 74 L.Ed. 1091, makes use of the expression “military reservation” which indicates clearly that such term is equally applicable to Fort McClellan. It would be wholly unreasonable to assume that in Section 106 Congress has made the specific provision for access roads to defense industries and sites and sources of raw material and yet intended to make no provision for a road to Fort McClellan and like military centers where thousands of soldiers are being trained daily for military service. We conclude this insistence requires no further discussion, and are clear to the view the Defense Highway Act gives full authority for the construction and maintenance of access roads to Fort McClellan. In Section 109 of this act the U. S. Commissioner of Public Roads is authorized to make surveys and plans and to make use of the state highway department of any state in making such surveys and plans, and express reference is made in this section to “highways” and “bypasses” around, and extensions into and through, municipalities and metropolitan areas. Like use is authorized to be made of the state highway department in obtaining rights of way for such project, as is to be noted in Section 114. We note also the provision in Section 109, as follows: “By agreement with the State highway department of any State, any project carried out in such State under the provision of this section may be carried out through or in cooperation with the highway department of such State.”

The answer discloses, and this is fully sustained by the proof, that this contemplated widening and improvement of Quintard Avenue (all disturbed curbing and sidewalk are, of course, to be replaced) *550 is being done by the Federal Government and paid for entirely with Federal funds. There has been due certification of the necessity of this road-as an access road to Fort McClellan, and it appears undisputably that the improvement was not instigated by the City of Anniston and that the City of Anniston has no part in the project. By formal ordinance the Federal Government was given access to Quintard Avenue for the purpose of this project at the request of the military authorities of the Government.

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Bluebook (online)
14 So. 2d 519, 244 Ala. 544, 1943 Ala. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brock-v-city-of-anniston-ala-1943.