Brown v. County Court

90 S.E. 166, 78 W. Va. 644, 1916 W. Va. LEXIS 148
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 90 S.E. 166 (Brown v. County Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. County Court, 90 S.E. 166, 78 W. Va. 644, 1916 W. Va. LEXIS 148 (W. Va. 1916).

Opinion

Lynch, Judge:

From a decree sustaining defendant’s demurrer to and dismissing the bill, alleging irregularities in- the submission of a proposed bond issue and tax levy upon the real and personal property of Portland district, ■ Preston county, for the improvement of public roads therein, upon the petition of the requisite number of taxpayers within the district, and praying. an injunction inhibiting defendant from further proceedings in the matter of such improvement, the plaintiff Brown obtained this appeal.

The vital errors, if errors at all, relate to the manner of the submission of the proposed bond issue. It is contended the notice of the election should have been published in two newspapers of opposite polities and general circulation within the territory affected. There are two statutes applicable to such proceedings: §7, ch. 9, acts 1908, relied on by plaintiff; and §5, eh. 8, acts 2nd Ex. Sess. 1915, relied on by defendant. The first statute requires publication in the manner urged by appellant; the second, “in one or more newspapers of general circulation if published within the county or district affected”, and with which defendant complied. Although the later act does not purport to amend and re-enact the prior one, it does so by implication. It embraces the same subject matter, and contains the usual general provision that all acts and parts of acts inconsistent therewith are thereby repealed. Hence, the last statute controls. Besides, it does not appear [646]*646from any pleading that there is more than one newspaper published or of general circulation in Portland district, as required in section 5.

The second irregularity urged is that neither the petition seeking the election, nor the order of the county court submitting the matter to the voters of the district, definitely state the amount of the proposed indebtedness or levy. However, both furnish the data from which such amount may readily be ascertained. The petition' fixed, as the basis of the indebtedness proposed, five per cent of the total assessed valuation of the taxable property in the district for the last preceding fiscal year. The aggregate property values the county court, by its order of submission, ascertained to be, and which the notices published and posted show was, $5,646,071. This total, and the rate prescribed and fixed, served as the bases from which to compute the amount to be authorized for collection and disbursement for the purposes designated. Prom them any intelligent voter readily could by calculation determine the extent of the liability sought to be imposed upon the property of his district for road improvement purposes. Hence, it can not reasonably be said sufficient information upon the matter submitted for decision was not furnished to him. What may be ascertained with certainty by computation from data provided and available is deemed certain and definite and satisfies the legal. requirement pertaining to such issues.

Again, it is claimed the petition and the order of submission indefinitely described one of the roads to be improved as beginning at the Maryland line and extending to and through the town of Terra Alta, thence to and'through the town of Albright to the Pleasant district line, and, as two roads opened and used by the public exist between Terra Alta and Al-bright, the distance between the two points being three miles less by one route than by the other, the voters intended and it was the duty of the county court to select for improvement the shorter of the two highways. In the absence of a definite identification of the road contemplated, the county court was not deprived of the right to exercise the discretion vested in it by law to determine which of the two roads it would im[647]*647prove. Such deprivation, to be effectual, must clearly appear. There is in this instance no manifestation of an attempt to circumscribe or restrict this statutory right of selection. On the contrary, an intention is apparent to leave its exercise by the proper tribunal free and unfettered by any limitation’ whatever. The petitioners and voters evidently knew the ex-. istenee of the two roads between the points named. They also knew both highways were not, and only one of them was, intended to be benefitted by the contemplated improvement.. Some one must supply the omission, that one necessarily being the tribunal to that end empowered by statute.. This objection, therefore, is untenable.

The fourth and last irregularity concerns the character of-the material to be used in the improvement of the roads specified. While the language used may perhaps engender some’ doubt when cursorily read, a careful examination will lead to the conclusion that the voters clearly understood and intended to consent to the use of concrete in the reconstruction of such roads. The language employed by the petitioners, so far as uow pertinent, and carried into the order of the county court, prays that “the proceeds arising from the sale of the bonds shall be used by the county court in relocating, grading and building or in the permanent improvement of the following named roads in such manner as is prescribed'by law, the roads to be improved by the proceeds of said bonds being as follows, towit: “A fifteen foot concrete road beginning at the Maryland line just west of Hutton and extending to and through the town of Terra Alta and thence to and through the town of Albright to the Pleasant district line; a fourteen foot concrete road beginning at the Union district line on the Aurora pike,” etc. It is contended that the word “concrete” is a part of the description of the road, and not a specification of the material to be used. But none of the roads were concrete roads. The evident intent of the voters was to make them such. In its. order calling the election, the' county court provided that the proceeds derived from the sale of .the bonds-should be used in making permanent improvements on the roads specified in the petition and to the extent therein set forth, ‘ ‘ by the use of concrete and such other materials as aré [648]*648required to complete the work in tbe maimer prescribed by law. ’ ’ It directed the vote to be taken upon that issue, making due provision for the election, the assessment of the taxes', and the disposition of the proceeds to be derived therefrom. The voters doubtless understood, when voting their consent so to be taxed, that the material to be used in making the public improvements authorized by them was concrete and such other material as was necessary to build concrete roads. They expressed .a willingness to be taxed for the construction of highways out of that character of road building material, and none other. It can not reasonably be said they contemplated the substitution therefor of water-bound macadam, although perhaps less expensive than that to which they assented. Doubtless the petitioners had. in mind the use of the same material, as evidently did the county court when granting their prayer.and submitting the matter to a popular vote. If so, and of that there can be no doubt, the only road construction material that can be used is the material authorized by them. Assent was not given to the use of any material other than that so specified and its constituent elements. That is the only reasonable and legitimate' conclusion or construction to be placed upon the proposition to which the voters gave their consent. By that constraction the county court is bound, as well as by its approval of the prayer of the petition asking for the public improvements. This construction is strengthened and supported by the further consideration that the county court advertised for bids for the construction of concrete roads.

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.E. 166, 78 W. Va. 644, 1916 W. Va. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-county-court-wva-1916.