Cheatham County v. Baker

30 S.W.2d 234, 161 Tenn. 222, 8 Smith & H. 222, 1929 Tenn. LEXIS 53
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 19, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 30 S.W.2d 234 (Cheatham County v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cheatham County v. Baker, 30 S.W.2d 234, 161 Tenn. 222, 8 Smith & H. 222, 1929 Tenn. LEXIS 53 (Tenn. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Swiggart

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal of Cheatham County and individual taxpayers, who joined the county as complainants after the filing of the original bill, is from the action of the chancellor in dismissing their “amended and supplemental bill,” on the demurrer of the defendant, the Commissioner of Highways and Public Works for Tennessee. The decree appealed from ¡did not affect the original bill of the complainant, Cheatham County, nor directly .modify the temporary injunction issued thereunder, which is still in force.

Cheatham County lies almost wholly between Montgomery and Davidson Counties. A straight line, drawn from Nashville, the county seat of Davidson County, to *225 Clarksville, the county seat of Montgomery County, would pass very close to Ashland City, the county seat of Cheatham County. For many years the most 'direct roadway from Nashville to Clarksville passed through Ashland City, and this road, under the designation State Highway No. 12, was adopted and made a part of the state highway system by one of the predecessors in office of the present defendant.

The original bill, filed by Cheatham County alone, in October, 1928, averred that the then Commissioner of Highways was proposing to construct a new highway from Nashville to Clarksville, which would touch Cheat-ham County along its northeastern border, missing Ash-land City by about eight miles, and that bids for the construction of a part of this new highway were about to be received. It was averred that the construction of this new highway would be in excess of the power of the Commissioner of Highways, and an abuse of his power, in that it would remove and destroy the existing highway connection of Ashland City with the county seats of Montgomery and Davidson Counties.

A temporary injunction was issued under the original bill, restraining the Commissioner from,awarding a contract for the construction of any portion of the proposed new highway; from abandoning the existing route of State Highway No. 12 from Nashville, via Ashland City, to Clarksville; and “from abandoning the present State Highway running from Nashville via Ashland City to Clarksville, and from withdrawing this road from the present state system of highways,” etc:

An answer to the original bill was filed by the then 'Commissioner of Highways on February 27, 1929. His successor in office, the present Commissioner, filed a supplemental answer on January 24, 1930, and then *226 moved to dissolve the temporary injunction. Action on this motion was withheld by the chancellor in order that complainant might have time to prepare and file its amended and supplemental bill, which was filed on February Í3, 1930.

The motion to dissolve the temporary injunction was not renewed after the filing of the amended and supplemental bill, bnt a demurrer to that pleading was interposed on February 19th, and on April 18th, this demurrer was sustained, and the amended and supplemental hill dismissed.

The decree of the chancellor, entered April 18, 1930, recites that the injunction granted under the original bill involves only the “abandonment and removal and the relocation and reconstruction of Highway No. 12,” and that since the Commissioner in his answer avers that he has no such intention, the injunction “does not prohibit the defendant R. H. Baker, Commissioner, from constructing State Highway No. 112,” etc.

Itj was further decreed by the chancellor that the Commissioner “has the legal right to locate and construct an entirely new highway from Nashville to Clarksville, and to designate same as State Highway No. 112, before reconstructing State Highway No. 12 from Nashville to Clarksville, via Ashland City, and that the amended and supplemental bill does 'not allege facts which amount to such fraud on the part of said Commissioner, or to such abuse of discretion, as would justify the Court in interfering with his discretion in the time of location and construction, and in the location and construction of State Highway No. 112.”

Appropriate assignments of error are directed to each of the conclusions of the chancellor quoted from his de *227 cree, and to his action in dismissing the amended and supplemental bill.

The amended and supplemental hill charges that State Highway No. 112 is bnt a new name or designation for the proposed new highway described in the original bill as a relocation of State Highway No. 12; and that although the present Commissioner has declared it to be his purpose not to abandon the present highway No. 12 as a part of the State Highway system, this assurance, together with the change in the number or designation of the proposed new road, is “a palpable subterfuge that is resorted to for the purpose of concealing and covering up the real purpose, intent and force of his act, that is to relocate, remove and build with a standard hard surface road State Highway No. 12 on the proposed new route and abandon both the present road and route of State Highway No. 12.”

The amended and supplemental bill includes as an exhibit a letter from the Commissioner of Highways to the County Judge of Cheatham County, dated September 24, 1929, in which the Commissioner states that he is in “thorough sympathy” with the desire to “construct the trank line Nashville to Clarksville highway, via Ashland City,” and that he had had “a thorough investigation made of all practical locations.” The Commissioner then stated his conclusions to be that the new route would result in a saving of distance of from 3.21 miles to 6.89 miles, and a reduction in grading and drainage cost of from $1,696,000 on one survey, and $1,062,000 on another, to $613,000. The Commissioner then said: “ Ohr analysis of the above costs and distances forces on us the conclusion that this trunk line highway should be located as originally intended; namely via Pleasant View. ’ ’

*228 The bill charges that the Commissioner’s estimate of the saving’ of distance and cost was by him based upon an alleged survey of the Ashland City route by Engineer C. R. Watkins; and it is specifically averred that Watkins made no survey except to measure the existing roadway with only two deviations. As to these two deviations, the bill avers: ‘ ‘ Complainant charges that both of these deviations were well known to be not feasible for highway construction, both on account of added distance and the rough terrain over which they were made, and complainant charges that they were so made deliberately with the wrong’ful intent and purpose of making a bad showing and making it appear that said route No. 12 was an improper and unfit route for the construction of the proposed hard surface highway. ”

Ota. October 12, 1929, the county notified the Commissioner that it would employ a competent engineer to locate- a new road, via Ashland City, and invited the Commissioner to verify the survey by having an engineer' in his employ attend it. In reply, the Commissioner stated that the county had been misled as to the nature of the survey his department had made, and concluded:

“In view of the fact that our location work along the present State Highway No. 12 was carefully handled by our Mr. C. R.

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Related

COUNTY HIGHWAY COM'N OF RUTHERFORD CTY. v. Smith
454 S.W.2d 124 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1969)
Robertson v. Davis
90 S.W.2d 746 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1936)
County of Cheatham v. Baker
64 S.W.2d 31 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 S.W.2d 234, 161 Tenn. 222, 8 Smith & H. 222, 1929 Tenn. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheatham-county-v-baker-tenn-1930.