County Court of Roane County v. O'Brien

122 S.E. 352, 95 W. Va. 32, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 215
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 6, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 122 S.E. 352 (County Court of Roane County v. O'Brien) 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
County Court of Roane County v. O'Brien, 122 S.E. 352, 95 W. Va. 32, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 215 (W. Va. 1923).

Opinion

MlLLER, PRESIDENT:

By the present proceeding plaintiff and petitioner is asking us to prohibit the defendant and respondent from further entertaining jurisdiction, in a certain suit in equity now pending in the circuit court of Roane County, wherein W. W. Ogden and W. B. Carper are plaintiffs and the plaintiff and petitioner herein is defendant. .

Along with the petition, and as a part thereof, there is exhibited a copy of the bill filed in said suit,, which is relied on by petitioner to show want of jurisdiction of the circuit court of Roane County, and of the judge thereof, to grant the plaintiffs therein the relief prayed for, or any relief.

Prom the bill and the exhibits therewith it fully appears that the material facts alleged and relied upon are substantially the same which were before us in: the .case styled W. N. Vineyard et al. v. County Court of Roane County, which was in fact a proceeding by said Vineyard and others to review the action of the Attorney General in approving the validity of certain road bonds in the district of Geary, Roane County, the application of the proceeds of which bonds is the principal subject of controversy in said bill. Vineyard v. County Court, 92 W. Va. 51.

The prayer of the bill is that defendant, the county court *34 of Roane County, be enjoined, restrained and inhibited from paying out any part of the proceeds of said $120,000.00 bond issue for surveying and locating the relocated road from the residence of G. W. White, leaving Hurricane Creek and crossing the hill to Big Sandy Creek, and up Garner’s Branch thereof, across the hill to Ammia Post Office, and up said Big Sandy Creek to the bridge at or near the mouth of Left Hand, and from using any part of the proceeds of said bond issue for the construction and building of said relocated road, and further that the said court be likewise enjoined, restrained and inhibited from stopping the work of improving said road at the mouth of Dog Creek, and that it be required to improve the said road to the village of Newton, and for general relief.

The gravamen of the bill is that in the construction of the road authorized, the county court has or is about to depart from the route for which the bonds were voted, contrary to the propsition submitted, and upon which the vote of the citizens of Geary District was taken. As alleged in the bill and appearing from the exhibits, the proposition was to bond said district in the sum of $120,000.00, the proceeds arising from which should be used by said county court in the permanent improvement by grading, draining*, bridging and surfacing a certain county-district road described therein as beginning at or near the mouth of Hurricane at hard road from Spencer, Walton to Clendennin, thence the most economical and practical route to intersect the state road from Clay, W. Va., to Spencer, W. Va.; and the further provision to the effect that said route was subject to any revision, re-location, or change which the court or the State Road Commission might deem advisable to obtain grades and alignment thereof, or to reduce the cost of construction, improvement or maintenance. The bill further alleges that upon the filing of said petition, the said county court entered an order, on June 22, 1922, pursuant to section 106 of chapter 112, Acts of the Legislature of 1921, appointing S. P. Whitney to make an investigation and estimate of the cost of the proposed improvement, who in response thereto made his report on July 11, 1922, designating the road as the “Hurri *35 cane to Newton Route, ’ ’ and specifying the different elements of cost, all aggregating the sum of $114,720.00.

The hill further alleges that said order of submission contained the following provision: ‘ ‘ The court understands and doth so order that the description of the road herein contained is a general description and may he changed as to location from point to point or from place to place when by so doing greater economy of construction is secured or greater good to the citizens of the county and state can he obtained;” that subsequently, on August 7, 1922, the court made the following supplemental order, entitled: “In the matter of the proposed bond election in Geary District: It appearing to the court that by oversight and inadvertence there was omitted from the order entered in this matter on July 11, 1922, the fact that the northern terminus of the said road proposed to be improved as shown in former order is to be at Newton, this county; the court doth now declare it to be its intention if said proposed bond issue be approved at said, election to fix the northern terminus of said road at Newton and to locate the same from the bridge at the mouth of Left Hand up 'Sandy to Newton.” It is further alleged in the bill that at the special election called to be held on August 18, 1922, the result thereof as declared by the county court sitting as a canvassing board, was that the said proposition had carried by more than three-fifths majority of all the votes cast at said election.

The bill then recites the subsequent proceedings by said Vineyard, before the Attorney General, and upon the appeal from his order therein to this court; and that our holding was that there was no such uncertainty in the order of submission as to render the order of submission or the election held thereunder void, or to justify this court in nullifying the approval of the Attorney General of the bonds authorized for the construction of the proposed road, and that the supplemental order of the county court of August 7th would bind the county court and prevent a subsequent departure from the original proposition as defined thereby.

The bill then alleges that the engineer who made the report preliminary to the order, based his estimate on the improvement of the road leading up Hurricane Creek and *36 through. Petit low gap to the bridge at the mouth of Left Hand, and thence up Sandy to the village of Newton, which the bill alleges was the only practical and economical route and follows substantially the location of one of the old roads between the points named through said district and which for many years had been the leading main thoroughfare; and it is alleged that at least nine-tenths of the voters, if not all of them, understood and believed that the proceeds of said bond issue would be used in the improvement of said road as above described, as being the most economical and practical route, running from the mouth of Hurricane by way of the bridge at Left Hand to Newton; and as evidence of such understanding, the bill exhibits the affidavits of a large number of persons to that effect.

The bill then further alleges that, disregarding said former proceedings and the wishes of the voters and the best interests of the citizens and tax-payers, the said county court, on January 1, 1923, made and entered an order to the effect that after having gone over and considered the different routes as proposed and suggested and measured the sainé, and pursuant to the power vested in the court, and believing it to be the most economical route and the one that would accommodate the greatest number of citizens, determined on the following route: “Beginning at the concrete bridge at the mouth of Hurricane Creek, thence up said stream a distance of about two miles to the residence of G. W.

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Bluebook (online)
122 S.E. 352, 95 W. Va. 32, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-court-of-roane-county-v-obrien-wva-1923.