Crockett County v. Walters

95 S.W.2d 305, 170 Tenn. 337, 6 Beeler 337, 1935 Tenn. LEXIS 141
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 95 S.W.2d 305 (Crockett County v. Walters) 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
Crockett County v. Walters, 95 S.W.2d 305, 170 Tenn. 337, 6 Beeler 337, 1935 Tenn. LEXIS 141 (Tenn. 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Chiee Justice Green

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought under the Declaratory Judgments Act (Code 1932, sec. 8835 et seq.) by Crockett county, a committee appointed by the quarterly county court of that county to bring suit, and by certain citizens and taxpayers of the county on behalf of themselves and for the county. The bill named as defendants the commissioner of highways, the comptroller, and the attorney-general of the state, the county judge, the county trustee, the highway commissioners of Crockett county, and others not necessary to be enumerated.

It was alleged that the quarterly county court had passed a resolution directing that Crockett county’s pro rata of the gasoline tax fund be expended by the state highway department on the highways of Crockett county under chapter 45 of the Pub. Acts 1931; that the coun *340 ty judge and other county officials denied the authority of said resolution, taking the position that chapter 45 of Pub. Acts 1931 was repealed by implication as to Crockett county by chapter 26 of the Private Acts of 1933 creating a highway commission for Crockett county, and that, under the provisions of the private act, the county authorities alone had the right to expend this fund.

The cause was brought to issue, proof taken, and on the hearing there was a decree for the complainants, from which the defendants have appealed. The bill sought a declaration upon several matters of controversy which appear to have been lost sight of, but the complainants took no exception to the chancellor’s decree. The complainants not appealing nor assigning errors, we confine our consideration to the matters upon which the chancellor passed.

His honor ruled that the suit was maintainable by the parties bringing it; that chapter 26 of the Private Acts of 1933 was unconstitutional; that the quarterly county court of Crockett county by' proper resolution directed the turning over of this county aid fund, pursuant to the provisions of chapter 45 of the Pub. Acts of 1931, to the state highway department to be expended on the county roads and bridges of said county; that the defendants county judge and county highway commissioners refused to obey said resolution; and the decree enjoined the county officers from expending any of the gasoline tax or county aid fund, and declared it the duty of those officials “to turn the same over to the State Highway Department, under the resolution of the county court, to be used and expended by the State Highway *341 Department as provided by chapter 45 of the Public Acts of 1931.”

The defendants’ first contention is that complainants have no right to bring this suit. We do not find merit in this. There was a bona fide controversy between the county, as represented by the quarterly county court, and the defendant officials as to the constitutionality and effect of chapter 26 of the Private Acts of 1933; the controversy was real; and the parties had a real interest in the determination of the question. No more is necessary to make a ease cognizable under the declaratory judgments statute. Miller v. Miller, 149 Tenn., 463, 261 S. W., 965. Likewise there were similar justiciable differences between individual complainants' and the defendant officials, asserting the validity of chapter 26 of the Priv. Acts of 1933 as a whole, with reference to burdens imposed upon the individuals by that act. :S'ome parties named both as complainants and defendants appear to be unnecessary, but there are real parties on either side and real controversies between them.

The validity of the resolution or resolutions of the quarterly county court in authorizing this suit is not directly assailed in this court. The proposition submitted by defendants’ counsel in the language of their brief is:

“If that resolution is to be construed and interpreted as authorizing the bringing of this suit, then the Quarterly County Court was exceeding its authority and power, and acting illegally. The purpose of this suit, as expressed at great length in the bill, is not to turn the Gas Tax Fund of the County over to the State Highway Department to be expended as provided in chapter 45, Acts of 1931 (Code, sec. 3291 (1-2-3)). . . . But the pur-» *342 pose of tlie suit, as set out, in many words, in tire bill, was, and is, to turn the control and management of the -expenditures of the County’s road fund over to an arm or agency of the Federal Government. Such a course was not in contemplation when Code, sec. 3291 (3) was enacted. . . . So we insist that the Quarterly County Court of Crockett County was without lawful power to authorize the prosecution of a suit, the purpose of which was to surrender the power of local self government and determination to an agency of the Government of the United States.”

In respect to this, it may be observed that the chancellor sustained the suit only to the extent of declaring it to be the duty of defendant officials to turn the gasoline tax fund “over to the State Highway Department, under the resolution of the county court, to be used and expended by the State Highway Department as provided by chapter 45 of the Public Acts of 1931.” Hereafter, if there is a diversion or misappropriation of this fund by the state highway department or others, such action may be challenged. No such question is before us on this appeal from the chancellor’s decree.

The bill, as before mentioned, attacks chapter 26 of the Private Acts of 1933 as unconstitutional, and the chancellor so held. We consider this attack later. Both defendants and complainants, the latter if the act of 1933 be treated as constitutional, seem to agree that this act repealed by implication chapter 45 of the Pub. Acts of 1931 as to Crockett county. We are not, however, able to reach this conclusion.

No rule of statutory construction is more firmly established than that repeals by implication are not «favored. This court has said that nothing short of an ir *343 reconcilable conflict between two statutes, by implication, works a repeal of tbe former by tbe latter. Stonega Coke, etc., Co., v. Southern Steel Co., 123 Tenn., 428, 131 S. W., 988, 31 L. R. A. (N. S.), 278.

Chapter 45 of tbe Pub. Acts of 1931, after providing tbe manner of distribution of tbe proceeds of tbe state gasoline tax among tbe various counties “to be used by tbe county highway authorities in tbe building, re-, pairing and improvement of county roads and bridges,” enacts “that tbe Quarterly County Court of any county of tbe State may, at any regular term by resolution passed by a majority of tbe Justices present and spread upon tbe minutes of tbe Court, direct tbe State Highway Department to expend said counties pro rata of said fund on such county highways and bridges as tbe county highway department of said county by resolution may direct, and in such counties as have no highway department then tbe County Judge or Chairman may so direct. ’ ’ Section 3.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 S.W.2d 305, 170 Tenn. 337, 6 Beeler 337, 1935 Tenn. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crockett-county-v-walters-tenn-1936.