Doran v. Robertson

27 S.E.2d 714, 203 S.C. 434, 1943 S.C. LEXIS 105
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 3, 1943
Docket15580
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 27 S.E.2d 714 (Doran v. Robertson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doran v. Robertson, 27 S.E.2d 714, 203 S.C. 434, 1943 S.C. LEXIS 105 (S.C. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Associate Justice Stukes

delivered the unanimous Opinion of the Court:

By proper permission of the Acting Chief Justice, petitioners filed their verified petition in the original jurisdiction of this court against the County Board of Commissioners of Charleston County, the members of which have appeared as respondents. They filed return and the matter was fully heard on the pleadings and the briefs and oral arguments of counsel at a recent term. There are no material issues of fact and those of law will be stated in the course of this opinion.

The supply act for Charleston County for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1943 was Act No. 244 of the General Assembly of 1943, Act April 19, 1943, 43 Stat. at Large, 574. By section 25 (pages 606-7), the County Board of Commissioners were authorized to issue and sell bonds of the county not exceeding $350,000.00 and use the proceeds for various admitted county purposes and “for the construction of sewerage systems; * * * it being determined by the General Assembly that each and every one of said purposes is an ordinary county purpose of said county.” Section 26 (page 608) of the Act purported to ratify and confirm a certain contract between the County Board and the V-Housing Corporation dated April 12, 1943, which it was said provided for the expenditure of county funds for “certain public improvements.” V-Housing Corporation is a private business corporation.

*439 Petitioners are citizens, residents and taxpayers of the county and contend that the provisions of the County Supply Act above mentioned are unconstitutional and therefore invalid for numerous reasons which need not now be fully stated, and attached as an exhibit to the petition is a copy of the V-Housing Corporation contract, referred to in the act.

In the latter agreement it is recited that the Housing Corporation is engaged in the construction of dwellings which it contemplates continuing “at the request of agencies and departments of the Federal Government” to relieve the housing problem in Charleston County resulting from the large number of workmen employed at the United States Navy Yard and other defense plants, and the county has determined “that it is necessary and proper to provide in connection therewith certain paving and sewerage facilities, not only to bring about the construction of such additional dwelling units, but also to render the same, and others heretofore constructed, accessible, and to safeguard and protect the health and safety of those who will occupy the same.”

The corporation binds itself to construct, as soon as practicable under existing circumstances, in various sections of Charleston County, not less than twelve hundred new dwellings in accord with specifications of the Federal Housing Administration and costing not less than $3,200.00 each.

In turn, the county is bound “to provide street or roadway paving, or sewerage facilities, or both, as may in each instance be agreed upon by parties, in* such sections of Charleston County as the dwelling units * * * may be located, and also in sections of said County in which the Corporation has heretofore, since January 1, 1942, constructed similar dwelling units.”

The contract contains limitations, that paving and sewerage shall not be provided for less than twenty dwellings and shall only be constructed in such manner that not over thirty-five lineal feet, exclusive of outfalls and intersections, shall *440 be required per dwelling, no paving shall be on private property, but shall be of concrete or similar material, etc., and shall comply with the terms of section 6147 of the Code of Laws of 1942. It is further provided that the limit of the expenditures by the county shall be $350,000.00 and no new paving or sewerage construction shall be required to be commenced after the cessation of hostilities in the present war, except such construction as has theretofore been requested in writing by the corporation, which requested construction must be commenced and completed even after the cessation of hostilities, subject to the overall limitation upon the county’s expenditure, $350,000.00. It is noted that the latter amount is the maximum bond issue authorized by the Act.

The return of the respondents controverts the legal conclusions of unconstitutionality alleged in the petition, raising issues which will be referred to in the following disposition of them, although perhaps not as perspicaciously as petitioners’ counsel has presented them.

To the return was attached copy of the formal resolution of the County Board providing for the issuance and sale of $350,000.00 in serial bonds pursuant to the authority of section 25 of the Charleston County Supply Act of 1943, adverted to hereinabove, and providing for the application of the proceeds of sale to (a) the construction and improvement of roads and bridges in Charleston County (an undoubted constitutional purpose), and to (b) the construction of sewerage systems where found to be needed for the protection of the public health in said county. The emphasized purpose just stated is the principle bone of contention in the controversy although the right of the county authorities to pave the streets of the rural housing developments of the corporation is also sharply challenged.

The comprehensive argument of petitioners’’ counsel makes many separate points of constitutional attack, but as before indicated, it is not deemed necessary to *441 treat them in such detail although all will be considered. Rather, the form of respondents’ brief will be followed. In it the first issue stated is: Are the provisions authorizing the bond issue and approving the contract properly included in the county supply act? That it was permissible to so include them is demonstrated by consideration of the recent authority of DeLoach v. Scheper, 188 S. C., 21, 198 S. E., 409. There it was held permissible for the Beaufort County Supply Act of 1938 to authorize the issuance of bonds by several of the townships of the county, acting together, where the title of the Act contained an appropriate reference to this object. And it was said that it was not a separate subject of legislation but related, as did the Act in the main, to the fiscal affairs of the county. The same may be appropriately said here. See also Crouch v. Benet, 198 S. C., 185, 17 S. E. (2d), 320, where provisions for issuance of bonds were upheld in the .State General Appropriations Act of 1941.

The recent decisions just cited also answer petitioners’ point that the Act violates Sec. 17 of Article 3 of the Constitution of 1895, in that it allegedly relates to more than one subject, not expressed in the title. But it has been seen that an annual appropriations act of a county may contain provisions for the issuance of bonds for county or subdivisional purposes, a related object which, therefore, comes within the subject of the Act when properly included in the title. And reference to the title of this Act (43 Stat. 574) shows that it was appropriate and complete in so far as the proposed bond issue is concerned.

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Bluebook (online)
27 S.E.2d 714, 203 S.C. 434, 1943 S.C. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doran-v-robertson-sc-1943.