Gallegos v. Conroy

29 P.2d 334, 38 N.M. 154
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1934
DocketNo. 3844.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 29 P.2d 334 (Gallegos v. Conroy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gallegos v. Conroy, 29 P.2d 334, 38 N.M. 154 (N.M. 1934).

Opinion

ZINN, Justice.

From a decree enjoining the state highway commission, its engineers and R. S. Gonroy, from constructing a road to be used for highway purposes on a right of way donated for that purpose to the state by defendant Conroy, this appeal is prosecuted. The defendants, with the exception of defendant. Conroy, demurred to the complaint, which was overruled, and, defendants electing to stand on the demurrer, the decree was entered. Defendants rely upon one ground for reversal. The plaintiffs raise some additional points to sustain the decree, on the theory that all facts, properly pleaded, are admitted by the demurrer to be true.

: The plaintiffs are Jesus Gallegos, a taxpayer and property owner of Valencia county, the village of Los Lunas, and the board of county commissioners of Valenciá county. For convenience, the plaintiffs and defendants will be referred to in this opinion as they were in the district court.

j The complaint recites that some time pri- or to the institution of this proceeding the state of New Mexico, with the aid of the United States, and in co-operation with the board of county commissioners of Valencia county, constructed what is known as federal aid project No. 125-A and federal aid project No. 150. These projects are located partly within Valencia county, and' the title to the right of way for that portion of each of said projects located in Valencia county is vested in the county. These two projects intersect at right angles within the corporate limits of Los Lunas. Project No. 150 is part of the main highway from Los Lunas to Gallup, N. M., and project No. 125-A is the project from Los Lunas to Ysleta, N. M.

The road attempted to be constructed is termed in the complaint as a Y, and was intended to join and contact project No. 125-A at a point about one-half mile north of its intersection with project No. 150, and join and contact project No. 150 at a point about one-half mile west of its intersection with project No. 125-A, apparently eliminating the right angle intersection within the corporate limits of Los Lunas.

The complaint recites that the Y is being constructed at the expense of the state of New Mexico unnecessarily, and its use will result in great danger and injury to the property and business of plaintiff Jesus Gallegos, who is a taxpayer, and that the operation of the Y will lead1 to confusion of traffic and danger to vehicles and life, and is being constructed at the instance and request of defendant R. S. Gonroy to gain for Gonroy, at the expense of the state, advantages over his competitors in business, and for no other purpose, and that the defendants are therefore acting in bad faith.

As to plaintiff Gallegos’ claim that he will be damaged if such Y is constructed, he pleads no facts indicating the manner in which he will be damaged or the nature of such damages, and such general allegation is a mere conclusion of the pleader. It does not appear from the complaint that there is any direct taking of plaintiff Gallegos’ property, and, if the damage be consequential, he cannot seek relief by injunction. We said in the case of Summerford v. Board of Com’rs, 35 N. M. 374, 298 P. 410, 413: “It is not possible to anticipate what consequential damages may be asserted. So, it is the rule that the improvement will be allowed to proceed and the liability for consequential damages will be determined afterward. Otherwise, injunctions would intolerably delay public work and responsible officials, from fear of personal liability, would refuse to proceed.”

Plaintiffs complain of the fact that the Y is being constructed at the expense of the state of New Mexico. In the completion of our main trunk highways, such expenditure is lawful. 1929 Comp. St. § 64-331. The need or requirement for the construction of the Y is a matter to be determined by the highway commission and not by the courts, and the courts cannot assume the control and management of our state highway system.

The allegation in the complaint that said construction will needlessly render unsafe a part of said highway and impair its ' usefulness' and divert its use are too general to be binding in any way upon the demurrants. Town of Farmington v. Mumma, 35 N. M. 114, 291 P. 290. We cannot charge the highway commission with bad' faith on such general allegations.

We can readily dismiss the plaintiffs’ charge on information and belief that said Y is being constructed to serve the individual interests of Conroy to gain for him advantages over his competitors in business, because it is a reasonable inference from the facts pleaded that the Y will eliminate a right-angle turn at the point of divergence between highway 66 and 85 at Los Lunas.

Merely because Conroy gratuitously gave to the state a right of way does not negative the public necessity thereof. This highway is to be a public highway, free and open to all citizens, and because it will be of especial benefit to one does not condemn its purpose. Heninger. v. Peery, 102 Va. 896, 47 S. E. 1013.

It is a fact which does not admit of contradiction, though not disclosed by the record, and of which we take judicial notice as we would of the fact that the village of Los Lunas is located on the Albuquerque-El Paso branch line of the Santa Fe Railroad, that “Federal Aid Project 150” and “Federal Aid Project No. 125-A” are merely the numbers designating the immediate road projects in a larger trunk line system, and that two main trunk lines, to wit, Highway 66, a main federal aid highway running in an easterly and westerly direction, not only through New Mexico, but through adjacent states, and Highway 85, a main federal aid highway running in a northerly and southerly direction, generally following the course of the Camino Real, 1929 Comp. St. § 64-1601, not only through the state of New Mexico, but through adjacent states, converge at a point near Las Yegas, N. M., and run together as One main highway until they come to the village of Los Lunas, one of the plaintiffs herein, where they diverge. Highway 85 continues south with its flow of traffic into El Paso, Tex., and Highway 66 turns west with its flow of traffic through Arizona and California.

That Conroy may derive some advantage from the construction cannot, standing alone, condemn it. The record does not disclose what business defendant Conroy happens to be in or what advantage he may have over his competitors, and we cannot impute base motives to the highway commission on such general statements. We must place the highway commission’s determination of necessity for the construction of the Y on a broader and larger plane than the desires of an individual, and infer that the commission’s motive is for the service of the state and the traveling public, even though some individual may better his position thereby. We must judge by the act and not a general allegation of motive.

Plaintiffs contend that the attempted establishment and laying out of the Y is in violation of article 4, § 24, of the N. M. Const. This section of our Constitution prohibits the Legislature from enacting local or special laws in the laying out, opening, altering, or working roads or highways, except as to state roads extending into more than one county.

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29 P.2d 334, 38 N.M. 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallegos-v-conroy-nm-1934.