Harlow v. Board of Com'rs of Payne County

1912 OK 521, 125 P. 449, 33 Okla. 353, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 704
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 23, 1912
Docket2136
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1912 OK 521 (Harlow v. Board of Com'rs of Payne County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harlow v. Board of Com'rs of Payne County, 1912 OK 521, 125 P. 449, 33 Okla. 353, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 704 (Okla. 1912).

Opinion

HAYES, J.

Plaintiff, a resident taxpayer of Payne county, brought this action in the court below to enjoin the board of county commissioners of that county from entering into and carrying out a contract for the construction of a certain bridge over a river in that county, and from levying a tax to raise funds to pay for the construction of the bridge, and to enjoin the county treasurer from extending such tax upon the-tax rolls of the county, and from collecting same. Upon the application of plaintiff the judge of the district court, at chambers, granted a temporary injunction, enjoining and restraining defendants in error from doing any of the aforesaid acts. This temporary injunction was subsequently, upon motion of defendants in error, dissolved by the court; and it is from the order dissolving the injunction that this appeal is prosecuted.

Plaintiff in error, by his contentions in this court, presents for our consideration two legal propositions. The first proposition urged is that the board of county commissioners are without authority to contract for the construction of the proposed bridge, because it is located within a distance of less than six miles of another bridge constructed across the same river, which is prohibited by section 2 of an act of the Legislature approved March 11, 1903 (Sess. Laws 1903, p. 244; section 7881, Comp. Laws 1909). The proposed bridge is to be constructed at a point on the Cimarron river where said river forms the boundary line between Mound and Union townships, in Payne county. These two townships have agreed with the county to pay each one-third of one-fourth of the cost of construction of said bridge, and the town of Cushing, an incorporated town in one of said townships, has agreed to pay one-third of one-fourth of such cost, and the county is to pay the remaining three-fourths. There has never been any agreement of the board of trustees of the adjoining townships to pay equally one-fourth of the expense of the construction of said bridge; and plaintiff’s second prop *355 osition is that, because of this fact, and by reason of section 6 of an act of the Legislature approved March 11, 1903 (Sess. Laws 1903, p. 246), as amended by section 3 of an act of the Legislature approved March 10, 1905 (Sess. Laws 1905, p. 354; section 7885, Comp. Laws 1909), the board of county commissioners is without authority to contract for the construction of the bridge. The act of the Legislature approved March 11, 1903, entitled “An act authorizing the construction of bridges” (Sess. Laws 1903, p. 244), provides for the construction and repairing of bridges across streams in the state where such bridges exceed the length of 200 feet between the banks of the stream on which any bridge is constructed. Section 2 of that act, which applies to the first proposition presented by plaintiff in error, reads as follows:

“Said bridges shall be located at any point on said river or rivers, provided no bridge shall be built on any such river under the terms of this act nearer than six miles to any other bridge located and built: Provided further, that more than one bridge may be built within one mile of an incorporated town or city.”

It is admitted that there is yio incorporated town or city within one mile of the location of the proposed bridge; and it is also admitted that upon a straight line, or by the course of the stream, it is less than six miles to another bridge upon said stream, but that by the usual traveled public road it is more than six miles to said bridge; and the board of county commissioners, construing the statute to mean six miles by the public highway, determined that it had authority to contract for the construction of the bridge. This construction of the statute by the board of county commissioners, we think, was incorrect. A somewhat similar question was considered in City of Blackwell v. City of Newkirk, 31 Okla. 304, 121 Pac. 260, where it is said:

“Erom an examination of the authorities we have been able to make, they appear to be practically in accord that, where distance is to be determined, it must be by a straight line, unless there is something in the nature of the case, or in the context of the act or instrument, indicating an intention to follow a different method.”

*356 The evident purpose of authorizing bridges to be constructed if not within six miles of each other, and prohibiting them from being constructed nearer than six miles to another bridge, is to provide for the construction of bridges at points upon any stream convenient to the traveling public. coming from every direction to cross such stream; and at the same time to deny to the municipal authorities and to the board of county commissioners the power to burden the taxpayers by constructing too many bridges, or by constructing them nearer to each other than the reasonable necessity demands. It is urged by defendants in error that because a bridge constitutes a part of the road the act should be construed as requiring the measurement to be made by the road leading from one bridge to' the other. In providing for the location of these bridges and the distance between them, the convenience of the traveling public residing upon the highway leading from one bridge to another was not in the minds of the Legislature; for, as a rule, the travel direct from one bridge to the next nearest bridge is of no great consequence, and rarely would there be a public highway leading direct from one bridge to the next nearest; for, in most instances, the greater part of the public travel will be across the river, rather than up and down its course. Measuring the distance between the bridges upon a straight line will result in a uniform system; one that will enable counties and municipalities therein to construct bridges to meet the reasonable wants of the traveling public, and at the same time protect against extravagance and the imprudent location of bridges in close proximity; for, if the distance is to be measured by the public road, it could and probably would not infrequently happen, on account of there being no public road upon a direct line, or upon an approximately direct line from the location of one bridge to the other, that the distanec by traveled road would be greater than the limit fixed .by the statute, and at the same time the bridges would be a very short distance apart. The same would result if the distance is to be measured by the course of the stream, where the stream is irregular and runs in curves. Two points upon a river more than six miles apart by public road today may be tomorrow, because of the opening of *357 new roads, less than six miles apart. A bridge when begun- may be without the limitations of the statute, but be within them when completed. There is nothing in the act to indicate that a different measurement than a straight line measurement of the distance is contemplated-; and, if a measurement by the public highway is adopted, it will render it possible, in many instances, for the municipal authorities to defeat the very purpose of the limitation upon their power to construct these bridges, for the distance between any two points upon a stream can be made to vary by ■changing the highways; and, without reviewing the authorities -cited in City of Blackwell v. City of Newkirk, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
1912 OK 521, 125 P. 449, 33 Okla. 353, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harlow-v-board-of-comrs-of-payne-county-okla-1912.