Highway Commission v. . Central Commission

103 S.E. 744, 179 N.C. 610, 1920 N.C. LEXIS 300
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 2, 1920
StatusPublished

This text of 103 S.E. 744 (Highway Commission v. . Central Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Highway Commission v. . Central Commission, 103 S.E. 744, 179 N.C. 610, 1920 N.C. LEXIS 300 (N.C. 1920).

Opinion

This is an action begun 8 April, 1920, by the highway commissioners of Woodsdale Township in Person County against the Central Highway *Page 611 Commission of Person County, to restrain them from building a road in Woodsdale Township. The object of the action is to determine, under the provisions of ch. 74, Public-Local Laws 1917, whether the township commission or the county commission have the right and power to locate the road to be constructed in the township under the provisions of said act.

At the hearing before Calvert, J., at chambers in Hillsboro 3 May, 1920, he refused a mandamus to require the county highway commission to build the road designated by the plaintiff, but restrained the defendant from using any of the money allotted to Woodsdale Township in the construction of the Chub Lake Road, or any other road in said township, and ordered the Central Highway Commission of Person County to adopt rules and regulations for the laying out of roads by the highway commissioners of the several townships of the county, such roads to be constructed by the Central Highway Commission. The defendant appealed from that part of his Honor's order enjoining the construction of the Chub Lake Road, and directing the making and promulgation of general rules and regulations. The plaintiff appealed from that part of the order declining to issue a mandamus compelling the construction of the road designated by the township highway commission. The commissioners of both the township and county commission are made parties individually. This at most is surplusage, and immaterial.

This action is to obtain a construction of ch. 74, Public-Local Laws 1917, which authorized the commissioners of Person County to submit to the voters the question of issuing bonds to build and improve public roads. The validity of this act was before us, and sustained in Wagstaff v.Commission, 177 N.C. 354. Sec. 4 of said chapter provides that at the time of submitting the question of issuing bonds to the electorate there should be elected in each township three persons as township highway commissioners.

Sec. 5 provides that if the majority of the votes cast are in favor of issuing the bonds the township highway commissioners from the 9 townships in the county should meet and elect three persons as the Central Highway Commission of Person County. The bond issue was approved by the voters of the county in March, 1917, and thereafter, as directed by the act, the township highway commissioners elected the defendants, the Central Highway Commission of Person County. *Page 612

The bond issue authorized was $300,000 — $25,000 of which was to be apportioned to, and spent in each of the 9 townships of the county, and the remaining $75,000 was to be used in the retirement of Roxboro Township bonds which had been issued by virtue of ch. 449, Public-Local Laws 1915.

Sec. 7, ch. 74, aforesaid, authorizes the Central Highway Commission to "sue and be sued," to make contracts, to acquire property, to exercise such other rights and privileges as are incident to the powers conferred, to construct, improve, and maintain the public roads of the county, buy, or rent teams, machinery and implements as may be necessary, and have all other rights and powers "for control and management" as were then vested in the county commissioners of Person County, and made it the duty of the Central Highway Commission to make general rules and regulations for layingout, constructing, altering, repairing, and building public roads in the several townships by the township highway commissioners; and that the latter shall, under the general rules and regulations prescribed by the Central Highway Commission, have charge of and management of the layingout, constructing, altering, repairing, and building of the public roads of the several townships of Person County. Provided all roads shall be laid out and constructed under the supervision of a competent and expert road engineer acceptable to the Central Highway Commission.

It was admitted at the hearing that the defendant, the Central Highway Commission, had not made and promulgated general rules and regulations for laying out public roads, as prescribed in sec. 7, but had themselves laid out and begun the construction of public roads in the several townships, paying for same out of the funds apportioned to each township without having consulted the township highway commissioners. In the fall of 1919 the Central Highway Commission laid out the Chub Lake Road running through the southwestern portion of Woodsdale Township, and in April, 1920, began the building of said road, to be paid for out of the $25,000 allotted to Woodsdale Township. The highway commissioners of said township protested in the fall of 1919 against the construction of the Chub Lake Road, but the Central Highway Commission began its construction in April, 1920. The Woodsdale Township highway commissioners, at a regular meeting in the spring of 1920, designated by resolution the road which they desired constructed in that township, and notified the Central Commission, which, however, ignored such resolution and began the construction of the said Lake Road.

The road designated by the township highway commission runs east and west from Daysville on the central highway to Woodsdale on the Norfolk Western Railroad in the center of said township, a distance of nearly three miles, and thence northwestwardly to Cunningham, *Page 613 through the center of the township and connecting with the central highway and said railroad station. The said central highway runs north and south through the central part of Person County. On said central highway, near where it intersects with this road, is the $40,000 high school building.

[EDITORS' NOTE: THE MAP IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.], SEE 172 N.C. 613.]

It is alleged that 80 per cent of the people of Woodsdale Township petitioned that the road be laid out as above stated, which runs through a section thickly populated by small farmers. Person County is rectangular in shape, having 9 townships — 3 in the southern part, 3 in the center, and 3 in the northern part. The Norfolk Western Railroad runs north and south through the center of the county. Helena *Page 614 is a railroad station in the southern part of the county, and used by the people of the three lower townships. Roxboro is railroad station used by the people of the three central townships, and Woodsdale is the railroad station used by the people in three northern townships — Holloway, Woodsdale, and Cunningham. The three said railroad stations thus each serve the three said sections of the county, and the road selected by the highway commissioners of Woodsdale will be used by the people of each of the three northern townships in going to the railroad station connecting with the central highway and the high school.

It is alleged that the Central Highway Commission is undertaking to have all the roads radiate from Roxboro in preference to the roads running east and west. This, it seems, will isolate the northern and southern parts of the county from their railroad stations, and force the business to Roxboro, and will seriously hamper also the convenience of the schools. There are other objections made to the alleged greater expense and inconvenience of selecting the Chub Lake Road, which the Central Highway Commission has designated to be built out of the $25,000 appropriated to Woodsdale Township.

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Bluebook (online)
103 S.E. 744, 179 N.C. 610, 1920 N.C. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/highway-commission-v-central-commission-nc-1920.