Lauderdale County v. Kittel

229 F. 593, 143 C.C.A. 615, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1582
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 11, 1916
DocketNo. 2803
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 229 F. 593 (Lauderdale County v. Kittel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lauderdale County v. Kittel, 229 F. 593, 143 C.C.A. 615, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1582 (5th Cir. 1916).

Opinion

GRUBB, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above).

[1] The question which presents itself on the threshold is the liability of the defendant to be sued on the contract of the road commissioners of district No. 1. The first and fifty-sixth assignments of error present the question. The contention of the plaintiff in error, in that respect, is that the act of the Legislature of Mississippi, authorizing the creation of road districts in the various counties of the state, and authorizing the commissioners of such districts, when created, to contract for the building of roads in such districts, should be construed as having the effect of creating the districts, when organized, municipal corporations, which were separate legal entities from the counties in which they existed, and alone responsible for and suable on the engagements entered into by them. The defendant in error’s opposing contention is that the effect of the act was merely to provide administrative agencies of the existing county governments, through the creation of the road districts, through which the work of road building in the counties could be subdivided into smaller units, and more conveniently and efficiently accomplished, than by the general officers of the county, such general officers being required to retain the supervision of the work and the expenditure of funds in the various districts and of the commissioners in their management thereof, and that the road districts provided for by the act were not separate corporate entities, were not subject to be sued as such on the contracts made by tlieir commissioners; that such contracts were the .engagements of the counties, whose representatives the commissioners were; and that the counties were alone suable thereon.

The act of the Legislature of Mississippi, authorizing the creation of road districts and the appointment of road commissioners for them, was approved March 3, 1910, and is known as chapter 149 of the Laws.of Mississippi of 1910. It was amended by an act approved March 11, 1912, and known as “chapter 145 of the Laws of Mississippi of 1912.” The record shows that district No. 1, Lauderdale [598]*598county, was legally organized under these acts, and that the contract sued on was entered into by road commissioners of that district with the defendant in error.

We have reached the'conclusion that the suit was properly instituted against the county of Lauderdale as defendant. The title of the original act, viz., “An act authorizing the board of supervisors to construct and maintain public roads in any one or more supervisors’ districts of the various counties of the state; to issue bonds and levy taxes for that purpose; and providing for the manner in which said roads shall be constructed and maintained; and how bonds shall be issued and taxes levied for that purpose,” clearly indicates that the board of supervisors of the counties, and not the road commissioners of the districts, were regarded by the Legislature as the body intrusted with the ultimate duty of road construction and maintenance in the districts created by if. The caption of section 1 of the act is also persuasive of the idea that the Legislature intended to place on the supervisors, as representing their counties, the duty of road construction, and the caption of this section in the amended act is consistent with this idea. The former is “Board of Supervisors Authorized to Construct Highways and Provide Funds Therefor;” that of the amended act, “Public Highways — How Counties may Construct the Same.” The section itself imposes the duty of the construction. and maintenance- of highways, and the issuance and sale of bonds therefor, and the levy of taxes to pay the bonds issued, and to maintain the roads constructed, on the supervisors of the county. Section 5 provides for the appointment of road commissioners by the county board of supervisors and their duties. Their duties are defined to be:

“To have the management and supervision of the construction and maintenance of the roads built under the provisions of this act, subject to the approval of the board of supervisors; and for their services shall be paid their actual expenses, not exceeding fifty dollars each, per annum; and it shall be the duty of such commissioners, subject to the approval of the board of supervisors, to determine and fix what road or roads shall be constructed and maintained in such district or districts out of the proceeds of the sale of such bonds and the levy of such taxes; and it shall be their duty to let all contracts for the construction and maintenance of such roads in the manner now provided by law-for the letting of contracts for public work by the board of supervisors; and it shall be their duty to employ a competent engineer to survey and lay out such road or roads in such district or districts, as they shall determine upon.”

The section then proceeds to define the duties of the engineer so selected and to provide that his estimate and survey shall be adopted or rejected by the commissioners, and their action spread upon their minutes, and that all acts done by the commissioners shall be subject to ratification or rejection by the board of supervisors.

The character of the duties imposed on tire commissioner, and the requirement that in the performance of them they are subject to the approval of the supervisors, clearly demonstrates that the purpose of the Legislature was merely to create a subordinate administrative agency to relieve the supervisors of the direct management and supervision of road construction and maintenance in the road [599]*599districts, just as might have been done by tbe appointment of an individual road supervisor in each district. The purpose of the division of the county into road districts, the bonds of which were to be issued to provide for the construction of roads in each district, and to be paid by the levy of taxes on the property in each district, was to geographically distribute the burden according to the special benefits and to reduce the size of the unit, so that the management and supervision might be the more effective. The ultimate control in all matters was retained in the county through its supervisors. The letting of all contracts, the employment of the engineer, the determination of the particular roads to be built, and the approval or rejection of the engineer’s survey and estimates were all administrative details, not beyond the authority of an employed superintendent, in view of the fact that they were all subject to the approval or rejection of the board of supervisors. The contracts of the commissioners were of no force till approved by the county supervisors, and they then became the contracts of the counties.

The bonds are expressly required by the act to be executed by the president of the board of supervisors, and countersigned by the clerk of that board, and to bear the impress of the seal of the county. They are the bonds of the county, though issued for the account of a particular road district, the property in which is primarily liable for their payment. The county, however, is the obligor, and would be the proper party defendant in an action to enforce them. It is true that the proceeds of bonds sold and the taxes levied are directed to be kept as a separate fund by the county treasurer, whose bond is made liable for their safe-keeping; but this is made necessary, since the bonds are payable primarily out of the fund derived from taxes collected on the property in each road district, and the proceeds of the bonds are to be used exclusively for the construction of roads in that district.

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Bluebook (online)
229 F. 593, 143 C.C.A. 615, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lauderdale-county-v-kittel-ca5-1916.