Massey v. Arkansas & Missouri Highway District

259 S.W. 387, 163 Ark. 63, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 258
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 3, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 259 S.W. 387 (Massey v. Arkansas & Missouri Highway District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Massey v. Arkansas & Missouri Highway District, 259 S.W. 387, 163 Ark. 63, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 258 (Ark. 1924).

Opinions

McCulloch, C. J.

There are before us two separate actions involving the same subject-matter, namely, an attack on the validity of a statute authorizing the improvement of a public road in Pulaski County, and also an attack on the assessment of benefits and other proceedings of the board of commissioners. The two cases are consolidated here, and both will be disposed of in this opinion.

The Arkansas & Missouri Highway District in Pulaski County was created by act No. 82 of the General Assembly of 1919, and its validity was upheld by this court in the case of Van Dyke v. Mack, 139 Ark. 524. That statute authorized the selection of the route of the road by the commissioners of the district, 'and the road selected by the commissioners runs from the north end of Main Street, in the city of North Little Rock, in a general northeasterly direction, to the Lonoke County line. Another part of the route was selected along East Third Street, in the city of North Little Rock, running from what is known as the Galloway Pike eastward to Main Street. Later, in the same session of the General Assembly, act No. 128 was passed, authorizing the addition of another route, known as the Jacksonville lateral and running east from Main Street in North Little Rock at Thirteenth Street, out that street, in an easterly direction to the city limits, and thence to Booker, on the line of the railroad, thence to Jacksonville, and thence northeast along ■a specified route to a junction with the other route selected by the board of commissioners, known as the main line.

During the extraordinary session of 1920 the General Assembly passed separate statutes authorizing the construction of certain laterals, designated, respectively, as the Tate’s Mill lateral, the East Ninth Street lateral, and another lateral, but all of these last mentioned were stricken down as invalid under the decision of this court in the case of White v. Arkansas & Missouri Highway District, 147 Ark. 160.

It appears from the proof in this case that, under the original statute creating the district and under act No. 128 of the General Assembly of 1919, supra, there was ■constructed the improvement of Third Street by hard-surface pavement, and about one and a half or two miles of hard-surface pavement of the main line running northward from the north end of Main Street, in North Little Eock, and the grading of the remainder of the road and the construction of bridges, and also the paving of Thirteenth Street inside the city limits a distance of only a few blocks, and the grading of a portion of the remainder of that road to Jacksonville. Assessments of benefits were levied for the construction of those projects, and bonds were issued, which are still outstanding. After the decision holding invalid the statutes of the extraordinary session of 1920, referred to above, the work was stopped altogether, for the want of funds, and the statute which is now under consideration was enacted by the General Assembly of 1923 (Special Acts 1923, p. 380), purporting to amend the original act No. 82 creating the district, and authorizing the inclusion into the district and improvement of another road described in § 5 of the statute, which reads as follows:

. “The board of commissioners shall lay out and construct a road running from a point on the highway built by the North Little Eock & Galloway Highway District, at or near what is known as Prothro’s Gin, where the present Jacksonville road intersects the said Galloway Pike, to a point on the Jacksonville lateral road, as may be selected by the 'commissioners, and via Booker, MeAlmont and Jacksonville, to the Lonoke County line, said road to have an eighteen-foot paved surface of asphalt or concrete, as the commissioners may deem best, and, if asphalt type road is used, it shall have a concrete header on either side to prevent spreading’, and all quarter sections of land north of the Arkansas River, where any part of same is within five miles of said road as planned, shall be added to and included in the district, if not now included in the district.” The caption of the statute is “An act to amend act Number 82 of the Acts of 1919.”

The first section of the statute removes the old members of the commission, increases the number to five, and designates the new members by name, prescribes the salary and the method by which vacancies may be filled from time to time. Another section directs the commissioners to make application for'State and Federal aid, which had already been allotted and uncollected bn the portion of the road to be improved under the prior statutes. Another section authorizes the commissioners to remove the assessors at will and select a successor.

Section 13 of the statute reads as follows:

“The board of commissioners, at the time an assessment of benefits is filed, or at any subsequent time, shall make an order, which shall be filed with the county clerk, which shall have all the force of judgment, provided there shall be assessed upon the real property of the district a tax sufficient to pay the estimated cost of the improvement, with ten per cent, added for unforeseen contingencies, which tax is to be paid by the real property in the district in the proportion to the amount of the assessment of. benefits thereon, which is to be paid in annual installments, payable not to exceed four per cent, for any one-year, as may be provided in such order. The tax so levied shall be a lien upon all the real property in the district from the time the same is filed with the county clerk, -and shall be entitled to preference over all demands, executions, incumbrances or liens whatsoever created, and shall continue until such -assessment, with any penalties and costs that may accrue thereon, shall have been paid. The remedy against such assessment of taxes shall be by appeal, and such appeal must be taken within twenty days from the time that said assessment has been filed with the county clerk, and, on such appeal, the presumption shall be in favor of the legality of the tax. Any owner of real property in the district may, by mandamus, compel compliance by the board of commissioners with the terms of this section. Provided, that the levy or levies on the assessment of benefits as herein provided for shall in no case exceed the total assessed benefits and interest thereon.”

Section 14 places a restriction upon the percentage of expenditures for expenses of engineers, attorneys’ fees, and incidental expenses. Other sections referred to the laterals mentioned in former statutes relating to this district..

The board of commissioners authorized under the statute last referred to proceeded to carry out the terms of the statute by forming plans for improving the road from Prothro’s Gin, on the Galloway Pike, to the Lonoke County line. They appointed an assessor, who .proceeded to make an assessment of benefits, which was reported to the commissioners and filed with the clerk of the county court, and, after hearing protests, the taxes were levied on these assessments of benefits, payable in annual installments of five per centum of the cost of the improvement, including ten per centum added for unforeseen contingencies.

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482 S.W.2d 785 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1972)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
259 S.W. 387, 163 Ark. 63, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/massey-v-arkansas-missouri-highway-district-ark-1924.