Rayder v. Warrick

202 S.W. 831, 133 Ark. 491, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 257
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 15, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 202 S.W. 831 (Rayder v. Warrick) 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
Rayder v. Warrick, 202 S.W. 831, 133 Ark. 491, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 257 (Ark. 1918).

Opinion

HART, J.,

(after stating the facts). The road dis-' trict was established under Act 338 of the Acts of 1915. Acts of 1915, p. 1400. Section 16 of the act is relied upon by the commissioners to uphold the validity of the order of the county court authorizing the change from a gravel to an asphalt surface and also the changes in the route of the road. The section reads as follows:

“If the commissioners find it necessary and to the best interest of the district at any time before the improvements are made, to make any alteration or change in the plans and specifications, or the route of the road to be constructed, or that it is necessary to construct any additional laterals or extensions within the boundaries of the district not provided for in the original plans, or find that any road or roads in the course of construction should be extended in the additional territory not included in the original district, they shall have the engineer for ©aid district or the State Highway Engineer, as the case may be, to make plans and estimates of the cost of such changes, laterals or extensions.
“When the engineer has completed his report of same he shall file it with the board of commissioners, and the commissioners of said district shall file same in the office of the county clerk. Thereupon the county court shall direct the clerk to give public notice that such report has been filed and set out the changes suggested, and calling upon the land owners to appear in that court and show cause for or against said changes in the plans, route or the construction of any laterals or extension as the case may be at .a date not earlier than five days after said notice shall have been given in a newspaper having a general weekly circulation for two consecutive insertions. If the county court finds at the hearing above provided for that it is to the best interest of the district to make any change or alteration, or construct any lateral road or to extend any road into adjoining territory, or to extend the boundaries of the district so as to include adjoining territory, it shall make an order extending the boundaries of the district approving the changes submitted or the construction of any lateral road or extension as the case may be, and from the finding of the county court thereupon appeals may be taken by complying with section 14 of this act.”

If the broad construction sought to be placed upon section 16 by the commissioners in regard to the alteration of the plans and specifications and route of the road to be constructed should prevail, it is at once obvious that the section is in conflict with section 1 of the act or ,at least that the two sections would be inconsistent with each other.

Subsection (A) of the first section provides for the circulation of the petition among the land owners and for the filing of a plat with the petition upon which the boundaries of the proposed district shall be plainly indicated showing the road which it is intended to construct and the improvement as nearly as practicable.

(1) Subsection (B) of section 1 provides that the State Highway Engineer.or his assistants shall prepare preliminary surveys, plans, specifications and estimates of the road which it is proposed to construct and improve in the district and file them in the county court for the purpose of determining the feasibility of any road improvement and the cost thereof before the petitions mentioned in subdivision (A) are circulated. This section came up for construction in the case of Lamberson v. Collins, 123 Ark. 205. With the view of arriving at the true meaning of each of these subdivisions and to harmonize them, with each. other, to meet the intention of the Legislature, the court held that in the formation of a district under the act, it was necessary that the provisions of subdivision (B) of section 1 be followed as well as the provisions of subdivision (A) of the section. It was said that the law-makers intended to provide for a source of information as to the magnitude and cost of the improvement before the property owners were called upon to exercise their choice, either favoring or opposing it. If the broad meaning now sought to be given to section 16 by the commissioners should be adopted, it will be readily seen that such construction would make it inconsistent with the construction we have already placed upon section 1 of the act and would be to hold that the Legislature did a vain and idle thing in declaring in section 1 that certain things must be done as a prerequisite for the valid organization of the district which could be undone by the commissioners under the power given them by section 16. In other words it will be inconsistent to hold that the provisions of section 1 in regard to the preliminary survey, plans, specifications and estimates of the proposed road must be made as a prerequisite to the validity of the proposed district and then to hold that under section 16 the commissioners might alter the plans, specifications, estimates and survey, in such a manner as to construct an entirely different kind of road on a wholly different route. As we have just seen one of the reasbns for holding the requirements; of subdivision (B) of section 1 mandatory was that this requirement was placed in the statute to enable the land owners, who are to be assessed for the cost of the improvement, to know in advance the nature and character thereof, and to enable them to act intelligently in determining whether or not they will encourage or oppose the improvement. The provisions of this section would not in any way safeguard the interests of the land owners if the commissioners could wholly change the plans and specifications so as to make an entirely different improvement and to construct it over an entirely different route. It has been many times .said by this court that it is .a primary rule in the interpretation and construction of statutes that the intention of the Legislature is to be ascertained and given •effect. In doing this, each section is to be read in the light of every other section, and also the object and purposes sought to be accomplished by the act are to be considered. Therefore courts should give effect to the intention of the Legislature as collected from the entire statute and that intention should prevail over inconsistencies between different sections or different parts of the same section when either a strict or liberal construction of the language of any particular section would lead to a contradiction between it and other sections.

(2) In the application of these cardinal rules of statutory construction, we are of the opinion that the decision of the chancellor was wrong. The change from a gravel road bed to an asphalt one was a radically different improvement from the one contemplated in the petition circulated among the land owners and from the one contemplated by the State Highway Department when it made its preliminary survey, plans, specifications and estimates under subdivision (B) of section 1. The commissioners also adopted a wholly different route from that at first contemplated. This they could not do. We think section 16 intended to give the commissioners the power to alter the plans and to change the route in order to better carry out the improvement as originally contemplated, but it does not authorize them to change the plan of the improvement to a wholly different one or construct it over a wholly different route.

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Bluebook (online)
202 S.W. 831, 133 Ark. 491, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rayder-v-warrick-ark-1918.