Rode v. State Highway Commission

225 N.W. 801, 58 N.D. 249, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 202
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 225 N.W. 801 (Rode v. State Highway Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rode v. State Highway Commission, 225 N.W. 801, 58 N.D. 249, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 202 (N.D. 1929).

Opinion

BueR, J.

The plaintiffs seek to enjoin the state highway commission and the board of county commissioners of Ward county from proceeding with the construction of a certain highway. The trial court decided that under the facts in this case if the state highway commission intends to construct the highway and charge Ward county with a part of the cost of construction and board of county commissioners •of Ward county intends to provide county funds for the building and' improvement of the highway in question, so that any part of the improvement would be charged to Ward county the defendants should be enjoined; but if the state highway commission intends to construct the highway without expense to Ward county then no injunction should issue, and an order in conformity with this decision was made.

. The plaintiffs appeal from that part of the order of the trial court refusing to enjoin the state highway commission if no expense should be charged to Ward county; and the defendant state highway commission appeals from the order allowing injunction in case a portion of the expense was to be charged to Ward county.

The case involves the construction of chapter 159 of the Session Laws of 1927 relative to the powers and duties of the department of state highways and the county commissioners of the counties of the state in the matter of state highways.

The facts are practically undisputed. As early as 1927 the state highway commission, in planning a state highway system under the laws then in existence, blazed state highway No. 23 known as the Parks Highway, beginning at the Eed Eiver opposite Iialstad in Minnesota and running in a westerly and slightly northwesterly direction across the state and through the southern portions of Ward and Mountrail counties. In November 1927 the board of county commissioners of *252 Ward county, under tbe provisions of § 22 of this law made written application, to the department for the “improvement and construction under the conditions of such act,” of that portion of the highway which would.run through the southern part of Ward county'and described, as the portion to he improved, the strip beginning at a point where highway"'23 intersects highway 6 and running due west to the village of Ryder and westward to the Mountrail county line in said AVard county, or as the complaint states:

“Being’ more particularly described as commencing at the point where sections 3 and 4-, 9 and 10, of township 151, range 83, in said AAhird county, meet, thence due west 'on the section line to the point where sections 3 and 4, 9 an“d 10 of township 151, range 87, in said AVard county, meet, thence due north on the section line, two miles to the point where sections 27 and 28,'33 and 34 in township 152, range 87 in said AA^ard county, meet, thence due west on the section liney two miles to the Mountrail county line. . .

' It appears that in the year previous the board of county commissioners had made a similar request to the'state highway commission as then constituted and to the 'United States Bureau of Public Works and both these departments had approved this route as designated. The board of county commissioners spent some money in surveying the highway,' securing the right of way, etc. and practically hád complied with the requirements then in force. In April 1928 the Department of state highways made certain changes in state highway 23 so it would pass through the southern part of AA^ard county and, instead of having the route begin at the point on highway 6 originally intended, relocated and redesignated it as beginning at a point about 8 miles north therefrom, then due west through the county of AVard to that point west of Plaza in Mountrail county which would be due north from the town of Parshall, in Mountrail county. At the time the department decided to redesignate and relocate this portion of highway 23 the county commissioners of Ward county had not requested the change nor consented to it. Neither had the department in its departmental budget or construction program for the year 1928 made provision for the construction of this portion of highway 23 as redesignated, but had made provision and included in the proposed construction work that portion previously designated. In April 1928 the board of county *253 commissioners of Ward county adopted a resolution Exbibit “B” requesting tbe department of state highways to “proceed with the preparation of surveys, plans, specifications and estimates required for the following described state highway improvement:- The local-name of road 23. . . . Beginning at NE corner of Sec. 4-152-83, Due West 18 miles. Ending at NW corner of sec. 3-152-86.”

The resolution requested the department to take all necessary steps in co-operation with the United States in order to obtain federal aid, requested the state highway commission to appropriate a sufficient amount of state aid to pay for 25 per cent of the road, and agreed that Ward county would pay 25 per cent of the total cost of construction. This resolution was recommended for approval by A. D. McKinnon, project engineer, and was approved by the State highway commission on June 21, 1928. Earlier in April of the same year the board of county commissioners of Ward county had adopted a -resolution-to the effect that the board had been informed the state highway commission had designated as part of highway 23 that strip beginning in township 151, range 83 and running due west or-westerly through Kyder, and to the western boundary of Ward county and that the department of state highways had now designated “as a state highway No. 23 to begin at the northeast corner of section 4, township 152, range 83 running due west to the southwest corner of section 31, township 153, range 81” and that the board approved of this new designation, “provided however, that the state highway commission will .designate the road first mentioned on this resolution, or the road through the village of Douglas.” Just how this route running through the village of Douglas would affect the relocation is difficult to see because it was not on the original location.

Section 9 of the Act requires the department to make a statement of the estimated cost of the portion of the highway to be constructed and provides how the.state highway commission shall “proceed to advertise for bids for contracts at such time as it may elect, and in the manner and for the purposes hereinafter provided.” In this case the Commission advertised for bids for the construction of-the portion of the highvfay as relocated and redesignated, and this resolution of approval, made by the county commissioners, was adopted between the elate of the last publication and the day for opening the bids. It is *254 admitted by the defendants that the state highway commission proceeded to advertise for bids for the construction of the highway as relocated without first consulting the county commissioners or submitting any estimated statement of cost; but before the resolution was adopted the commission had presented to the board the statement of the estimated cost.. It is not contended that the cost of construction of this portion of the highway 23 in dispute will, together with other construction work included in the construction program of the department of state highways, exceed “the total estimated income or allowance granted or set aside for construction purposes in the departmental budget.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Great Northern Railway Co. v. McDonnell
45 N.W.2d 721 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1950)
Holloway v. Purcell
217 P.2d 665 (California Supreme Court, 1950)
Board of County Com'rs v. State Highway Commission
1936 OK 195 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 N.W. 801, 58 N.D. 249, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rode-v-state-highway-commission-nd-1929.