Scott v. Board of Commissioners

87 S.E. 104, 170 N.C. 327, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 395
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 8, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 87 S.E. 104 (Scott v. Board of Commissioners) 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
Scott v. Board of Commissioners, 87 S.E. 104, 170 N.C. 327, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 395 (N.C. 1915).

Opinion

Hoke, J.

The public road law of Cabarrus County, Laws 1907, ch. 201, sees. 14 and 15, contains provision, among other things, that the superintendent of roads shall have power to locate, relocate, widen or otherwise change any public road, or parts of same, in the county, or lay out and establish a new public road, whenever such location, change, etc., shall be considered necessary and advantageous to public travel, etc., but before doing so he is required to file a petition before the board of commissioners stating the proposed changes, with a map, the estimated costs, number of culverts, bridges, etc. The superintendent is also required to notify the interested landowners, etc. If the proposed change is ordered, the same shall amount to a condemnation, etc., and the superintendent shall proceed to construct the road pursuant to the plan as approved and ordered. In reference to the right of appeal, sec. 15 *328 makes provision: “That any landowner interested may appeal to tbe Superior Court for a trial de novo, on giving a bond for costs,” but “tbe taking of said appeal shall not delay tbe changing, locating or relocating of any public road or tbe discontinuing or abandoning of any public road, according to tbe terms of tbe order made therein by tbe said board of commissioners, unless tbe same be -reversed by tbe trial in tbe Superior Court”’ Tbe statute also makes ample provision for compensation to any landowner injured by tbe proposed changes. In tbe present case, tbe commissioners having made an order for tbe proposed location, plaintiffs appealed and filed in tbe Superior Court their verified complaint, used on tbe bearing as their affidavit and evidence, and in which they specify tbe reasons why tbe restraining order should be continued to tbe bearing, as follows:

“(a) Because tbe line or route recommended by J. M. Burr age, superintendent of roads, at March meeting of tbe board of commissioners, is such a change as is not “necessary and advantageous to public travel” as provided by chapter 201, Public Laws of North Carolina, 1907, tbe same being about 15 feet shorter than the present road¿ and said road will be much more expensive to tbe county to build and will greatly damage said landowners, Emma E. Scott and husband, A. J. Scott.

“(b) Because tbe plan and purpose of said superintendent of roads to erect a fill 40 feet wide and 7 to 10 feet high across tbe bottom lands of Emma E. Scott and husband, A. J. Scott, and to leave an opening of about 110 feet, will cause tbe water of said creek to be dammed and flooded over tbe 25 acres of their land upon which they have been assessed $20 per acre by drainage district, to their great injury and damage.

“(c) Because tbe said change of road and said embankment will -cut off from their pasture a branch of water that has been used for more than twenty years to water their cattle, and this damage and deprivation of tbe use of their branch water could be entirely avoided if tbe road be not changed.

“(d) Because said plan and change of tbe road, as laid out, calls for a cut 8 feet deep within less than 50 feet of tbe plaintiffs’ residence and will cause tbe destruction of a number of fine elm trees in their yard.

“(e) Because said road will take about 4 acres of their best land, which has been improved at great expense, and will cut off a narrow strip of land between said road and tbe dower tract and present road. Said strip will be so narrow as to be almost worthless to them.”

Tbe commissioners, in their verified answer, also used as an affidavit, give a detailed statement of tbe proceedings, and, among other things, make averment as follows:

“That tbe public road in controversy in this proceeding is one of tbe public roads leading out from tbe city of Concord, tbe county-seat of *329 Cabarrus County, and is a coutiuuatiou of East Depot Street from tbe corporate limits, and is known as tbe new Salisbury road. Tbat said public road runs tbrougb one of tbe best and most tbickly settled sections of Cabarrus County, and tbe citizens wbo live in tbat part of tbe county bave no other public road leading from said sections except tbe road in controversy, tbe said road having been a public road, much used since tbe town of Concord was established. On account of tbe many bills, springs and boggy places in tbe old road, it becomes very bad and almost impassable in bad weather, and tbe rural mail carriers and traffic and the citizens and general public, wbo are forced to use this road in coming to and returning from market, and for other purposes, bave for a long time complained of tbe bad condition of this road and bave repeatedly demanded of tbe county to change and improve it; and in order to get tbe best results for tbe public money necessary to build a permanent road, and one which will be tbe greatest good to tbe greatest number, with tbe minimum inconvenience and least damage to tbe lands of those over which tbe changes in tbe proposed road are to run, tbe authorities of tbe county, after mature consideration, adopted tbe line surveyed over tbe lands claimed by plaintiffs, and defendants now believe tbe changes proposed and adopted by them are tbe ones tbat should be carried to completion as speedily as possible for tbe convenience of tbe general public.

“Tbat tbe portion of said road which it is proposed to change, and which plaintiffs oppose and seek to enjoin, is partly across a low, boggy bottom, and a branch flows along tbe old road a greater part of tbe distance across said bottom, which is overflowed by Big Cold Water Creek whenever ,it overflows its" banks, and tbe other part is' a long, steep bill with a number of wet and springy places in same, thus constituting one of tbe worst sections of public road in Cabarrus County, and on account of tbe topography and physical condition of tbe land in which this section of tbe road lies, makes tbe proposed change absolutely necessary and very advantageous to public travel; it being impossible to make a good road across tbe said low or bottom land without making a fill several feet high, and it is impracticable to build said fill in tbe old road because of tbe branch which runs along for some nine hundred feet across said bottom, and tbe wet, springy places at other points along said old road and tbe dirt necessary to make a proper fill across said bottom cannot be gotten by following tbe said road up said bill without hauling said dirt for a long distance and necessitating,making a cut several feet deeper than tbe one about eighteen inches deep contemplated by defendants in front of tbe bouse where plaintiffs reside; and, besides, tbe proposed change is shorter and more direct, affording a better grade and drain to tbe roadbed at much less cost and expense to tbe county than to make a road where the old road runs; and, when completed, will be *330 well drained and rnncb more desirable and advantageous to tbe public travel, and a more permanent roadbed, and less expensive to keep in good condition tban to build tbe road along tbe old roadbed or in another place.”

Tbe affidavit of tbe commissioners contains further and elaborate statement of tbe conditions making it impossible to use or improve tbe old road to advantage, and further, that large sums of money have been already spent in preparing tbe present road for use and necessary bridges built at great expense, and that if this road and its use.

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Related

SOUTHERN RAILWAY COMPANY v. City of Greensboro
101 S.E.2d 347 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 S.E. 104, 170 N.C. 327, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-board-of-commissioners-nc-1915.