State Ex Rel. Winkler v. County Court

148 S.E. 674, 105 W. Va. 589, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 112
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1928
Docket6268
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 148 S.E. 674 (State Ex Rel. Winkler v. County Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Winkler v. County Court, 148 S.E. 674, 105 W. Va. 589, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 112 (W. Va. 1928).

Opinion

Woods, Judge:

The county court of Kanawha county in an order bearing date August 3, 1927, calling a special election in Jefferson district for the purpose of issuing bond® in the sum of $220,000.00 for the construction of roads, as prayed for in a petition by a requisite number of voters of said district, in pursuance with the nominations contained therein of certain citizens and tax-payers of said district as the members of, and to constitute, a committee on bghalf of the citizens and tax-payers “to act in conjunction with said county court in the selection of the kind of hard surface .to be used in the construction of the road”, incorporated the following: “It is therefore ordered that C. C. Delaney, Ned Winkler, George Wisman, J. W. Leonard and C. H. ZerkLe, be and they are hereby appointed a committee to act in conjunction with this Court in the selection of the kind of hard surface to be used as aforesaid.” This order, as well as the petition, specified *591 three different types of hard surface for use in the building of the road, to-wit: “concrete road of Portland cement”, “Telford base with Bermudez asphalt surface, and ‘napped base’ with Bermudez asphalt surface”. The bond issue carried and the result was declared in the manner prescribed by law, and, still later, the bonds were duly issued and sold and the proceeds thereof came into the hands of the county court, to be expended in the construction of roads in said Jefferson district. The county engineer upon direction of the county court prepared and filed specifications' including and providing for each of the three kinds of hard surface. These specifications were approved.

In February of this year the county court issued and published its call for bids for the work, describing the road as “Project No. 193, grading, draining and paving of 4.55 miles of the Coal River Road, from St. Albans up Coal River to the intersection of the Tornado and Falls Creek road. Certified check $9,000.00.”

Under that call, K. E. Reed & Company, a corporation, was the lowest bidder for cement construction, at $150,816.12, and G. T. Fogle & Company, a corporation, was the lowest bidder for napped stone base with asphaltic concrete surface type of construction, at $148,442.50. The County Court stood unanimously for acceptance of K. E. Reed & Company’s bid for concrete construction, and the committee representing the taxpayers for the bid of G. T. Fogle & Company for the napped stone base construction. The bids were received and opened on March 20, 1928. Being unable to agree, the county court advised the committee that the awarding of the contract would be postponed until March 23rd. On that date, the Court sat again and the members of the committee met with it. A large number of the .tax-payers of the district appeared, and the court insisted on a private meeting in the county engineer’s office. An order was entered reciting that while “the committee explained to the court that the great concensus of opinion in said Jefferson district favored as-phaltic concrete”, the court adjourned further consideration of the contract, until April 5th, “that the people of said dis *592 trict may give the matter further consideration before final decision. ’ ’

On April 5th. the court and committee again met. The court was unanimous for concrete and the committee in favor of asphaltic concrete road. Thei members of the committee after a discussion, expressed themselves, two. being in favor of napped stone base, and the others the Telford base. Then the court announced that, as there was a difference in this respect between the members of the committee it did unanimously award the contract for concrete construction to K. E. Reed & Company. The committee protested, and announced that, if the court should carry said award into effect, it would take legal steps to prevent it. Then the court retired from the court room and later re-appeared and announced, through its counsel, that further consideration of the matter would be postponed until 2:00 P. M. of that day. Before adjournment, however, the members of the committee, in open court requested that they be then permitted again to vote upon their choice of the type of construction, and, such permission being granted, they unanimously voted in favor of napped stone base with asphaltic concrete top. When the court reconvened that day, the committee was notified .that, unless they would recede from their position, change their vote, and vote with the court, the court would reject all the bids received for said road on. March 20th. The committee refusing to vote with the court, the court again appeared and caused to be read .an order, reciting that a dead-lock between the court and the committee had occurred, and declaring all bids received for said road to be “Automatically rejected”. Thereupon the committee objected to said action of the court, and again voted in open court unanimously in favor of asphaltic concrete construction, and moved the court to award the contract to the lowest bidder for this type of construction. On that motion, the court voted in the negative and the committee objected and excepted. On the 13th day of April, the court held another session for consideration of the subject, attended by the committee, and both the court and the committee adhered to their respective positions and nothing was done and no order was entered.

*593 This was the status of the case when mandamus was sought in this Court against the county court of Kanawha county, and' the members thereof, to compel them to proceed with the construction of said road in conformity with ■ the terms and conditions of the petition, order of submission.' to the voters of said district, and authorization by the voters1 at said election, of the issuance of bonds thereunder, andf-to that end concur with the petitioners (the committee duly appointed to represent the tax-payers and citizens of the said district) in.the selection by said committee, of the kimUqf hard surface to be adopted and used in the construction of said road. Upon the filing of such petition an alternative writ was awarded. The return of the county court made the issue here.

The case turns upon the question of the power vested -ill the committee. In eases where the authorization of an issue of bonds, by a municipality is sought for public improvements, we have held that there may be annexed to the giant of such money for the purpose, measures not inconsistent with the law nor transgressive of any principle of public policy, limiting the discretion and powers of the county court,-or other municipal authority, seeking assent to such bond issúé, as to any such matters, or providing for representation by the tax-payers in the administration and use of the money. Lawson v. County Court, 80 W. Va. 612. In the principál case there was a provision in the order of the county court submitting to the voters of a magisterial district a bond issiie proposition for a public road improvement, for the appointment of an advisory committee and requiring that the platíS and specifications and the contracts for the construction of the work to be such as were approved by such advisory committee. The order contained the further provision that the work should not be paid for until inspected and approved by said advisory committee.

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.E. 674, 105 W. Va. 589, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-winkler-v-county-court-wva-1928.