State Ex Rel. Yost v. State Road Commission

122 S.E. 527, 96 W. Va. 184, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 80
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 122 S.E. 527 (State Ex Rel. Yost v. State Road Commission) 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. Yost v. State Road Commission, 122 S.E. 527, 96 W. Va. 184, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 80 (W. Va. 1924).

Opinion

Litz, Judge:

L. N. Yost, C. G. Conaway and D. P. Fitch, residents, citizens and tax payers of Fairmont District, Marion county, seek by mandamus the compelling of the State Road Commission of West Virginia, C. P. Fortney, Chairman, and E. B. Stephenson and C. E. Hiner, members thereof, to repair the floor of a certain bridge or viaduct called “West End Bridge”, on the “Country Club Road” heretofore accepted and designated by the State Road Commission as “Project No. 2131” of the State Road system in that county and district.

Chapter 112, Acts 1921, (Chapter 43, Code 1923), creating the State road commission of West Virginia and providing for the establishment of a State road system, in Section 1, states:

“The purpose of this act is to enact in one comprehensive statute a complete system of laws for this State governing the construction, reconstruction, maintenance and repair .of all roads, ways and bridges, and the regulation of traffic thereon; to define and classify public roads and provide for a State system of roads connecting at least the various county seats of the State and with the leading highways of adjacent'States; * * * to create a State road commission; * * * to provide for the taking over by the commission from the counties, towns and cities (having a population of less than twenty-five hundred persons) of roads and routes constituting a part of the State road system, cmd relieving such political svib-divisions of any further obligation and expense to improve and maintain the same, and from further authority over them.”

Section 4 of the statute divides public roads into two classes:

(1) “State Roads”, which shall include all roads taken over for construction or maintenance by the State road commission pursuant to the provisions of the act.

*186 (2) “County-district roads”, which shall include all other public roads except streets and other public ways in incorporated towns and cities.

Section 5 creates “The State Road Commission of West Virginia” as a body corporate, which may sue and be sued, plead and be impleaded, contract and be contracted with.

Section 11 vests authority and control over the construction, maintenance and regulation of all public roads within the State in the State road commission, and in the several county courts, respectively, to the extent and under the provisions and regulations prescribed in the act; and, except as otherwise provided, it gives to the State road commission superintendence and administration of the construction, reconstruction, maintenance and repair of State roads, and to the county courts a like authority over county-district roads.

Section 16 requires the State road commission, as soon as may be after the act becomes effective, to locate, establish, construct and maintain a system of State roads and highways connecting at least the various county seats of the State and with important roads of adjoining States. This section also provides that any portion or section of the State road system, prior to its being taken over by the commission, shall be known and designated as a “State route”.

Under Section 20, when funds are available for the purpose, the commission is required, by order entered of record, to take over and assume charge of the further construction, reconstruction, and maintenance of all roads, or sections of roads on the State routes in the several counties, (except roads within incorporated' towns having a population of more than twenty-five hundred persons other than the national road through the city of Wheeling), which have been improved with a hard surface, and which, in the opinion of the commission, shall have been constructed and maintained in accordance with approved methods, or in accordance with recognized standard plans and specifications. Certified copies of such orders shall be delivered by the commission to the clerks of the county, courts of the several counties in which the respective roads or sections of roads to be taken over lie, and be by the latter recorded in the road record book of their offices.

*187 By Section 21 tbe State road commission is empowered and directed to construct, reconstruct, maintain and repair at the cost and expense of the State the roads forming the State road system in tbe several counties of tbe State as soon as it shall have taken over such roads. And in tbe construction and maintenance of tbe roads constituting parts of tbe State road system, the commission is given, iff addition to tbe powers expressly granted by tbe act, all tbe rights and powers conferred by law on county courts in tbe construction and maintenance of county-district roads.

Section 64 provides: “Tbe county courts of tbe several counties in tbe State shall continue in charge of tbe construction, improvement and maintenance of all roads heretofore known as Class A roads located in their respective counties, and shall maintain them as county-district roads until such time as tbe State road commission shall, by order entered of record, take them over, either for construction, or maintenance, after which they shall he and remain under the exclusive authority and jurisdiction of the State road commission.”

Section 128 declares that tbe interest heretofore belonging to tbe State in any of the roads or bridges thereof and which heretofore by legislative enactment have been transferred to and vested in the various county courts of the State shall remain as vested, except as to State roads and highways which may be established, taken over or incorporated into the system of State roads and highways provided for in this act.

It is thus made manifest by various provisions of the statute that the powers conferred and duties imposed upon the State road commission- concerning roads taken over by it as parts of-' the State road system are as fixed and permanent as those governing county courts in relation to county-district roads.

The “Country Club Road” extends from the corporate limits of the city of Fairmont, Marion county, in a southerly direction 1.67 miles. About midway between its termini, where this road crosses an interurban railway line, another road, entering Fairmont by way of Locust Avenue, leads off. On the former road, about equally distant from its termi- *188 ñus at the city limits and the interurban crossing, is a bridge or viaduct, known as “West End Bridge”, by which the highway is carried over a deep ravine. This bridge is approximately 300 feet long and elevated about 70 feet at its highest point. It consists of a steel trestle, encased in concrete, with a floor sixteen feet wide, exclusive of a sidewalk on one side. The floor is constructed of a concrete slab four inches thick, reinforced with a single sheet of metal, the meshes of which are four inches square. It has required frequent repairs since being constructed, due to its inadequate strength for the heavy traffic carried.

In the year 1915 certain highways in Fairmont district, including the Country Club and Locust Avenue roads, were improved from' the proceeds of a district bond issue; the former road being hard-surfaced with “Warrenite”, an asphaltic process, and the latter with brick pavement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 S.E. 527, 96 W. Va. 184, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-yost-v-state-road-commission-wva-1924.