State Road Commission v. Miller

151 S.E. 436, 108 W. Va. 431, 1930 W. Va. LEXIS 172
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1930
Docket6623
StatusPublished

This text of 151 S.E. 436 (State Road Commission v. Miller) 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 Road Commission v. Miller, 151 S.E. 436, 108 W. Va. 431, 1930 W. Va. LEXIS 172 (W. Va. 1930).

Opinion

Lively, PkesideNt:

The State Road Commission (hereinafter called the Com *433 mission) by petition to the circuit court of Summers County sought to condemn 10,000 cubic yards of rock owned by J. W. Farley and E. E. Willey on certain described land of C. L. Miller, lying near a section of state highway then being constructed up the Greenbrier river a few miles above Hinton. The rock sought to be condemned was to be used as a base on the state road. Defendants, C. L. Miller, J. W. Farley and E. E. Willey, jointly demurred to, and answered the petition.

The answer denied that the Commission desired the rock to build a public road, or that the stone was necéssary in building the state highway. It avers that the Commission after having graded the highway, let the hard surfacing thereof to a contractor, Battershell, Saddler and Terry, at competitive bidding, for the sum of about $70,000, on May 1st, 1929, who were to furnish all labor and material therefor; and on May 11, 1929, said contractors gave bond conditioned for the faithful performance of the contract; that the Commission had no further interest in the road thereafter which would justify it in the invocation of the right of eminent domain, and therefore was abusing its powers under the statute for the benefit of the firm of contractors to whom the work had been let. The demurrer -was overruled, and the case was submitted for decision upon the bill, answer, general replication, and an agreed statement of facts. The court, by order of July 23, 1929, denied the Commission the right to condemn and dismissed its petition. This writ followed.

The facts stipulated are that the Commission advertised for and received bids for the construction of the highway on April 30, 1929, and awarded the contract to the said contractors on May 1, 1929, who filed with their bid a certified check for $3,600 as required by the advertisement for bids; that a written, contract dated May 1, 1929, was entered into between the Commission and the contractors and was executed on May 11, 1929, and was acknowledged by A. P. Terry and S. J. Saddler on May 21, 1929, and by J. J. Battershell on May 28, 1929; and that the contractors gave a bond for the faithful performance of the contract with a surety company as surety, in the penal sum of $40,080 dated May 11th and acknowledged by Terry and Saddler on May 21st and by *434 Battershall on May 28th, and by the surety company on May 11th; that notice that the Commission would proceed to condemn the rock was served on Miller, Farley and Willey to the effect that on June 18th it would file its petition therefor in circuit court; that on that day the Commission entered on its record a formal resolution establishing a stone quarry on the Miller land (describing it by metes and bounds) for the purpose of obtaining 10,000 cubic yards of stone for the use on the state road; that other contractors who bid on the road had taken the precaution to secure options of stone before they submitted their bids. There are contained in the stipulations other matters which would be evidence of the value of the stone to the owners, which matters are of little value in determining the right of the Commission to condemnation, and will not be detailed. It is further stipulated that the contractors above named refused to enter into the road contract and made it final until the Commission had agreed to condemn the rock and had actually served notice upon the owners of its intention to take and condemn.

Notice of intention to condemn was served on defendants on May 18, 1929, and that the Commission would enter upon the land described and take therefrom 10,000 cubic yards of stone for road building purposes, and that it would within 60 days from such entry petition the court to condemn. It appears that the contractors considered their contract as effective on May 21st, and from that date had taken from the land about 9,800 cubic yards and used same on the road pending the hearing of the condemnation proceeding which was begun on June 18, 1929. The question to be decided is whether the Commission had such an interest in the construction of the road, having let the contract on condition that it would proceed to condemn, as would give it the right to condemn. Under the statute, it is quite clear that the Commission has power to condemn rock to be used in building-roads; but whether by its conditional contract with Batter-shell, Saddler and Terry it still retains the right to condemn, is not so clear, and is the controlling issue. The statute, section 29, chapter 43, Code, giving power to the Commission to condemn materials to be used in the construction and *435 maintenance of state roads is broad and comprehensive. For convenience it is here quoted:

“For the purpose of obtaining materials to be used in the construction and maintenance of state roads and highways, the State Road Commission is hereby authorized and empowered, on behalf of the state, to establish quarries, stone crushing plants, brick kilns, cement plants, and other plant or plants, deemed by it needful or necessary in the prosecution of its work, as provided by this act, and to acquire land and appurtenances thereto. The Commission shall also have power to rent, purchase or condemn, or to acquire by any other lawful means, stone quarries, gravel, clay, sand, and other deposits, with rights of way thereto, * * * and to do all other things needful or necessary in connection with the purchase, production, accumulation and distribution of such materials for, the use aforesaid; * * *. The Commission may sell' any surplus of such materials, products or equipment to any county or counties, or to any municipality of the state, or to any person, firm or corporation, at not less than actual cost or value, exclusively for use in the building of roads, streets alleys in this state, * * * and acquire all materials and do all things that they may deem necessary for the operation thereof and for the more economic prosecution of the work of building and maintaining public roads as provided for by this act. ’ ’

It will be noted by a casual reading of. this’ statute that the legislature had in view, and conserved the expeditious and economic building and maintenance of state highways. The powers of the Commission are unusually broad. The Com.mission is empowered to “acquire all materials and do all things that may be deemed necessary for the full operation thereof (plants for manufacture of cement, brick, stone and other materials) and do all other things that may be deemed necessary for the operation thereof, and for the more 'economic prosecution of the work of building and maintaining public roads as provided by this act.” To aid in further quick and economic building and maintenance of state highways, *436 power to condemn rock and other materials with convenient ways thereto, and establish rock quarries, is expressly granted to the Commission.

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McGibson v. County Court, Roane County
121 S.E. 99 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1924)
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23 W. Va. 203 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1883)
Edgell v. Conaway
24 W. Va. 747 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1884)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 S.E. 436, 108 W. Va. 431, 1930 W. Va. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-road-commission-v-miller-wva-1930.