State v. Bone Creek Township

190 N.W. 586, 109 Neb. 202, 1922 Neb. LEXIS 44
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1922
DocketNo. 22434
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 190 N.W. 586 (State v. Bone Creek Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bone Creek Township, 190 N.W. 586, 109 Neb. 202, 1922 Neb. LEXIS 44 (Neb. 1922).

Opinion

Rose, J.

This is an action by the state of Nebraska, plaintiff, ü> recover from Bone Creek township, Butler county, Nebraska, defendant, $4,000 appropriated by it to defray a portion of the expense of paving a road therein a distance of 4,860 feet from the foot of Hookstra Hill across the Platte river bottom to the Schuyler bridge over the Platte river. In consideration of this paving defendant agreed to contribute that amount but refused payment after .plaintiff had completed the improvement at a cost of $25,000. This action to pay part of the expense of paving was taken at an annual meeting held March 5, 19.18, as shown by a resolution declaring:

“An appropriation of $4,000 be and is now made, to be applied on paving the road between the river bridge, and Hookstra Hill, * '* * and that said appropriation be 1 urned over to the state authorities for that purpose.”

The trial court sustained a demurrer to the petition and .dismissed the action. Plaintiff has appealed.

[204]*204Defendant contends that the pavement in Bone Creek township is part of a post road or national highway Avhich the federal and the state governments selected, planned and improved at their own expense for their own purpose Avithout regard to defendant; that there is no state or federal laAV authorizing such paving for a township; that defendant was Avithout power to make the donation; that the paving Avas an internal improvement to which a toAvnship could make no contribution without a vote of the electors at an election authorized by law; that no such election was ever held; that the annual township meeting Avas not an election Avithin the meaning of the state Constitution, Avhich provides:

“No city, county, tOAvn, precinct, municipality, or other subdivision of the state, shall ever make donations to any railroad, or other works of internal improvement, unless a proposition so to do shall have been first submitted to fhe qualified electors thereof, at an election by authority of laAV.” Const. 1875 art. XII sec. 2.

The argument in favor of these propositions is plausible, but the opposite view seems to be based on more substantial grounds.

In a county under toAvnship organization, a toAAmship or toAvn is a subdivision of state territory, convenient in area, for the purpose of carrying into effect limited poAvers gOA’-ernmental in their nature. Wilson v. Ulysses Township, 72 Neb. 807. Included in these governmental functions Avas the statutory power to direct the raising of money by taxation for the construction and the repairing of roads within the township and to make contracts necessary to the exercise of such power. Rev. St. 1913, secs. 1007, 1008, 1012; Wilson v. Ulysses Township, 72 Neb. 807. It Avas under this authority that defendant acted in making the appropriation. If the highway improved Avas part of a government or post road under the control of the state or nation, as argued by defendant, those sovereignties Avere not obliged to make a permanent pavement across the Platte river bottom through [205]*205Bone Creek township. In voluntarily assuming the principal burden of paving a single road for a short distance, the state and nation did not take from defendant the governmental functions mentioned.

The petition does not allege that a proposition to appropriate money for the purpose of defraying a portion of the expense of the paving had been submitted to the qualified electors “at an election by authority of law” —a requirement of the Constitution, if the paving is a work of “internal improvement” in the sense of that term as used in the supreme law. Const. 1875, art. XII, sec. 2. Did defendant have power to make the appropriation without a vote of the electors? In other words, was the appropriation a “donation” to “works of internal improvement,” within the meaning of the Constitution? The supreme court of Minnesota said that an appropriation to aid in the construction or repairing of a public road is an appropriation for a work of “internal improvement” as the words are used in the Constitution of that state, and the supreme court of Kansas seems to have followed the precedent. Cooke v. Iverson, 108 Minn. 388, 52 L. R. A. n. s. 415; State v. Knapp, 99 Kan. 852, L. R. A. 1917C, 1034. The supreme court of Maryland, however, took the opposite view of a somewhat similar constitutional provision. Bonsal v. Yellott, 100 Md. 481, 69 L. R. A. 914. In forbidding subdivisions of the state to “make donations” to any railroad, or other “works of internal improvement,” without submitting to the electors a proposition to do so, the framers of the Nebraska Constitution of 1875 and the people who adopted it had in mind the evils arising from excessive donations of public funds to enterprises performing public services for private gain. Public buildings used exclusively for governmental purposes, without direct pecuniary profit to any corporation, or individual, are, in a popular sense, internal improvements, but they are obviously not within this constitutional inhibition.

At the time defendant agreed to make its contribution [206]*206to the costs of the paving, the primary burden of constructing highways and of keeping them in repair fell on counties and on townships in counties under township organization. The function exercised in making and improving roads for the state under such a system was governmental, involving taxation. Money thus raised and used for the benefit of the public as a whole can scarcely be called a “donation,” unless all taxes devoted exclusively to public purposes are viewed in the same light. The limited governmental powers of a township are not shared by private corporations or individual agencies acting for private gain. No commercial enterprise will manage or control the paved road through Bone Creek township or derive any direct pecuniary benefit from it as a business institution.

The paved road, though an “internal improvement” in a general or popular sense, is not such in the restricted sense contemplated by the Nebraska constitutional provision declaring that no subdivision of the state “shall ever make donations to any railroad, or other works of internal improvement, unless a proposition so to do shall have been first submitted to the qualified electors thereof, at an election by authority of law-” Bonsal v. Yellott, 100 Md. 481, 69 L. R. A. 914. This conclusion is in harmony with a familiar rule of construction, which has been stated as follows:

“Where an enumeration of specific' things is followed by some more general word or phrase, such general word or phrase is to be held to refer to things of the same kind.” 19 C. J. 1255.

Tn the Constitution “railroad,” an enterprise performing public services for private gain, is first specifically designated. This is followed by the general term, “or other works of internal improvement,” the word “railroad”’ indicating the kind of internal improvement to which the provision applies. The paved road is an internal improvement of a different kind. It is financed wholly by the government for the benefit of the public [207]*207alone. Tlie interpretation which does not extend the phrase to paved roads of this kind seems to be more in keeping with the language and purpose of the Constitution than the popular definition of “internal improvement,” when that term is separated from the context.

Union P. R. Co. v. Commissioners of Colfax County, 4 Neb. 450, has not been overlooked.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 N.W. 586, 109 Neb. 202, 1922 Neb. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bone-creek-township-neb-1922.