State v. White

18 A. 179, 16 R.I. 591, 1889 R.I. LEXIS 95
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 13, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 A. 179 (State v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. White, 18 A. 179, 16 R.I. 591, 1889 R.I. LEXIS 95 (R.I. 1889).

Opinions

This is an information in the nature of a writ of quowarranto filed by the Attorney General, on the relation of John Walsh, commissioner of highways of the town of Johnston, to inquire by what authority the defendants are assuming to exercise certain powers and duties in connection with the building of a bridge in one of the public highways of said town, and the doing of certain other work on said highway. The information sets forth, in substance, that the relator has been duly elected to the office of commissioner of highways of said town; that he has duly qualified himself to act and is acting as such officer, and performing the duties pertaining to the office; that, by virtue of his said office, it is his duty to keep in repair and amend from time to time all the highways and bridges in said town, as provided by statute; and that at the general election held in said town, on the first Wednesday in April last, an appropriation of $6,000 was made to repair the highways thereof, a large part of which sum has already been expended by him for said purpose.

He further sets forth that, at a town meeting held in said town on the last Monday in May, 1889, other large sums of money were appropriated for the highway department, among which was the *Page 592 following: "Voted, That a sum of money not exceeding $10,000 be and the same hereby is appropriated, to build one half of Manton Bridge, westerly, to the iron watering trough near the Killey Brook, and to set curbing and pave the gutters on said road." That on the 18th day of June the town council of said town, on petition therefor, appointed the defendants a committee, with full power to cause the old Killingly road at Manton to be graded, gutters paved and curbed, and the bridge over the Woonasquatucket river at Manton to be rebuilt.

That said defendants pretendedly qualified as such committee, and are acting in that behalf, and that they are thus illegally and without right usurping the duties and functions which belong to the relator by virtue of his said office; and that the defendants have, in so far as the doing of said work is concerned, obtruded themselves into his office and ousted him therefrom; and praying for a decree forbidding them from thus interfering with the duties of the highway commissioner, and that they be ousted from said office. To this information the defendants have demurred.

The main question raised by the demurrer, and the only one we deem it necessary to consider, is, whether or not the acts charged against the defendants amount to an usurpation by them of the office and functions of the relator as commissioner of highways.

The counsel for the relator contends that all work on the highways, including the building of bridges, appertains of right to the office of commissioner of highways, and that the town council has no authority to devolve said work, or any part thereof, on any other person or persons, and that the responsibility of doing the work contemplated by the vote of the town rested solely on said commissioner the moment said vote was passed in town meeting. He further contends that the building of a new bridge is nothing more than the repairing and amending of a highway within the meaning of Pub. Stat. R.I. cap. 65, § 1. The counsel for the defendants contend, on the other hand, that the authority of the commissioner of highways extends only to the repairing and amending of highways, and the doing of such additional work in connection therewith as is specially devolved on him by statute, or as the town council may direct him to do, but that he has no authority, simply by virtue of his office, to build highways or bridges, *Page 593 that not being either a repair or amendment. They further contend that there is no officer known to the law to build bridges, and that it follows that these defendants were legally appointed, and have the right and the duty to build said bridge as directed, and that they cannot be ousted as members of the committee, or interfered with in the proper discharge of their functions.

The vote of the town council by which the defendants were appointed a committee, etc., does not refer in terms to the vote of the town whereby the appropriation to build the bridge, etc., was made. But we assume that the work which said committee was appointed to do is the same, and no more, as that contemplated by the tax payers in the making of said appropriation. For we cannot presume that the town council would use any part of a special appropriation for any other purpose than that designated by the town in making it. And no question is made at the bar that any other work is intended to be devolved on this committee. And we understand by the vote of the town that the main object of the appropriation was to build one half of Manton Bridge, and that the provision in said vote, "to set curbing and pave the gutters on said road," is merely incidental to the building of the bridge, by constructing the necessary approaches thereto. SeeTitcomb v. Fitchburg Railroad Co. 12 Allen, 254, 259;Commonwealth v. Inhabitants of Deerfield, 6 Allen, 449. The powers and duties of surveyors of highways (and where commissioners are elected, instead of surveyors, they have the same powers throughout the town as surveyors do in their respective districts, see Pub. Stat. R.I. cap. 37, § 2) are regulated and defined by statute. See Pub. Stat. R.I. cap. 65, §§ 1-12, 15-24, 30-33, 37. Section 1 contains a summary of the duties of said office, and is as follows:

"All highways, causeways, and bridges, except as is herein after provided, lying and being within the bounds of any town, shall be kept in repair and amended from time to time so that the same may be safe and convenient for travellers, with their teams, carts, and carriages, at all seasons of the year, at the proper charge and expense of such town, under the care and direction of the surveyor of highways for such town." *Page 594

The statutory powers and duties of the relator, then, as commissioner of highways, are to keep the highways in repair and amended, together with such incidental and additional powers as are conferred by said cap. 65.

So that the question which arises is this, viz.: Is the work which the defendants have been appointed and directed by the town council to do a repairing or amending of one of the highways of said town, within the meaning of said § 1? We think not.

To repair means, according to Webster, "to restore to a sound or good state, after decay, injury, dilapidation, or partial destruction; as, to repair a house, a wall, or a ship." To amend, according to the same author, means "to change in any way for the better, as, a. By simply removing what is erroneous, corrupt, superfluous, faulty, and the like; b. By supplying deficiencies; c. By substituting something else in the place of what is removed." We think that the building of a new bridge in a highway is something more than merely repairing the highway, within the meaning of said § 1. Indeed, the statute seems to view it in this light; for by Pub. Stat. R.I. cap. 34, § 5, it is provided that towns may appropriate money "for the building, repairing, and amending of bridges." To build is to construct and raise anew, and not simply to amend or repair something previously constructed.

Says Rogers, J., in Cornell v. Vanartsdalen, 4 Pa. St. 364, 370, referring to the term "repairs": "It is not a technical expression, and must be taken as used in its ordinary sense, and does not extend to improvements of the soil. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
18 A. 179, 16 R.I. 591, 1889 R.I. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-white-ri-1889.