Thompson v. Mann

252 S.W. 4, 159 Ark. 391, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 43
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 11, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 252 S.W. 4 (Thompson v. Mann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Mann, 252 S.W. 4, 159 Ark. 391, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 43 (Ark. 1923).

Opinions

Smith, J.

This is the third appeal involving Road Improvement District No. 10 of Pulaski County. In the case of Cumnock v. Alexander, 139 Ark. 153, the validity of act No. 436 of the regular 1919 session of the General Assembly creating the district was upheld. At the extra session of the General Assembly acts were passed which changed the plans of the improvement by adding certain roads to be improved and by eliminating one of the subdistricts. The statute as amended provided for the improvement, in subdistrict No. 6, of a road designated as the Perryville road, beginning in the city of Little Rock at Main and Markham' streets, and running out Markham Street to Victory Street, thence south .on Victory to Third Street, thence west past Forest Park, and thence northwesterly to Cross Roads. The commissioners determined that the portion of the improvement extending from the corner of Main and Markham to Third Street, just described, could be eliminated because those streets could be used as a part of the improvement without repair or other work on the part of the district, and the county court approved the amended plans of the commissioners which excluded those street's from the plans of the improvement. A property owner in the district sought to restrain the commissioners from thus changing the plans, but we upheld their right to do so in the case of Crawford v. Pulaski Road Improvement Distinct No. 10, 154 Ark. 311.

The General Assembly of 1923 passed four acts relating to this district, but the construction o-f only two of them appears to be involved in this litigation, those being acts Nos. 316 and 347.

Act 316 authorizes the commissioners to add a hard surface to that part of the Baucum road in section 2 from, its intersection with the Galloway pike to a point about a mile and a half south of Scott Station, and added to the boundaries of the district some land in Lonoke County, and extended the northern boundary of section 2 in Pulaski County about one mile.

This act contained a limitation on the cost of construction, found in section 9A, which reads as follows: ‘■‘■Section 9A. The road provided for in this act shall not be less than 16 feet nor more than 20 feet in width, and shall not cost said district in excess of $330,000, exclusive of interest.”

Section 4 of act 316 also contains a legislative finding that the lands in this section of the district which were also situated in the boundaries of the North Little Bock and Galloway Boad .District would receive no greater benefit per acre than lands in other parts of the district equally distant from the improved road; it also contained a limitation that the entire improvement, together with the interest on the cost, should not cost the rural lands in section 2 more than $250,000.

Act No. 347 provided that the commissioners should have the right to improve Victory Street from Third to Markham, and to improve Markham Street from Victory to Main as a part of the improvement in section 6 of the district, this being a part of the improvement which the commissioners were originally authorized to make,' but later abandoned.

Appellee, the plaintiff below, is the owner of lands in both sections 2 and 6 of the district, and he alleged that the commissioners were incurring expenses in the preparation of plans for the improvement of the Baucum road which would cost exceeding $330,000, the limitation contained in the section of the statute quoted above, and that the limitation of $250,000 on the rural lands found in section 9B of act 316 would also be exceeded.

Plaintiff also attached as arbitrary the legislative finding of benefits contained in section 4 of act 316, and he also attached as unauthorized the action of the commit sioners in incurring expense in mahing plans for the improvement of the streets in the city of Little Bock, set out above, asserting that this could be done only upon' a petition of a majority in value of the owners of property adjacent thereto.

The answer put in issue all the allegations of the complaint, and the cause was heard on the pleadings and on oral testimony, which is before us in the bill of exceptions made at the trial.

The court dismissed all of the complaint for want of equity, except that portion seehing to restrain the commissioners from incurring expense in mahing plané foi the improvement of the Baucum road, thé total cost of which the court found would exceed $330,000. Both parties have appealed.

It appears from the testimony that the commmis-sioners have sold eighty thousand dollars in bonds for the purpose of obtaining money to improve the Bau-cum road, and had expended $50,000 of that amount when act 316 was passed. After the passage of that act the engineer of the district changed the plans of that improvement, and admitted, in his testimony, that the improvement contemplated by the changed plans could not be constructed for $330,000 if the $50,000' already expended was included as a part of the cost.

We think the court properly construed section 9A of the act, and that the $330,000 is a limitation on the total cost. It is true that statutes are construed prospectively, but the aid of rules of construction is invoked in the interpretation of statutes only when the meaning of a statute is uncertain, and rules of construction are never • allowed to defeat what appears to be tlie manifest purpose of the lawmaking body. Hopper v. Fagan, 151 Ark. 428.

Obviously, the thing of interest, to the taxpayer is the cost of the improvement — the total cost thereof. The fifty thousand dollars already expended is a part of the ■cost which the taxpayer will have to discharge, and the work done with this fifty thousand dollars, is a part of the final plans for the improvement, and must be taken into account in ascertaining what the cost of the road will be, because the work done with this fifty thousand dollars will be a part of the road. This fifty thousand dollars worth of work .has not been paid for ’by the property owners, except that bonds have been sold which are liens upon the lands in the district, and their payment lies in the future as the bonds mature, and these liens can be discharged by the property owners only when they have paid the cost of the improvement, and this cost will include the whole amount expended for the construction of the road..

In placing this limitation on cost, the -Legislature excluded interest, but excluded interest only, and it follows therefore that the commissioners are without authority to build a road which will cost exceeding $330,000, exclusive of interest.

What we have said is applicable also to the limitation on the cost to the owners of rural property contained in section 9B, but the testimony shows that this limita- . tion-will not be exceeded.

The Chief Justice and Mr. Justice Humphbeys do not concur in the view that the limitation covers total cost, they being of the opinion that this limitation relates to . the sum to-be expended after the passage of the act which contains the-limitation.

The majority is also of opinion that the legislative finding contained in section 4 of act 316 is not arbitrary.

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Related

Barton v. Drainage District No. 30
294 S.W. 418 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
252 S.W. 4, 159 Ark. 391, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-mann-ark-1923.