Valentine v. Road Directors of Allegany County

126 A. 147, 146 Md. 199, 1924 Md. LEXIS 128
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 21, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 126 A. 147 (Valentine v. Road Directors of Allegany County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valentine v. Road Directors of Allegany County, 126 A. 147, 146 Md. 199, 1924 Md. LEXIS 128 (Md. 1924).

Opinion

Oeeutt, J.,

delivered tbe opinion of tbe Court.

John L. Valentine, the appellant, on July 14th, 1921, sued the Road Directors of Allegany County, in the circuit court for that county, for injuries wbicb be claimed to have received whilst in the lawful use of a certain bridge on a public *201 highway in Pennsylvania in an accident said to have-been due to the defective condition of the bridg'e.

A demurrer to the declaration which he first filed having been sustained, he filed an amended declaration to which the defendant also demurred. That demurrer was likewise sustained, and judgment entered for the defendant, and from that judgment the plaintiff has appealed, so that the question before ns is whether the averments of the amended declaration state a good cause of action.

It appears from the demurrer and from certain Public Local Laws of Allegany County, of which the Court will take judicial notice, that chapter 262 of the Acts of 1904 of the General Assembly of Maryland created a body corporate with power to sue and be -sued under the name of the “The Road Directors for Allegany County,” and conferred upon it certain powers and charged it with certain duties in reference to the public roads and highways of that county, stating in part that “their powers, duties 'and obligations with respect to the public roads in Allegany County shall be coextensive with the powers, duties and obligations heretofore resting upon the County Commissioners! -of Allegany County with respect to the public roads and bridges in said county, except in so far as the same may be modified or changed by the provisions of this act.” Section 212. It also provided, in section 213, that “The Road Directors shall adopt such sys,-tem for the repairs and improvements of the roads in Alle-gany County as they may deem best”; .and in section 216A that “The Road Director’s, herein provided for shall take charge and supervision of all roads and bridges in Allegany County”; and in section 216T, “the Road Directors shall have power to make rules and regulations to carry out .the purposes of this act.” It also provided for raising funds by taxation for carrying out the purposes of the act, and provision is made in it for the construction and maintenance, use, relocation, alteration and closing of public highways in that county.

Included among the roads embraced in the highway system of that county is “a road leading off the Bedford road to *202 Iiazeu, Maryland, and is the only route or road by which the people of Hazen can get to Cumberland or the improved roads without mating a detour of five or six males through Pennsylvania; that at a' point where the aforesaid road crosses Evitt’s Creek, a bridge has been maintained by Alle-gany County, Maryland, for a period of about fifty years, it being supposed until ten or twelve years ago that said bridge was in Allegany County, Maryland, when it was dis^ covered that it was located across the Pennsylvania line, although the road of which said bridge is a part runs back into Allegany County, Maryland, on both sides of the stream spanned by the bridge; that when it was discovered that the bridge was located in Pennsylvania it was necessary to rebuild and maintain it on the same location, or relocate a long stretch of expensive road, and the defendant in the year 1912 elected to and did rebuild the aforesaid bridge on the same location and maintained: the same up until the date of the injuries, herein complained of.”

The bridge referred to was suffered to fall into disrepair and to become so weakened and unsafe that on June 15th, 1920, as the plaintiff was driving a team of horses drawing a load of lumber across it, it collapsed, “throwing the plaintiff and his team into- the waters of Evitt’s Creek,” in consequence o-f which he was injured, two of his horses killed, one badly injured and his wagon damaged.

The declaration sets out these facts, and declares that it was the duty of the defendant to keep that bridge in a safe condition for public travel, and that as his injuries resulted from a breach of that duty that the defendant is answerable to him in damages for his injuries and losses.

The controlling question in the case is whether the Koad Directors of Allegany County are under existing law responsible for the condition of a bridge on a public highway in Pennsylvania. The appellee is .a governmental agency charged with certain public duties, and clothed with certain powers enumerated in the act creating it, together with such other incidental powers as may be necessary to effect the purposes of its creation, and it has.' no power, duty or authority *203 except such as are conferred upon it mediately or immediately by the Legislature. Heiskell v. Baltimore, 65 Md. 152; Horn v. Baltimore, 30 Md. 218; McQuillin on Mun. Corp., par. 499. And this ease could be disposed of by a- mere, reference to the statute, which expressly and in terms limits the powers; duties and obligations imposed by it upon the appellee to the public roads and bridges in Allegany County. Eor by no process of reasoning with which we are familiar can a, bridge wholly within the boundaries of Bedford County, Pennsylvania, be held to be in Allegany County, Maryland, with which it has no physical connection at all except that supplied by a road which runs from it into Maryland.

But aside from that consideration it is obvious that the defendant in the absence of an express grant from the Legislature could have no power to. expend the public funds of the county, dedicated under the termsi of the act to the construction and maintenance of roads and bridges in Allegany County, to the construction of roads and bridges in another state. Certainly the same road without the sanction of both states could not at the same time be a public highway both of Maryland and Pennsylvania, and it. is difficult to see under what power or authority the appellee could exercise any control or supervision over public roads and bridges in another state or how they could lawfully repair, rebuild or maintain them without an express grant of power so to do from the legislature of such state. These principles seem to be self-evident and .scarcely need authority to support them, but the same question has been considered in other cases. Perhaps the leading case in which it has been decided is that of Becker v. LaCross, 99 Wis. 414, 40 L. R. A. 829, in which, to quote from the syllabus, it was held: “A city cannot accept a grant from another state to operate, a toll road beyond its limits and the limits of its own state; or be held liable for defects in such road if operated by it, when it is not authorized to do so by the laws1 of its own state, although the toll road is made to connect with a city toll bridge that the city has constructed under authority.” The facts in that` *204 ease were these: The State of Minnesota by appropriate legislation authorized the Oity of LaOrosse, Wisconsin, 'to build a toll road in Minnesota connecting with a bridge between the two states built by lawful authority.

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Bluebook (online)
126 A. 147, 146 Md. 199, 1924 Md. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valentine-v-road-directors-of-allegany-county-md-1924.