Van Dyke v. Mack

214 S.W. 23, 139 Ark. 524, 1919 Ark. LEXIS 243
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 30, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 214 S.W. 23 (Van Dyke v. Mack) 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
Van Dyke v. Mack, 214 S.W. 23, 139 Ark. 524, 1919 Ark. LEXIS 243 (Ark. 1919).

Opinion

McCULLOCH, C. J.

This case involves an attack on the validity of act No. 82 of the General Assembly of 1919, which was approved February 14, 1919. Section 1 of the statute, which declares its pupose, reads as follows :

“The purpose of this act is to secure the construction of a highway running from the city of-North Little Rock, Arkansas, through the counties of Pulaski, Lonoke, White, Jackson, and connection with the Alicia and Walnut Ridge Highway on the Lawrence County line at or near Alicia, thereby giving a through route to the Missouri line, over the Alicia and Walnut Ridge Highway to Walnut Ridge, thence over highway of Road Improvement District Number Two of Lawrence County to Randolph County line, thence over highway of Road Improvement District Number Three of Randolph County to Pocahontas, thence over highway of Pocahontas and Donathan to Missouri. To that end, there are hereby organized four improvement districts: One for Pulaski County, one for Lonoke County, one for White County and one for Jackson County. Said districts shall be entitled respectively, the Arkansas and Missouri Highway District in Pulaski County, the Arkansas and Missouri Highway District in Lonoke County, the Arkansas and Missouri Highway District in White County and the Arkansas and Missouri Highway District in Jackson County. Each of said districts shall be corporate bodies, with the right to sue and be sued, to have a corporate seal and to perform all the functions granted to them by this act. The limits of each district shall embrace all quarter sections of land, any portion of which is within five miles of the route as selected by the commissioners, whether the same be laid off in town or city lots or not. ’ ’

Other sections name the commissioners for each of the districts and provide for the construction of the improvement, the issuance of bonds and the assessment of benefits. The other provisions of the statute involved in the attack made in this case on its validity will be referred to later in the discussion.

It appears from the section copied above that the lawmakers intended in this single statute to create four separate road improvement districts in different counties with no relation to each other except an effort to attain uniformity in the route of the combined roads to be construeted under the provisions of the statute. Section 4 authorizes the commissioners of the respective districts, in connection with 'the State Highway Department to “proceed to select a highway across their respective counties and joining with the highway selected by the commissioners of the adjacent counties,” but that if “the commissioners of any two districts are unable to agree upon a meeting point of the respective highways, the State Highway Engineer shall fix the meeting point.” That section further provides that when the route may be selected the county court shall proceed to lay out the public roads pursuant to the general statutes on that subject.

Appellee owns lands in Jackson County within the limits of the district as laid out, and he instituted this action in the chancery court of Jackson County to restrain the commissioners of the Jackson County district from proceeding under the terms of the act to assess benefits and levy taxes thereon. Some of the attacks relate to the validity of the whole statute, and others are directed to the question of the validity of only that part of the statute which creates the Jackson County District.

(1) The first point involved relates to the question of inclusion or exclusion of lands in Independence County. The Jackson County route as selected by the commissioners runs for a considerable distance within five miles of the Independence County line, and it is insisted that the statute is invalid because it either includes Independence County lands lying within the five-mile limit without providing for a method of assessment, or excludes those lands, notwithstanding the fact that the statute itself constitutes a legislative determination that all lands within the five-mile limit will be benefited by the improvement.

(2) We interpret the language of the statute to mean that only Jackson County lands within the five-mile limit are embraced within the boundaries of the district. There is some ambiguity in the language of the several provisions of section 1 when read separately, but, when read together and in connection with the statute as a whole, it is apparent that the lawmakers intended to create four separate districts, the boundaries of which were to be within the four separate counties mentioned, and that the concluding words of the section specifying the limits of the districts relate only to lands in the county, notwithstanding the fact that the route may run near enough to the boundary of an adjoining county to include lands of that county within the five-mile limit. The name by which the separate districts are indicated in the statute shows clearly the intention of the lawmakers. The districts are designated respectively, the “Arkansas and Missouri Highway District in Pulaski County, the Arkansas and Missouri Highway District in Lonoke County, the Arkansas and Missouri Highway District in White County and the Arkansas and Missouri Highway Dis: trict in Jackson County.” The fact, too, that the various sections relating to the organization of the district, the supervision of the respective county courts and the appointment of assessors all indicate that the districts are created by counties, and are confined to the limits of the counties mentioned.

(3) The other point of attack that the statute is void because it excludes the Independence County lands is answered by saying that the statute only constitutes a legislative determination of benefits to the lands embraced in the districts and not all land within five miles of the route. It may have been determined by the lawmakers that lands in adjoining counties where perhaps the trend of travel is in a different direction may not receive benefits, even though within five miles of the road, or that the benefits received may be relatively so slight as not to justify inclusion within the boundaries of the district. We cannot say, in other words, that the legislative determination that the lands in Independence County will not be benefited is on its face arbitrary and without foundation. On this point the case is ruled by the decision of this court in Conway v. Miller County Highway & Bridge District, 125 Ark. 325, which involved the validity of a statute authorizing the construction of a bridge across a navigable stream which formed the boundary between two counties, and it was held that the failure to include lands in one of the counties would not render the statute invalid. The same conclusion was reached in other cases. Mullins v. Little Rock, 131 Ark. 59; Fenolio v. Sebastian Bridge District, 133 Ark. 380.

(4) The chancery court decided that the statute was void for the reason that the construction of the road in .White County through the agency of a district in that county was dependent upon the petition of a majority of the property owners in that county and might not be constructed at all, thus thwarting the purpose of the lawmakers in providing for the creation of four districts for the construction of continuous roads.

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Related

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242 S.W. 72 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1922)
In Re Estate of Johnston
206 P. 628 (California Supreme Court, 1922)
Tims v. Mack
227 S.W. 393 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1921)
White v. Arkansas & Missouri Highway District
227 S.W. 261 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1921)
Self v. Road Improvement District No. 1
223 S.W. 402 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1920)
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218 S.W. 389 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1920)
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215 S.W. 882 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1919)
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215 S.W. 255 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1919)
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215 S.W. 659 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 S.W. 23, 139 Ark. 524, 1919 Ark. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-dyke-v-mack-ark-1919.