Young v. . Highway Commission

128 S.E. 401, 190 N.C. 52, 1925 N.C. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 24, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 128 S.E. 401 (Young v. . Highway Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. . Highway Commission, 128 S.E. 401, 190 N.C. 52, 1925 N.C. LEXIS 7 (N.C. 1925).

Opinion

The defendants appealed from an order of Daniels, J., enjoining them from carrying into effect a contract executed on 14 April, 1925, by and between the county commissioners and the highway commission. By the terms of this contract, the commissioners of Johnston County, in consideration of securing the construction of Route 22 (a part of the highway system extending through the county from the Wilson to the Harnett line), earlier than it would be possible to have it built without an advancement of funds by the county, agreed to lend the highway commission $500,000 to be used as a part of the money necessary for the construction of the road, and to have this amount available and subject to draft as soon as the highway commission should indicate its readiness to let out the work. The highway commission thereby obligated itself to proceed as rapidly as practicable with the preparation of the plans and specifications for concrete pavement and to do the work as rapidly as practicable, supplementing the sum advanced by the county with the funds of the highway commission, and, further, to repay to Johnston County, without interest, out of the funds allocated to the county from the proceeds of bond issues thereafter authorized by the Legislature, or out of other road construction funds, to the extent that such funds might be sufficient therefor, the net sum of $500,000, or so much thereof as might be advanced by the county to the highway commission.

On 30 May, 1925, the plaintiff brought suit, and in his complaint, after setting out the contract, alleged that the county commissioners were preparing to sell notes or bonds of the county in the sum of *Page 53 $500,000 with a view to turning the amount over to the highway commission; that the highway commission had surveyed the route, was preparing plans and specifications, and intended to begin work on the road; that the obligation assumed by the highway commission was in excess of the funds appropriated by the Legislature and would require for its payment the amount which the county had offered to lend, and that the chairman of the highway commission was undertaking to accept the loan and had issued directions to the commission's clerical force to credit the county and to apply in repayment whatever funds should be subsequently allocated to the county for the construction of its roads. The plaintiff further alleged that the contract is void and prayed that the parties be restrained.

The commissioners and the highway commission filed separate answers admitting the material allegations in reference to the contract, but denying that it is void. The defendant Page filed an affidavit to the effect that the contract had been made pursuant to a policy adopted by the commission soon after its organization in 1921; that advances approximating a total of ten million dollars had been accepted from the various counties of the State to hasten the building of links in the highway system, and the commission had promised to reimburse the counties out of funds thereafter available for the purpose; that some of the counties had been reimbursed in part, some in full, and that a large number of similar contracts were then outstanding. He further stated that the county commissioners had been informed that the highway commission had no authority to pledge the faith and credit of the State to the repayment of these advances beyond the extent of funds already appropriated, and that the promise to reimburse the counties had been conditioned upon future allocations; that the amount which Johnston County had agreed to advance, together with available State funds, would be sufficient to complete the proposed road, and that without an additional issue of bonds an annual construction fund of $60,000 would go to Johnston County.

At the hearing Judge Daniels, being of opinion that the contract in question had been executed without authority of law and was ultra vires, restrained and enjoined the defendants from proceeding further in carrying said contract into effect. The defendants excepted and appealed. The exception raises the question whether the instrument purporting to be a contract between the county of Johnston and the State Highway Commission was ultra vires, or entered into without authority of law; and the answer to this question involves the alleged legal right of the county to make the proposed loan and of the commission to obligate itself to the repayment thereof as the contract provides.

The act creating the existing highway commission and making provision for a State system of dependable roads went into effect on 3 March, 1921, authorizing the continuance of the former commission, however, until the commission thereby created should be formally organized. Public Laws 1921, ch. 2; Public Laws 1919, ch. 189. Soon thereafter the provisions of section 14 were sustained on appeal from a judgment rendered in the Superior Court of Harnett County. In that case it was alleged that on 20 May, 1921, the board of commissioners had entered into a contract with the State Highway Commission, in accordance with section 14, for the advancement of funds to construct a part of the highway system through the county. This Court, upholding the contract, said in substance that a county primarily is required to construct and maintain its roads and bridges, and that as the board of commissioners was specially authorized by section 14 to contract with the highway commission in reference to the construction of the road, it was the duty of the board, so far as it was legally empowered, to provide the funds necessary for such purpose. R. R. v. McArtan,185 N.C. 201.

In Lassiter v. Comrs., 188 N.C. 379, the act of 1921, ch. 2, was presented in another phase. There it appeared that as between two routes proposed for a part of the State highway system extending from Raleigh to Wendell, the State Highway Commission had adopted the Milburnie, or upper road, on condition that the board of commissioners of Wake County should contribute the sum of $41,500 as a proper liability and as a proportion of the cost of construction and repair to be borne by the county. It was objected that without a vote of the people the commissioners had no legal right to make the contribution, but the Court held otherwise, Chief JusticeHoke saying: "So all-pervading and insistent is the power of county commissioners on the question of public roads that, although special legislation may disclose a purpose to supervise and control the matter of roads by other boards, as the township system, unless clearly forbidden by such legislation, the county commissioners could lend proper aid to this effort by appropriating general county moneys for the purpose. Bunch v.Comrs., 159 N.C. p. 335. And it has also been uniformly held that in the exercise of these powers the construction and repair of the public roads *Page 55 are a necessary expense not requiring the approval of a popular vote.Woodall v. Highway Commission, 176 N.C. 377; Davis v. Lenoir, 178 N.C. 668;Hargrave v. Comrs., 168 N.C. 626; Murphy v. Webb, 156 N.C. 402. It is urged against the exercise of such power in the present instance that when the Milburnie Road is taken over by the highway commission, such commission is given full control, and it is then no longer a county road; but, as shown in the evidence, this was a public road, a part of the county system, and for the repair and upkeep of which the county was liable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 S.E. 401, 190 N.C. 52, 1925 N.C. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-highway-commission-nc-1925.