Court Opinion

ID: 7810876
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-07 17:12:41.442074+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:30:28.078125
License: Public Domain

Hart, J. This is an appeal by the commissioners of a road improvement district from the judgment of the circuit court affirming the action of the county court in disapproving the plans and specifications filed by the commissioners for the construction of the proposed improvement. The judgment is sought to be reversed on the ground that the action of the county court and the circuit court was arbitrary. The special session of the Arkansas Legislature held in 1920 passed an act to create the Prescott and White’s Ferry Road Improvement District in Nevada County, Arkansas. The bill is No. 118 of the unpublished Acts of 1920, and was approved February 11, 1920. Boundaries of the district were designated in the act,, and the road to be improved was described. Section 5 of the act makes it the duty of the commissioners to improve the road by grading, draining, and surfacing it in such manner, and with such materials, as the commissioners shall deem best for the interest of the district, with full power to construct bridges, culverts, and necessary appurtenances to the road. The section further provides that the several parts of the road may be surfaced with such different materials as the commissioners shall see fit. It also provides for changes in the route of the road, to be approved by the county court and laid out by it as county roads are laid out. Section 6 provides that the commissioners shall file their plans, when completed, with the county clerk of Nevada County. The section further provides that, if the county court shall approve the plans, as filed, it shall enter an order to that effect, which shall have the force of a judgment. It also provides that, if the county court shall disapprove the plans, it shall enter an order to that effect, and appeals from such order may be taken by the commissioners to the circuit court to be there triéd de novo before the circuit court sitting as a jury. Thus it will be seen that the commissioners are given great discretion as to the kind and character of the improvement to be made in the road. They have full power to grade, construct, and surface the road with such materials as they shall deem best for the interest of the district, and also to construct the necessary bridges and culverts. Their action, in this respect, however, is subject to the approval of the county court. The county judge was a witness in the circuit court. According to his testimony, after the commissioners had filed their plans and specifications with him, he made an estimate of the proposed cost of the improvement, and found it to be so great that it would be very burdensome to the people interested, and would be prohibitive. The commissioners did not disagree with him that the cost of the road was prohibitive. The plans and specifications showed wooden bridges, and one of them was 550 feet long. The county judge thought that this was another objection to making the improvement, because it would be better, in the long run, to have steel and concrete bridges and culverts. Another reason for disapproving the plans and specifications was, that the proposed road was near another county road which would have to be kept up by the same property owners. The county judge, by virtue of his office, was necessarily familiar with the public roads of his county. According to his testimony, he knew and appreciated the necessity of improving the public roads and the ability of the property owners to pay for the same. He had the plans ana specifications before him, and, when everything was considered, he deemed it to be to the best interest of the people not to carry out the proposed improvement. The circuit court accepted his testimony as true, and acted upon it in trying the case de <novo. The testimony is of such a substantial character as to form a basis for the action of the circuit court in affirming the judgment of the county court, and it can not therefore be said, in view of all the surrounding facts and circumstances, that the ruling of the circuit court was arbitrary, and without substantial evidence to support it. It follows that the judgment will be affirmed.