MacK v. Paragould & Hopkins Bridge Road Imp. Dist.

Appellants are the owners of real estate lying within the Paragould and Hopkins Bridge Road Improvement District No. One of Greene County, Arkansas, and have by this suit attacked the validity of that district.

It was alleged in the complaint which appellants filed that the district is void for the reason that, in the plans and specifications prepared by the State Highway Department and filed in the county court of Greene County, upon which the final petition signed by the landowners was predicated, as required by law, a bridge or viaduct is provided for extending from the west line of the lowlands adjacent to the St. Francis River to the center of the channel of said stream. This bridge or viaduct is 1,900 feet in length, and the cost of its construction is estimated at $57,000, and it is alleged that the district has no authority or power to build this bridge or viaduct.

It was also alleged that the map of the district describing the proposed improvement, which was attached to the final petition of the landowners, shows a road to be improved which extends beyond the boundary of the proposed district, and that this fact renders the district void.

The district in question was organized upon the petition of the landowners, under the provisions of what is known as the Alexander road law (5399 et seq., C. M. Digest).

It appears from the record in the case that the purpose of the proposed improvement is to connect the city of Paragould with an improved highway which has been built in the State of Missouri to the State line, the improved road in that State extending to the center of the St. Francis River, which forms the boundary between the two States at that point. *Page 869

St. Francis River, at the point where it is proposed to cross it by connecting up with a bridge built in Missouri to the State line, is a very small, narrow stream, but there is an annual overflow which spreads over its banks. Adjacent to the river is a sandy alluvial soil, which was not regarded as adapted to forming the base of an improved road, and the plans prepared by the State Highway Department called for the building of a viaduct or bridge over this area and across a drainage ditch and levee and over that part of the river proper lying in this State, and connecting with the portion of the bridge in the State of Missouri.

As has been said, the total length of the bridge or viaduct is 1,900 feet, of which the portion extending into the river proper is about 150 or 200 feet, and the portion spanning the ditch is between 100 and 150 feet. The remainder extends over the lowlands adjacent to the river.

It is insisted that the bridge or viaduct is of such magnitude that it can only be constructed as a separate improvement, and the case of Van Dyke v. Mack, 139 Ark. 524, is cited as sustaining that contention.

The case just cited involved the construction of a special act of the General Assembly creating the Arkansas Missouri Highway Improvement District, by the terms of which improvement districts were created in each of the counties through which the proposed road ran, to construct the portion of the road lying within the respective counties. One of these districts was in Jackson County, through which the White River flows, and it was insisted that the statute creating the district authorized the commissioners of the district in Jackson County to build a bridge over White River.

Section 4 of the special act creating that district authorized the commissioners "to construct bridges, subways, culverts, and all necessary appurtenances of said roads," and we held that the language of the statute quoted did not authorize the commissioners to construct a *Page 870 bridge across White River as a part of the road to be improved, for the reason that it was manifestly intended by the statute to authorize only such bridges, subways and culverts as would constitute necessary appurtenances to the road to be constructed, and not bridges of such size and magnitude as would constitute separate improvements.

Section 7 of the Alexander law (which is 5409, C. M. Digest) provides that the plans for a proposed road shall show the grading to be done, the bridges and culverts to be constructed, and the other work necessary to construct the proposed improvement, and confers power to build such bridges and culverts as are a necessary part of the road, and are not of such magnitude as to constitute a separate improvement.

The facts here are very different from those in the case of Van Dyke v. Mack, supra, and are very nearly like those in the case of Bullock v. Dermott-Collins Road Imp. Dist., 155 Ark. 176, where the proposed road crossed a large creek and Bayou Bartholomew, and bridges costing from ten to twelve thousand dollars over each stream were required. Bayou Bartholomew is a stream of approximately the size of the St. Francis River where the road in the instant case crosses it.

Here the bridge or viaduct extends to the center of the St. Francis River, a distance of less than 200 feet; it crosses a drainage ditch and levee, which requires nearly the same amount of bridge work, and the remainder of the 1,900 feet, comprising the total length of the bridge or viaduct, is over land which might be crossed by building an embankment, if a bridge or viaduct were not regarded by the engineers who formulated and prepared the plans as being more desirable, and this bridge or viaduct is for the larger part of the distance merely an elevated highway. The estimated cost of the bridge or viaduct is $30 per running foot.

The total estimated cost of the whole improvement is $190,400, and we do not think the proportionate cost *Page 871 of the bridge or viaduct is so large that it could only be constructed as a separate improvement, but we think that, like the bridges in the case of Bullock v. Dermott-Collins Road Imp. Dist., supra, it is a component part of one improvement.

Of the second ground of attack but little need be said. The west end of the road is at the east end of Junction Street, in the city of Paragould, which street extends to the boundary of the city. In other words, the proposed road extends to the east boundary of the city of Paragould, and runs for several miles on section lines before reaching the city, and the line of this road, as marked by the engineer on the plat, extends into the city for a short distance, as if it were proposed to improve a portion of Junction Street in that city, and which runs beyond the boundary of the district. This line does extend beyond the boundary of the district, but the portion of the road to be improved is colored and the portion of the line extending into the city is not colored. Moreover, the petition circulated among and signed by the landowners described the road as beginning at the east end of Junction Street in the city of Paragould, and the orders of the county court so described the road to be improved, and we do not think it can be fairly contended that the plans called for the improvement of a portion of the street in the city of Paragould which is not in the district.

It does not appear from the record before us that the proposed improvement is open to the objections which proved fatal to the proposed improvement in the cases of Mullins v. Little Rock, 113 Ark. 590, and Mullins v. Commissioners' Bridge Imp. Dist. No. 2, 114 Ark. 324. Each of those cases involved the construction of a bridge across the Arkansas River at the city of Little Rock. In the first of those cases the proposed improvement was defeated because, as was held by this court, there was no provision in the law for a local improvement district to aid a county in the construction of a *Page 872 bridge connecting two cities, as was proposed in that case. In the second of those appeals, which involved the same improvement, it was held that there could not be two separate sets of commissioners to build a single improvement.

In the instant case it appears from the record before us that the commissioners will have sole control of the proposed improvement, which lies entirely in the district, and although it extends to the center of the St. Francis River, that fact will not defeat the construction of the improvement because it there connects with a similar improvement, and, when so connected, a completed bridge will exist and will afford a facility for crossing the river.

We think the court below was correct in dismissing the complaint as being without equity, and that decree is affirmed.