Kirby v. Commissioners Court Marshall Co.

MAYFIELD, J. —

This is common-law certiorari to quash proceedings in the commissioners’ court of Marshall county establishing a public road in that county. The circuit court denied and dismissed the petition for certiorari, and declined to quash the proceedings in the commissioners’ court. From the judgment dismissing the petition for certiorari, appellant prosecutes this appeal.

*613It has been ruled by this court repeatedly that the supervisory power of a superior over an inferior legal tribunal, by means of a common-law writ of certiorari, extends only to questions touching the jurisdiction of the subordinate tribunal and the regularity of its proceedings. The appropriate office of the writ is to correct errors of law apparent on the face of the record. ' Conclusions of fact cannot be reviewed, unless specially authorized by statute. The trial is not de novo, but on the record; and the only matter to be determined is the quashing or the affirmation of the proceedings brought up for review.—Town of Camden v. Bloch, 65 Ala. 236; McAllilley v. Horton, 75 Ala. 491.

Phior to the Code of 1907 it has been uniformly ruled that “the commissioners’ court of roads and revenue is a court of special, limited jurisdiction, and its proceed ings, to be valid, must show upon their face affirmative ly that the court has acquired jurisdiction of the subject-matter by taking those preliminary steps directed by the statute, in cases providing for its action. This was the doctrine held in the case of Commissioners’ of Roads and Revenue of Talladega County v. Thompson, 15 Ala. 134; and the same doctrine was reasserted at the present term of this court in the case of Lamar v. Commissioners of Roads and Revenue of Marshall County, 21 Ala. 772.”—Molett v. Keenan, 22 Ala. 487.

We are of the opinion, however, that it was the purpose of the Legislature to change this rule of law announced in the above cases, and, to the extent of establishing roads, stock law districts, etc., to make the .court of county commissioners a court of original and unlimited jurisdiction. In fact, the statutes so declare.

Section 3312 of the Code reads as follows: “The court [commissioners’] possesses original and unlimited jurisdiction in relation to the establishment, change, or *614discontinuance of roads, bridges, causeways, ferries, and stock law districts within the county, except where otherwise provided by law, to be exercised in conformity with the provisions of this Code.”

Section 5765 of the Code provides as follows: “The • courts of county commissioners of the several counties are invested with a general superintendence of the public roads within their respective counties, and may establish new, and change and discontinue old, roads, in the manner hereinafter provided, and shall improve and maintain the public roads, bridges, and ferries of their respective counties so as to render travel over the same as safe and convenient as practicable. To this end, they are given legislative judicial, and executive powers; they may establish, promulgate, and enforce new rules, regulations, and laws not inconsistent with the general and special laws of this state which are necessary to make, improve, and maintain a good system of public roads, bridges, and ferries in their respective counties, and regulate the use thereof.”

This and similar sections of the Code relating to the jurisdiction and powers of the commissioners to establish stock law districts have been construed by this court; and in the cases treating the subject the commissioners’ court was held to be, for the purposes mentioned, what the statute declares it to be, a court of original and unlimited jurisdiction, and not of special and limited jurisdiction, as it was before the passage of the statutes now in the Code of 1907. See Cook v. Commissioners’ Court, 178 Ala. 394, 59 South. 483; Wright v. Commissioners’ Court, 180 Ala. 534, 61 South. 918.

We can see no reason why commissioners’ courts have not the same power and jurisdiction to establish roads which they have to establish stock law districts. We *615likewise see no reason why the proceedings in suck courts to establish roads should not receive the same liberal construction, to uphold them, when assailed on certiorari, that is accorded to proceedings to1 establish stock law districts. Applying the same rule of construction to statutes and proceedings governing the establishing of roads, which we applied to partly the same and similar statutes and proceedings governing the establishing of stock law districts, we hold that the proceeding (here assailed), to establish a public road in Marshall county, is not so absolutely void or irregular as to confer no jurisdiction on the commissioners’ court, or to require the same to be quashed on certiorari to the circuit court.

We therefore hold that the trial court committed no error in denying the application for certiorari, nor in dismissing the petition therefor.

One of the main contentions of appellant is that the original record in the commissioners’ court failed to affirmatively show that the application to establish the road in question was in writing. • The record did originally show that the application to establish the road was made to the court; but it did not recite that it was in writing. The amended record, however, does affirmatively show that the application was in writing. The appellant contends, however, that the court was without authority and power to so amend the record, after the petition for certiorari to quash was filed in the circuit court.

We cannot agree with appellant in either of these contentions. We do not think that the failure of the record in the commissioners’ court to recite that the application was in writing rendered the whole proceeding void and subject to be quashed. We are also of the opinion that the commissioners’ court had the right to make the record speak the truth,; by showing that the *616application was in writing, by incorporating the application in the minute entries of the court, and by making the record a part of the return of their commissions to the writ of certiorari.

While there may have occurred errors and irregularities in the proceeding to establish this road, such as are pointed out by appellant, we find none which renders the proceeding void, or subject to be quashed on certiorari. We find no reversible error, and the judgment must be affirmed.

Affirmed.

Anderson, C. J., and Somerville and Gardner, JJ., concur.