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State v. Georgia Rural Roads Authority

Supreme Court of Georgia
Sep 12, 1955
211 Ga. 808 (Ga. 1955)

Opinion

19032.

ARGUED JULY 12, 1955.

DECIDED SEPTEMBER 12, 1955.

Declaratory judgment. Before Judge Moore. Fulton Superior Court. June 6, 1955.

Eugene Cook, Attorney-General, Paul Miller, Assistant Attorney-General, for plaintiffs in error.

Peter Zack Geer, B. D. Murphy, contra.


The Georgia Rural Roads Authority Act of 1955 (Ga. L. 1955, p. 124) is not invalid for any reason assigned in the plaintiff's petition, and the judgment and decree of the court declaring the act, and all actions taken and proposed to be taken thereunder, as described in the plaintiffs' petition, to be constitutional and valid in all respects, is not erroneous for any reason assigned in the bill of exceptions.

ARGUED JULY 12, 1955 — DECIDED SEPTEMBER 12, 1955.


This case is her excepting to a declaratory judgment entered by the Superior Court of Fulton County, declaring constitutional and valid the Georgia Rural Roads Authority Act (Ga. L. 1955, p. 124), and the actions taken and proposed to be taken thereunder, as described in the plaintiffs' petition.

This act created as a body corporate and politic the Georgia Rural Roads Authority, declaring it to be an instrumentality of the State. Besides the usual corporate powers, the Authority was granted the right to construct rural roads with the proceeds of bonds to be issued by the Authority, and such roads to be rented or leased to the State and the State Highway Department, as lessees, and the rental received by the Authority is to be used to retire the bonds issued by the Authority. The act authorizes the execution of leases between the Authority as lessor, and the State and the State Highway Board as lessees, covering the projects or roads to be used by the State and the State Highway Board. The Governor and the State Highway Board are authorized to execute these leases.

The act further empowers the Governor and the governing authority of each county to convey to the Authority for a nominal consideration real property or rights-of-way belonging to the State or county on which the projects shall be constructed.

Pursuant to section 7 of the act, the State Highway Board has by resolution initiated the construction of rural road projects in approximately 130 counties of the State by making a recommendation to the authority to undertake and to finance construction thereof, one of which is in Fayette County. The Authority has considered this request, and has by resolution provided for the undertaking, construction, and financing of these projects in accordance with the recommendations of the State Highway Board, these resolutions calling upon the Governor and the governing authorities of the several counties involved to convey to the Authority the rights-of-way necessary for the projects. The estimated cost of construction of these projects will be approximately $10,000,000.

The petition alleges that the aforesaid resolutions of the State Highway Board and the Authority authorized the execution of a lease of the projects embodying in substance the following terms: For a term not in excess of fifty years at a rental calculated to enable the Authority to pay the principal of and interest on bonds issued to defray the cost of the projects, to comply with sinking-fund requirements of a trust indenture securing the bonds, to pay the cost of maintaining, repairing, and operating the projects, to perform fully all provisions of any trust indentures securing the bonds, to pay the pro rata share of administrative and operating expenses of the Authority, including sums which may be owed to the Highway Department for plans and specifications, and to pay any expenses in connection with the issuance of the bonds, but with the rental not to exceed under this and any other leases the maximum set forth in the amendment to the Highway Board Act (Ga. L. 1955, p. 249) of $8,500,000 per annum, the lease to provide that the Highway Department and/or the county in which the project is situated, shall maintain and keep in good repair the road projects and shall indemnify and save harmless the Authority from damage to person or property occurring on the leased premises.

Subsection (d) of section 10 of the act provides that, if the lease obligates the State and State Highway Department, the lessees, to maintain, repair, and reconstruct the projects during the period of the lease, this work shall be performed by the State Highway Department, but that as to any project which is not a part of the State-aid System of Highways, the duty of maintenance and repair of the project shall rest upon the county in which all or any portion of a project is situated, the same as in the case of other public roads in the county.

The plaintiffs in error, the State of Georgia, the Governor of Georgia, the State Highway Department of Georgia, the State Highway Board of Georgia, and named individual members thereof, and Fayette County, alleging that they are under the duty of administering and carrying out the Rural Roads Authority Act, if the same is valid and constitutional, brought the present suit, alleging uncertainty and the unconstitutionality of the act in the various respects set out in the petition. The Georgia Rural Roads Authority, in its answer, denied the allegations of unconstitutionality and illegality, and asked for a declaration as to the validity of the act. The Judge of Fulton Superior Court entered a judgment in favor of the defendant, declaring the act and all actions taken and proposed to be taken to be constitutional and valid in all respects, and the case is here on appeal from that judgment.


1. The Georgia Rural Roads Authority Act and the State Bridge Building Authority Act are practically the same, except that the former deals with rural roads and the latter with bridges. Every attack made upon the constitutionality and validity of the present act, and of the actions taken and to be taken thereunder, with the exceptions hereinafter noted, have been made in the attacks upon similar provisions of the State School Building Authority Act, the State Bridge Building Authority Act, or the State Toll Bridge Authority Act, and have been exhaustively dealt with and ruled upon adversely to the contentions of the plaintiffs in error in the decisions of this court in Sheffield v. State School Building Authority, 208 Ga. 575 ( 68 S.E.2d 590), McLucas v. State Bridge Building Authority, 210 Ga. 1 ( 77 S.E.2d 531), and State of Georgia v. State Toll Bridge Authority, 210 Ga. 690 ( 82 S.E.2d 626). As stated by Mr. Justice Candler, in the McLucas case ( 210 Ga. 1, 6), the ground has been thoroughly plowed in those cases, and need not be gone over again. The rulings there made are controlling on every question presented here, except those hereinafter specifically dealt with.

2. The contention is made in subparagraph 3b of paragraph 12 of the petition that the act, the lease contract, and the obligations imposed upon and assumed by the counties thereunder to maintain and keep said roads in repair are violative of article 7, section 7, paragraph 1, and of article 7, section 7, paragraph 3, of the Constitution of 1945 (Code, Ann., §§ 2-6001 and 2-6003), relating to the creation of debts by counties. Section 2-6001 imposes a limitation upon the bonded indebtedness of the county, and § 2-6003 imposes a limitation upon any additional indebtedness. Both provide how such indebtedness may be incurred. The basis for the contention that the act and the leases to be executed thereunder violate these provisions of the Constitution is that they require the counties to maintain roads built by the Authority. Section 10d of the act provides "that as to any project which is not a part of the State Aid System of Highways, the duty of maintenance and repair shall rest upon the county in which all or any portion of the project is situated, as in the case of other public roads of the county." This act is providing only for the construction of rural roads, and a rural road is defined as "Any continuous stretch of public way, road, thoroughfare, street or right of way, not now or as of the particular time of inquiry in the future designated as part of the State highway system in the manner provided by law and not located wholly within the boundaries of any incorporated municipality." Under the terms of the act each project leased by the Authority to the State and to the State Highway Department, will, upon the completion of its construction, "be a part of the system of public roads of the State and of the county or counties wherein the project is located." Such a project will not be a part of the State highway system unless it is designated as such in the way and manner provided by law. The purpose of the act is to construct rural roads, and not to enlarge or add to the State highway system.

While, under section 10d of the act, the county in which the project is situated is to maintain and repair the rural roads, this is not the imposition of any additional burden upon the county, but is exactly the same obligation as that resting upon the county with respect to other public roads in the county, and arises under the statutes relating to public roads. See Code Chapter 95-8. Under article 7, section 4, paragraph 1, of the Constitution (Code, Ann., § 2-5701), the General Assembly has power to delegate to the county the right to levy a tax "To build and maintain a system of county roads." The act of 1946 (Code. Ann. Supp., § 92-3701) provides that county taxes may be levied to "build and maintain a system of county roads." The Rural Roads Authority Act imposes no additional burden upon the county; the duties to maintain roads constructed under the act, but not a part of the State highway system, do not create a debt such as is prohibited by the constitutional provisions above referred to. The power of the General Assembly to legislate concerning maintenance of roads by a county is a part of the general legislative power conferred upon the General Assembly by the Constitution. "The whole subject is under the control of the State in its sovereign capacity, and this power is to be exercised through its legislature." Lee County v. Mayor c. of Smithville, 154 Ga. 550 ( 115 S.E. 107). See also Spain v. Hall County, 175 Ga. 600, 602 ( 165 S.E. 612). The contention that the act is violative of the two constitutional provisions dealing with the creation of debts by the counties is without merit.

3. The only other question presented by the present record which is not directly dealt with in the previous decisions of this court hereinbefore cited is that the Rural Roads Authority Act provides that the State itself is authorized to become a party to the rental contracts, and that "The rentals contracted to be paid by the lessees to the Authority under leases entered upon pursuant to this Act shall constitute obligations of the State, for the payment of which the good faith of the State is hereby pledged." That the undertaking of the State in this particular is authorized by article 7, section 6, paragraph 1a, of the Constitution of 1945 (Code, Ann., § 2-5901), is clear from the provision itself. It provides in express terms that the State may contract with any public corporation or authority for the use of facilities which such an authority is authorized to construct, the only limitation being that the contract must deal with such activities and transactions as the State is authorized by law to undertake.

It will be borne in mind that this provision of the Constitution first appeared by the act of 1941 (Ga. L. 1941, p. 50) as an amendment to article 7, section 6, paragraph 3, of the Constitution of 1877. As thus adopted this section provided that "any city, town, municipality or county of this State . . . may contract. . ." When the Constitution of 1945 was adopted, this language was changed by adding the words, "the State, State institutions," so that the section was made to read as is now set forth in the Constitution of 1945. That the purpose of the framers of the Constitution of 1945 was to enlarge the amendment of 1941, so as to extend to the State and State institutions the same privileges which had been granted to the specified political subdivisions of the State, is plain and clear; and under the ruling in the McLucas case, supra, the State is authorized to enter into such contracts as are provided for under the terms of this act, since it is authorized by article 7, section 2, paragraph 1, of the Constitution (Code, Ann., § 2-5501), "To construct and maintain . . . a system of State highways." In Hayden v. City of Atlanta, 70 Ga. 817, 825, it is said: "But the power to have worked, opened, repaired and improved the public highways, streets and roads, may be exercised by the legislature in such manner and way, and under such circumstances as may be deemed best. There is no limitation imposed by the Constitution upon this power; it rests upon the sound discretion of the legislature." See also Lee County v. Mayor c. of Smithville, 154 Ga. 550, supra.

Under the authorities hereinbefore cited as applied to the act here under consideration, the judgment of the trial court in favor of the defendant, declaring the Georgia Rural Roads Authority Act, and all actions taken and to be taken thereunder, to be constitutional and valid in all respects as against the attacks made thereon in the plaintiffs' petition, and in denying the prayer for injunctive relief, is not erroneous for any reason assigned.

Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur. Wyatt, P. J., concurs specially.


I agree to this opinion for the sole reason that I am bound by former full-bench decisions of this court.


Summaries of

State v. Georgia Rural Roads Authority

Supreme Court of Georgia
Sep 12, 1955
211 Ga. 808 (Ga. 1955)
Case details for

State v. Georgia Rural Roads Authority

Case Details

Full title:STATE OF GEORGIA et al. v. GEORGIA RURAL ROADS AUTHORITY

Court:Supreme Court of Georgia

Date published: Sep 12, 1955

Citations

211 Ga. 808 (Ga. 1955)
89 S.E.2d 204

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