Bailey v. City of Raleigh

58 L.R.A. 178, 41 S.E. 281, 130 N.C. 209, 1902 N.C. LEXIS 47
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 22, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 58 L.R.A. 178 (Bailey v. City of Raleigh) 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
Bailey v. City of Raleigh, 58 L.R.A. 178, 41 S.E. 281, 130 N.C. 209, 1902 N.C. LEXIS 47 (N.C. 1902).

Opinion

Furches, C. J.

The plaintiff’s: intestate resided within one mile of the corporate boundaries of the city of Raleigh, and during the years of 1888, 1892, 1893 and 1894, carried on the business of a retail liquor dealer within one mile of the city limits. In the year 1888, he paid the city $50 for license to carry on said business, and in 1892 he paid $300; *210 in 1898, be paid $300, and in 1894 be paid $150 — making, in tbe-aggregate, $800.

Tbe Legislature of 1901 passed an act (Chapter 327), wbicb tbe plaintiff contends authorizes him to recover back from the defendant city this amount ($800), and interest thereon. Tbe statute provides that where any city, town or municipality has collected any tax or assessment upon property “outside of tbe actual charter or incorporate limits of such town, city or municipality, or where any town, city or municipality shall have collected a privilege tax or assessment upon any person or persons doing business outside of the actual charter or incorporate limits or boundaries as aforesaid upon such business, said town, city or municipality shall refund to' such person or persons, or their proper representatives, tbe amount of such tax or assessment.” It is not denied but what tbe city charter and tbe acts of tbe Legislature, in terms, authorized tbe city to issue the licenses and collect tbe tax.

This presents tbe question; and there is no doubt but tbe act in terms is sufficiently comprehensive to cover the case (as it was in all probability intended to do), and to enable the plaintiff to recover, if it was within tbe legislative power to give him this right.

As a general rule, tbe Legislature may give a remedy, but not a right; that is, where there is a cause of action, the Legislature may provide a means by which such cause of action may be enforced; but it can not malee a contract for parties, nor can it take tbe property of one person and give it to another. No man shall be “disseized of his property except by the law of tbe land”; that is, by the judgment of a Court of competent jurisdiction, in which be is a party and afforded an opportunity to defend his rights. These propositions are too elementary to require citation of authority. The Legislature, for the public good, may require certain things to be done, and it may prohibit the doing of others, and it may pro *211 vide a penalty for their violation. But this is for the public good, and not between parties, and these can never be retroactive. And, as the Legislature can not determine the rights of parties, and has" no means of enforcing its judgments, if it could be said to have any,.all that section 327 can be understood to mean is that the Legislature opens the doors of the Courts to the plaintiff to prosecute his claim, and, by this statute, says if the city has collected this money wrongfully, you shall have it back.

Municipalities being a part of the State,- the rule laid down above as applying to individuals is somewhat modified in its application to municipal corporations. The principle is not abandoned, but slightly modified, so as t.o allow such legislation to this extent, that if the plaintiff has a just and meritorious demand against the city, in which the city has wrongfully received his money, labor or property, but for some technical reason he is not able to recover it back, the Legislature may specially provide for his relief, as in Section 327; as in Guthrie National Bank v. City of Guthrie, 173 U. S., 528, where parties had acted as officers of the defendant before it was incorporated, and had been given certificates of indebtedness for their services, which had been transferred to the plaintiff. After the defendant was incorporated, it refused to pay these certificates, upon the ground that they were issued before the defendant was incorporated. This was held to be a legal technical ground of defense, but the fact remained that the defendant had received the services of these officers, policemen and others, and the Legislature passed an enabling act similar to Section 327. The Court held that the city had received the benefit of these services, sustained the validity of the act, and the plaintiff recovered. But the same opinion held that this could not be done unless .there is. a moral obligation to pay. The same doctrine is held in New Orleans v. Clark, 95 U. S., 644, and the same in many other opinions and by leading text-writers. Indeed, it seems to bo *212 the general rule, and, so far as we have seen, it is almost without exception.

But all tbe text-books and decisions declare in express terms that this doctrine does not obtain except in cases where there is a moral obligation to pay, or a legal or equitable right exists that can not be enforced for some technical -reason.

Black’s' Constitutional Law, on page 3-80, after announcing the doctrine above stated, says: “But the Legislature can not compel a municipal corporation to pay a claim which it is under no obligation, legal or moral, to pay; nor can- it require a Court to render judgment on proof of the amount thereof.”

Dillon’s Municipal Corporations, on page 130, after announcing the doctrine that where there is a legal or moral obligation to pay, but which can not be enforced, proceeds to say: “The cases on this subject, when carefully examined, seem to the author to go no further, probably, than to assert the doctrine that it is competent for the Legislature to compel municipal corporations to recognize and pay debts; or claims, not binding in strict law, and which, for technical reasons, could not be enforced in equity, but which nevertheless are just and equitable in their character, and involve a moral obligation. To this extent, and with this limitation, the doctrine is unobjectionable in principle, and must be regarded as settled, although it asserts a measure of control over municipalities, in respect to their duties and liabilities, which probably does- not exist as to private corporations and individuals.”

In a leading note of Mr. Freeman, in the case of Hasbrouck v. Milwaukee, 13 Wis., 37, 80 Am. Dec., on page 733, it is said: “But it (the Legislature) can not compel the payment of the claim which the city is neither under a legal nor a moral obligation to pay.” For this he cites Blanding v. Burr, 13 Cal., 343; Smith v. Morse, 2 Cal., 524; Nevada v. Hampton, 13 Nev., 441; Thomas v. Leland, 24 Wend., 65; Guilford v. Supervisors, 13 N. Y., 144; New Orleans v. Clark, 95 U. S., 644, and a great many other cases.

*213 This money was not levied or assessed against the plaintiffs intestate, nor his property. But it was paid by him voluntarily, upon his own application and request, and he received from the city a privilege that he did not have — a license to retail liquor. And we are unable to see that the plaintiff has any legal or equitable right to recover it back, even if the city had no right to grant the license, and certainly he has none if the city had this right. The plaintiff’s right to recover, if he has such right, must rest upon the moral obligation

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Bluebook (online)
58 L.R.A. 178, 41 S.E. 281, 130 N.C. 209, 1902 N.C. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-city-of-raleigh-nc-1902.