Board of Com'rs v. Tome

153 F. 81, 82 C.C.A. 215, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4380
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 9, 1907
DocketNo. 683
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 153 F. 81 (Board of Com'rs v. Tome) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Com'rs v. Tome, 153 F. 81, 82 C.C.A. 215, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4380 (4th Cir. 1907).

Opinion

McDOWELL, District Judge.

By act of the Legislature of North Carolina (chapter 365, p. 640, Acts 1887) the Murfreesboro Railroad Company was incorporated and Murfreesboro township of Hertford county, which was by section 30 of the act created a “body politic and corporate” (the county commissioners being by said section made the corporate agents of the township), was authorized to subscribe to the stock of the said railroad company and to issue bonds in the payment of the subscription. This statute, so far as. is now material, does not differ essentially from the statute under consideration by this court in Board of Com’rs v. Tollman, 145 Fed. 753, 76 C. C. A. 317. An election was held under the act of 1887, and the subscription was authorized. In 1888 the bonds, which are dated September 19, 1887, were issued to the railroad company. The bonds are each for $1,000, numbered consecutively from 1 to 25. The first bond is made to become due ten years after February 1, 1888, and each successive bond one year later. Oh each bond were coupons, for $60 each, payable annually.

[83]*83On August 5, 1891, Jacob Tome became the purchaser of all the bonds and of all the coupons not then due. The coupons falling due-February 1, 1892 and 1893, were not paid. In November, 1893, the said Tome instituted an action in the United States Circuit Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina. To this action the only defendant named is the township of Murfreesboro. The relief sought was judgment that the plaintiff recover of the township the amount of the said coupons with interest and costs, and that the board of commissioners of Hertford county be required by mandamus to levy' taxes and pay the said coupons, and also to thereafter annually levy such taxes and pay the coupons subsequently to become due. On May 3, 1894, the township appeared by counsel and answered the complaint. On November 29, 1895, the township filed a second answer, in which the defendant pleaded the fact that by chapter 23, p. 31, Private Acts 1895, the Legislatare of North Carolina-had “abolished the charter of the defendant.” Somewhat later the complainant appears to have filed an amended complaint, which does not appear in the record, making the board of commissioners of Hertford county also a defendant. An answer to this amended complaint was filed December 18, 1896. It should here be stated that the act of 1895 referred to repealed the essential sections of chapter 365, p. 640, Acts 1887 — including section 30, which made the board of commissioners the corporate agents of the township. The result of this action was a judgment in 1897 in accordance with the prayer of the original complaint. In 1898 the executors, under the will of said Jacob Tome, instituted another action in the said court on account of the subsequent default in payment of coupons, in which the township and the board of commissioners and the individuals constituting such board were made the parties defendant. On this complaint an order similar to the one above mentioned was made December 21, 1898. Commencing in 1898, and continuing until late in 1902, some considerable payments were made on the coupons. On December 20, 1902, the opinion of the Supreme Court of North Carolina in Debnam v. Chitty, 131 N. C. 657, 43 S. E. 3, was announced. In this opinion chapter 365, p. 640, Acts 1887, was held to have been invalidly enacted. Since the publication of that opinion the executors appear to have been unable to obtain further payments on their coupons. In May, 1905, the affidavit of one of the said executors setting out the fact that the two former judgments had been rendered, and that the then overdue coupons had not been fully paid, was filed in the aforesaid trial court. Thereupon the said court issued a rule to show cause why a peremptory writ of mandamus should not issue. The said affidavit and the said rule are both entitled, “Executors of Jacob Tome, Dec’d, v. Murfreesboro Township.” The rule appears to have been served only upon the board of commissioners. An answer was filed to the rule on June 5, 1905, by the board of commissioners “appearing specially.” The lower court on January 10, 1906, entered an order reviving the above-mentioned judgments of 1897 and 1898, and ordering the issue of a writ of peremptory mandamus directed to the board-of commissioners, and in other respects following the judgments and [84]*84orders previously made by said court. The mandamus ordered by the judgment of January 10, 1906, was issued May 7, 1906. Thereafter an assignment of errors was filed in behalf of the .township, a bill of exceptions was settled and signed, and a writ of error was allowed. On November 21, 1906, the Supreme Court of North Carolina handed ■down its opinion in Board v. Wachovia Loan & Trust Co., 55 S. E. 442, in which the ruling in Debnam v. Chitty, supra, in regard to the validity of the statute there in question, is expressly repudiated. This fact was not known at the time this case was argued here.

The first matter to which our attention is required arises from the ■contention that the judgments of 1897 and 1898 estop the plaintiff in error from raising any question as to the validity of the act of 1887, ,under which the bonds here involved were issued. We are unable to perceive that these judgments “contain process within themselves,” or that any reason exists which discriminates the case at bar in this respect from Brownsville v. Loague, 129 U. S. 493, 9 Sup. Ct. 327, 32 L. Ed. 780. The judgments did not direct the clerk of the trial court to thereafter issue writs of mandamus if defaults in the annual payments of the coupons should occur. Clearly for a failure or refusal of the board to levy a tax in 1900, for instance, the coupon holder had to have an order of some description from the court to obtain relief. Although the judgments of 1897 and 1898 contained orders making it the duty of the board to annually levy the necessary tax, yet, on a subsequent failure of the board to obey such orders, some action by the court was necessary to enforce compliance with the previous orders. Whether the necessary action might be process for contempt or another writ of mandamus is immaterial. The fact remains that the judgments are not of themselves sufficient.

Section 620, Revisal 1905 (of the North Carolina laws), reads:

“After the lapse of three years from the entry, of judgment on the judgment docket, an execution can be issued only by leave of the court, upon motion, with personal notice to the adverse party, unless he be absent or nonresident, or can not be found to make such service, in which ease such service may be made by publication, or in such other manner as the court shall direct. Such leave shall not be given unless it be established by the oath of the party, or by other satisfactory proof, that the judgment, or some part thereof, remains unsatisfied and due. But the leave shall not be necessary when execution has been issued on the judgment within the three years next preceding the suing for execution, and return thereof unsatisfied in whole or in part.”

The last of the two judgments mentioned was rendered December 21, 1898. The affidavit on which was commenced the proceeding now under review was filed more than three years later. By force of the statute above quoted the judgments sought to be revived were dormant. The writ of mandamus applied for in 1905 is essentially, in the case at bar, a process in the nature of an execution. The statute in question is in effect a statute of limitation, and the trial court was bound by it. Ross v. Duval, 13 Pet.

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Bluebook (online)
153 F. 81, 82 C.C.A. 215, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-comrs-v-tome-ca4-1907.