Brown v. Commissioners of Hertford

5 S.E. 178, 100 N.C. 92
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 5 S.E. 178 (Brown v. Commissioners of Hertford) 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
Brown v. Commissioners of Hertford, 5 S.E. 178, 100 N.C. 92 (N.C. 1888).

Opinion

MerruioN, J.,

This is a controversy, submitted to the Court below without action, as allowed by the statute, (The Code, §§ 567-569). The plaintiffs are tax payers of Mur-freesboro Township, in the Comity of Hertford, and the defendants are the commissioners of that county.

The statute (Acts 1887, ch. 365) incorporates The Murfreesboro Railroad Company, and sections fourteen and thirty-one thereof, provide as follows:

Sec. 14. “ That Murfreesborough Township, in Hertford County, and Town of Murfreesboro, in said county, may subscribe to the capital stock of The Murfreesboro Railroad Company, or make donations to said company, to be secured by the bonds of said Township, or said town, as the case may be, bearing six per centum interest, as hereafter provided, subject to the approval of the qualified voters of said Township or said town.”

Sec. 31. “ When any township shall subscribe its bonds to the capital stock of said railroad company, or donate the same, as provided in this Act, the county taxes, which shall be levied and collected upon the property and franchise of said company in said Township, shall be applied in payment of the interest on the said bonds, to the amount of said interest, so long as the same shall accrue, and the excess of said taxes, if any, shall be applied to general county purposes; that when the said interest shall cease to accrue, by *94 reason of the payment of said bonds, the said taxes shall be applied to general county purposes.”

Of the numerous questions raised, and submitted to the Court below, the following are the material ones as to which error is assigned:

“1. Has the General Assembly the constitutional power to authorize a township to vote its bonds to aid in building a railroad, running partly through said township, into an adjoining county?
2. Has it the power to direct the application of the taxes levied and collected on ,the property and franchise of said company, within said township, to the use of the township, as provided for in section 31 of said act; if not, does that provision render the whole Act unconstitutional ?”

As to these questions, the Court decided :

“1st. That the Legislature has not the power under section 4, Article 7, of. the Constitution, to authorize the issuing of the bonds, and the levying of the tax, provided for in chapter 365, Laws of North Carolina, session 1887; nor was the power of the Legislature enlarged, so as to authorize the same by section 14, Article 7, of the Constitution, as to a particular township.
2d. That the Legislature had not the power, under the Constitution, to direct the general tax levied upon the property of the said railroad, or to be levied, to be applied to the purpose named in section 31 of the Act; but this section does not render the whole Act unconstitutional, nor prevent the collection of the tax upon the property of the said railroad, and its application to general county purposes.”

The appellants contend that these rulings are erroneous.

The Court gave judgment, that the defendants be enjoined perpetually against subscribing for the capital stock of the company named, and likewise against issuing the bonds of the township named, to pay for such stock, &c., and for costs.

The defendants, having excepted, appealed to this Court.

*95 Several of the questions raised by the case agreed upon by the parties and submitted to the Court, involving the regularity and sufficiency of the order of the County Commissioners, directing an election to be held, and the conduct of it, to ascertain the voice of the electors of the township, in respect to the proposed subscription for capital stock of the railroad company named, were decided adversely to the ap-pellee. As he did not appeal, these questions are not before us for our consideration, and hence, we express no opinion in respect to them, except so far as they may be incidentally affected by the questions we are called upon to decide. Indeed, they might, very properly, have been omitted from the transcript of the record on appeal.

The Constitution of this State, (Art. VII., §§ 3-4), as it prevailed before it was amended in 1877, and as amended, provided that the County Commissioners, of every county in the State, should divide the same into convenient districts, determine the boundaries thereof, and prescribe a name for each. It further provided, that when this was done, and report thereof was made to and approved by the General Assembly, that then “ the said districts shall have corporate powers for the necessary purposes of local government, and shall be known as Townships.”

Thus townships were established in every county invested with corporate powers.

But an amendment of the Constitution provided, as to that Article including the sections thereof cited, (§ 14 thereof,) that “ the General Assembly shall have full power, by statute, to modify, change, or abrogate any and all of the provisions of this Article, and substitute others in their place, except sections seven, nine, and thirteen.”

The Legislature, in the exercise of the power thus conferred upon it, enacted, (Acts 1876-'77, Chap. 141, § 7,) that All the provisions of Article seven of the Constitution, inconsistent with this Act, except those contained in sections *96 seven, nine and thirteen, are hereby abrogated, and the provisions of this Act substituted in their place; subject, however, to the power of the General Assembly to alter, amend, or abrogate the provisions of this Act, and to substitute others in their stead, as provided for in section fourteen of Article seven of the Constitution.” It further enacted, in the same statute, as follows: “ Sec. 3. The townships heretofore created, or hereafter established, shall be distinguished by well defined boundaries, and may be altered, and additional townships created, by the Board of County Commissioners, but no township shall have, or exercise, any corporate powers whatever, unless allowed by Act of General Assembly, to be exercised under the supervision of the Board of County Commissioners.”

The counsel for the appellee contended, on the argument before us, that the statute last cited abolished the provisions of the Constitution cited in respect to townships, and wholly deprived them of corporate powers and authority, and that the General Assembly has not power now to confer upon them such corporate powders, and particularly such powers for a single purpose, as for the purpose of subscribing for the capital stock of a railroad company, as in this case, and create a township debt, secured by bonds, to be put upon the markets to pay for such stock.

The view thus insisted upon is, we think, clearly untenable. It will be observed, that the provision of the Constitution, conferring power upon the General Assembly in respect to Article seven thereof, is clear, distinct and comprehensive ; it confers full power to modify, change or abrogate its provisions, except as to those sections specified, and to

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.E. 178, 100 N.C. 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-commissioners-of-hertford-nc-1888.