Chimney Rock Co. v. Town of Lake Lure

156 S.E. 542, 200 N.C. 171, 1931 N.C. LEXIS 276
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 27, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 156 S.E. 542 (Chimney Rock Co. v. Town of Lake Lure) 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
Chimney Rock Co. v. Town of Lake Lure, 156 S.E. 542, 200 N.C. 171, 1931 N.C. LEXIS 276 (N.C. 1931).

Opinion

Glabkson, J.

The evidence was to the effect that the town of Lake Lure was incorporated as a municipal corporation by the General Assembly of North Carolina and its charter is set forth in chapter 179, Private Laws of North Carolina, session 1927, and in accordance with its charter it is exercising municipal functions. In its corporate capacity, under the power conferred upon it by the General Assembly it issued and sold a large amount of bonds in the sum of $250,000, for the alleged purpose of making municipal improvements. (1) The Chimney Rock Company, a corporation, has a deed of trust on its property, dated 1 March, 1929, duly recorded, and the First Bank and Trust Company of Hendersonville, N. C., a corporation, is trustee for the bond holders, the principal sum of $77,000 is now outstanding. It is in evidence that Chimney Rock Company owns about 185 acres of land which includes Chimney Rock — spoken of as a natural wonder and located on said property — -and there is a scenic road leading to the rock and other improvements. Because of its scenic beauty and natural wonder, the property is operated and exhibited for profit as an amusement enterprise, and that the income amounted to from $40,000 to $47,000 a year. (2) It was in evidence that Chimney Rock Mountains, Inc., comprises about 8,000 acres of land, about 1,500 acres of this is covered by the lake. Highway No. 20 runs parallel with the river on the north side of Rocky River part of the way. Leaving the town of Lake Lure and coming towards Chimney Rock one comes down Highway No. 20, which skirts along the lake and then continues along Rocky Br.oad River some distance to where the toll road branches off from Highway No. 20. That is what is known as the private or toll road, and runs southeast for a little distance, crosses part of what is called the intervening property and runs back on the Chimney Rock Mountain property and 'then, after making a number of turns, goes on up to Chimney Rock. It is about three miles long and is a toll road. It becomes a toll road a short dis *174 tance after reaching tbe property of the Chimney Rock Company where toll is collected. That is the only road approach to what is known as Chimney Rock, where there is located Cliff' Dweller’s Inn and some other cottages. It is a scenic spot where a great many tourists go. Lake Lure is also a scenic spot, and the people who visit one of these spots very frequently visit the other, as they are right together. This road was built up to the top of Chimney Rock before 1916. One drives more than two-thirds’ of the distance of this road on the Chimney Rock Company’s property before coming to the toll gate where they collect toll. The road below the toll gate is traveled by the general public. Unless going to Chimney Rock, one does not travel this road much because the rock is at the end of the road.

The rock is about 100 feet across, with an elevation of 300 feet on the steepest side from the top over to the ground. The rock covers something like one-eighth of an acre. A great deal of the land included in the big boundary of Chimney Rock Mountains, Inc., is mountainous land and about 1,500 acres included in the big boundary is covered by the lake.

Under the act incorporating the town of Lake Lure, ratified 7 March, 1927, the boundaries included (1) the land owned by the Chimney Rock Company, a corporation, about 185 acres on which is “Chimney Rock”; (2) the land owned by the Chimney Rock Mountains, Inc., 8,000 acres about 1,500 acres is Lake Lure. Between these two bodies of land above set forth are two small tracts of land of about 75 acres. The space between the two is about 700 feet across this property. The highway along Rocky Broad River connects the two tracts, and a toll road runs up to “Chimney Rock.” Both are scenic spots close together connected by an improved road.

The contentions of the parties has narrowed down to the sole question: Has the General Assembly the power to incorporate the town of Lake Lure and include in its boundary the lands above set forth, known as “Chimney Rock” development, comprising about 185 acres? We think so.

It is contended by the plaintiffs that this cannot be done, as the land is not contiguous. Both are valuable for scenic beauty, one “Chimney Rock” from the base 1,000 feet ascent, and the other “Lake Lure,” 1,500 acres of land covered by water. Then again the two places are primarily to attract tourists and visitors during the summer period, and are joined together by a splendid scenic highway — the joinder by the highway, as it were, being like the famous North Carolina Siamese twins.

Ordinarily the lands comprising a city or town are contiguous. The joining of these two scenic places into one town, the peculiar topography of the land for scenic devolpment, comprised of “Lake Lure” and “Chim *175 ney Rock,” is for legislative discretion, and not for this Court to determine. Policy of legislation is for the people, not courts. Bond v. Town of Tarboro, 193 N. C., 248.

“It has been long settled that no court would declare a statute void unless the violation of the Constitution is so manifest as to leave no room for reasonable doubt. The philosophy of our system of government is based on the consent of the governed, subject to constitutional limitations.” Commissioners v. Assell, 194 N. C., at p. 419; Kornegay v. Goldsboro, 180 N. C., at p. 445; S. v. Revis, 193 N. C., 192; Hinton v. State Treasurer, 193 N. C., at p. 499; Briggs v. Raleigh, 195 N. C., 223.

This is an act of the General Assembly, creating the town of Lake Lure, and there is no constitutional provision prohibiting- this to be dono. •

In Lutterloh v. Fayetteville, 149 N. C., at p. 70-71, we find: “Judge Dillon, in his work on Municipal Corporations (4 ed.), sec. 185, cites an array of authorities in support of his texts: 'Not only may the Legislature originally fix the limits of the corporation, but it may, unless specially restrained in the Constitution, annex, or authorize the annexes tion of, configiums or other territory (italics ours), and this without the consent, and even against the remonstrance, of the majority, of the persons residing in the corporation or in the annexed territory. And it is no constitutional objection to the exercise of this power of compulsory annexation that the property thus brought within the corporate limits will be subjected to taxation to discharge a preexisting municipal indebtedness, since this is a matter which, in the absence of special constitutional restriction, belongs wholly to the Legislature to determine.’ Such legislative enactments involve no sort of a contract between the General Assembly, on the one part, and the citizens of the locality to be annexed, on the other part.”

This “other territory” seems to be modified in the fifth edition of Dillon on Municipal Corporations, sec. 355, note p. 618. But the Lui-terloh case has long been recognized as authority in this jurisdiction. Holmes v. Fayetteville, 197 N. C., 740; Penland v. Bryson City, 199 N. C., 140. On the present record, we do not think it should be modified.

In 1 McQuillin Municipal Corp. (2 ed., 1928), part sec. 284, p.

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Bluebook (online)
156 S.E. 542, 200 N.C. 171, 1931 N.C. LEXIS 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chimney-rock-co-v-town-of-lake-lure-nc-1931.