Corporation of Columbia v. Hunt

39 S.C.L. 550
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMay 15, 1852
StatusPublished

This text of 39 S.C.L. 550 (Corporation of Columbia v. Hunt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corporation of Columbia v. Hunt, 39 S.C.L. 550 (S.C. Ct. App. 1852).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Wabdlaw, J.

Independent of the efficacy of any town ordinance, the action cannot rest upon the ground that defendant’s promise to refund money, which the plaintiffs have expended for his benefit, may be implied from his silence whilst he saw the work go forward, knowing that he wps expected to pay for it.— The Council had full right to do the work, without consulting the defendant: he could not lawfully have hindered it; and he declined to give even that testimony of his assent, which the expression of a preference for one material rather than another might have been supposed to include.

It is true, that when a corporation has no other means of compelling its members to pay the sums which have been required from them according to its by-laws, it may have the aid of this Court, and in an action here, a promise by a member to render his dues will be implied. (Corporation of Columbia vs. Harrison, 2 Mill, 213).- This implied promise, however, presupposes and grows out of an obligation enacted by a valid by-law.

The sum here demanded from the defendant is neither a fine nor a tax. It is not a fine, because that is. a mulct laid by some competent tribunal for punishment of an offence, implying trial and judgment: whereas the proceeding against the defendant [554]*554has been only the demand from him by a marshal of a sum ascertained by calculation under a general order which embraced all persons who were in arrear for the curbing. It is not a tax, because there was no. ordinance imposing such a tax: — it was not laid upon any property nor apportioned to the quantity or value of any thing besides the work done: — and the order under which it was demanded, was not general, so as to operate upon all the corporators who owned the property made by it liable to taxation, but was confined to a special class; in all which particulars, the Acts hereafter cited will show that it is distinguished from any tax which the intendant and wardens may lay, under the special grants that have been made to them of power to lay taxes upon certain enumerated subjects.

The sum demanded is then nothing but the share which has been charged upon the defendant as a lot-owner, according to an assessment made upon the lot-owners of a certain street, under an order which was intended to make them exclusively liable for the expenses of a useful work in that street, and considered to be more beneficial to them than to other corpo-rators.

If there had been a by-law ordaining that such work should be done and such assessment made, and providing a mode of proceeding, there is no room to doubt that the law might, according to the mode provided, have been executed by the Council itself, its committee, officers or servants, under general or particular directions given by the Council or by any body authorized by the by-law. The by-law or ordinance, containing the rule, must have been under the common seal of the corporation; but the executive acts need not have been. A great difficulty in this case is, however, that there was no ordinance which authorized an assessment. The 10th section of the Ordinances of April, 1851, (ordinance of Columbia, page 88,) provides that each lot-owner on Richardson street shall do certain work: and that if he should neglect to do it after ten days notice, he shall be fined, and the marshal, after the expiration of the notice, shall cause the work to be done at his [555]*555expense. The proceeding thus ordained is very different from that which was taken in the case before us. If we admit that the curbing is within the work contemplated by this section, we yet see that the Council, for the purpose of securing uniform width and proper height in the pavement, or for some other reason, determined to do the work of curbing itself— made no requisition for the lot-owners to do it, but after it was done ordered them to pay. The objection is not, that the defendant had not notice of the payment required from him, but that he had not the opportunity by doing the work himself, after notice that he was required to do it, to avoid fine or expense as the section contemplates. I speak the opinion of three members of the Court, when I say that the proceeding against the defendant is considered to be unauthorized by any ordinance of the town.

There are two other members of the Court who do not clearly see the defect in the ordinances and proceedings of the Council : but they and one of the three before mentioned, are of opinion chat an assessment upon lot-owners in a particular street for improvements made in that street, is not authorized by the charter of the Town of Columbia, and that a by-law of the corporation ordaining such an assessment is consequently void. This point, as indeed the one concerning the conformity of the proceeding against the defendant to any existing ordinance, cannot be now authoritatively adjudged: and I will only indicate, some of the views which prevail.

In the City of Charleston, by an Act of 1764,

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Bluebook (online)
39 S.C.L. 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corporation-of-columbia-v-hunt-scctapp-1852.