Cromartie v. Commissioners of Bladen

85 N.C. 211
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 5, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 85 N.C. 211 (Cromartie v. Commissioners of Bladen) 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
Cromartie v. Commissioners of Bladen, 85 N.C. 211 (N.C. 1881).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

The plaintiff having sued, an d at spring term, 1875, recovered judgment against the board of county commissioners of Bladen for the sum of $4,760, with interest thereon from February 5th preceding, to enforce the pay *212 ment thereof applied for and obtained a writ of mandamus commanding the commissioners, as soon as permitted by law, to levy and collect a sufficient tax to discharge the debt. The process isscted on December 25th, 1879, and was returnable and returned to spring term following. To this mandate the commissioners answered that they were only authorized by law, with a concurrence of a majority of the justices of the peace sitting with them, to levy taxes on the first Monday in August, and had been unable to comply with the directions of the writ since it was issued. At fall term, 1880, they made further answer and say that they have levied the maximum tax allowed under the constitution upon the taxable property in the county, from which would be realized about $4,000, according to their estimates, all of which was needed to meet the ordinary expenses of the county government for the current fiscal year, and necessary reparation of the public buildings and bridges.

At spring term, 1881, a rule, supported by affidavits of the plaintiff and others, was granted by the presiding judge against the commissioners personally, requiring them to appear before him instanter, and show' cause, if any they have, why an attachment should not issue against them for contempt in failing to obey the command of the writ, to which rule the chairman of the board, W. J. Parker, on behalf of himself and associates, responds and says:

The commissioners did on August 1st, 1880, levy a tax on the real and personal estate in their county subject to taxation, to the full limits allowed by law, to-wit, for school purposes 8-J- cents and for county expenses 34-|- cents on every one hundred dollars valuation, and $1.28 upon each taxable poll for the school and pauper fund. The. nett amount expected to be raised from the assessment upon property will be $4,630.38, whereof has been already disbursed by the treasurer $5-32.76, and $2,472.55 remains in the collector’s hands.

*213 The expenses to ¡be provided for during th.e year out of •this fund are::

Eor costs incurred upon nol. fros. Socket of fall term, 1880..........$ 200
“ “ of holding the present term of the court,... 1,200
“ " mileage and per-diem of the-commissioners, 300
■“ payment-of fees du-e the clerk,. 300
“ -estimated jail charges $250, necessary repairs $300, and cost of providing an iron -cage therein $1,200,.. 1,750
■“ repairs of. court house $400, and of bridges $200,,......-....... 600
“ other unascertained costs for taking tax list and holding August election, estimated at.......... 300
Making in the aggregate,......-.$ 4,650

‘The fond -in -the treasury on March 1st, 1881, was for general purposes $1,625.11, and -not the larger sum stated in dhe plaintiff’s affidavit.

Upon the coming in of this response, without-inquiry or «reference to ascertain the-correctness of its specifications or •the necessity and reasonable cost of the expenditures for the -proposed-objects,-so .fa*r'.-as we ;-ean -see-from tb-e-record, his Honor finds-as a fact t-hat no-steps had hitherto been taken lowar-ds the reparation of th.e public buildings and bridges, and that ali accruing demands on -the treasury to-that date had been met, -except the expenses of the pending,derm and 4he nol. pros, docket and the sum.of,$75 to be pa-id under a ■contract for a bridge, that the -available county means in -possession of the treasurer were for public schools derived •from the property tax, $2,033.47; and the poor from the poll .ta^, $236.86,; general county purposes, $1,625.11.; and-to be. *214 collected and paid in by the sheriff for the same objects, to' wit, public schools, $662.95; poll tax, $827.45; general'1 county fund,. $2,472.45., And the court thereupon rnade-the rule absolute and adjudged that the several defendants-be each committed to the custody of the sheriff and be by-him imprisoned in the common jail until they pay to the-plaintiff out of the general fund in the county treasury the sum of $1,0-00, and deliver to- him an order on the sheriff' for a further like sum. to be- paid out of the taxes which have or may come into, his hands, and that an alias writ of mandamus issue returnable to the next term, commanding the-commissioners to levy and collect a sufficient tax to-pay the-residue of the plaintiff’s demand.

From this judgment the defendants appeal, and-the plaintiff objecting to the appeal in the court below, insists it cannot be entertained, here.

1. The judgment of imprisonment of the defendants for-the alleged disobedience-of the mandate of the court and for-the enforcement of its order, made in a pending proceeding between parties, and affecting a-, substantial right,, is clearly the subject matter of appeal. An appeal under similar circumstances. was upheld in Bond v. Bond, 69 N. C.. 97; In re Walker, 82 N. C., 95, and In re Daves, 81 N. C., 72.

In the-last case in meeting, the objection,that an appeal-does not lie from, a judgment punishing a party for contempt,, it is said, “ this is true as to-that class of contempts-which are-committed in the presence of the court.or so-near-ns to interfere with its business, and the reasons for. which, are set out by Nash,. O. X, in the- opinion in State v. Mott, 4 Jones, 449. Butin cases-like the present, where the-right to-punish depends upon a wilful disobedience of any process or order lawfully issued,, the lawfulness of the power.-exereised is a proper subject of review in this court.”

2. The defendants contend that the imprisonment being, indefinite in duration is in contravention..of the. act. regula?- *215 ting contempts, the second section of which prescribes the only punishments to be imposed and limits the extent of the fine and imprisonment. Bat. Rev. ch. 24.

An examination of the enactment, with its divisions in full as published in the acts of 1868-’69 eh. 177, renders its proper construction plain and tlie intent of the general assembly in passing it, manifest. The first section declares what acts and omissions are contempts for which the guilty party may be punished. In these cases the judgment is punitory for offences already committed, and its object the vindication of the rightful authority of the court aud its protection in the exercise of judicial functions. The punishment which may be imposed is restricted to a fine notin ■excess of $250, and imprisonment for not more than thirty •days, one or both, at the discretion of the eourt.

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Bluebook (online)
85 N.C. 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cromartie-v-commissioners-of-bladen-nc-1881.