Edwards v. Commissioners of Greene County

87 S.E. 346, 170 N.C. 448, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 424
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 15, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 87 S.E. 346 (Edwards v. Commissioners of Greene County) 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
Edwards v. Commissioners of Greene County, 87 S.E. 346, 170 N.C. 448, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 424 (N.C. 1915).

Opinion

HoKE, J.

Chapter 122, Public Laws 1913, establishes a scheme by. which the roads of the different townships may be “laid out, established, repaired, graded, constructed and improved in any way,” and provides for a bond issue for the purpose when authorized by a vote of the people of the locality affected; sec. 1 of the act providing, among other things,“That the bonds so issued by the commissioners of the county shall be paid by the township for which they are issued and shall not be chargeable against any property or polls outside of said township. The board of county commissioners, in performing the duties of issuing, selling and purchasing bonds or doing any other thing under this act, shall be deemed the agent of any township acting under this act.”

On the hearing it was made to appear that, pursuant to this statute^ there had been a bond issue of $20,000 for the purposes designated in Ormonds Township, Greene County, and the commissioners having ex-, pended a large part of the proceeds in the improvement of the township roads, had remaining in their hands near the sum of $1,200, and with this sum they were about to construct a new road taking a designated route in the township, when plaintiffs instituted the present action -to restrain the commissioners from their purpose, under allegations made- *450 on oath, chiefly, that the new road was not needed and would not be for the public interest and benefit of tbe people of the township; that it was contrary to the will of the large majority of the citizens resident therein, and “third, that, as plaintiffs are informed and believe, the commissioners in laying out and constructing said road are deliberately and willfully disregarding their duties as public officers and violating the trust and confidence reposed in them, in utter disregard of the expressed will of the citizens and taxpayers of the township and for the purpose of promoting their own selfish and private interests and the interests of two or three landowners.”

' It was further averred that, in laying out the proposed road, the commissioners had not pursued the course indicated and required by secs. 2684 and 2685 of Revisal, requiring that landowners along the route should be notified. In support of the allegation that the proposed road was against the will of the people of the township, it was alleged in one of plaintiff’s affidavits that,, on an informal vote had on the question, there were 101 votes polled, and all of them, practically the entire voting strength of the township, were cast against the proposed road.

On' the part of the defendants there was full and detailed denial of all the facts .tending to show that the road was an improper undertaking, and of any and.all allegations in impeachment of the motives of the commissioners; that, for various and sufficient reasons, specified in detail, the proposed road was necessary to the public interests of the township, giving them an outlet in times of high water across the low grounds of Contentnea Creek, which did not now exist and of which there was a great public need; that the matter had aroused great interest in the county and township and the commissioners had carefully looked' over the routes and had caused the same to be surveyed and designated by á competent road surveyor, and that the route selected was by far the best way available to meet the desired need, and the same could be constructed and maintained at far less expense than any other suggested.

In reply to the alleged opinion of the township on the subject, the commissioners aver that the vote was not taken so as to give any intelligent or fair expression of the people, and, on the contrary, at a meeting of the board, after full discussion, and with a large attendance of persons interested, when it was announced that the proposed route would be selected, and objections and criticisms were called for, none were made, etc., and that the road meets a great need in the township and can be built and maintained within their means. On this, the evidence chiefly relevant, we are of opinion that his Honor made a correct decision in dissolving the restraining order.

Under our Constitution, and under the present statute more directly involved, the government of the county is vested to a great extent in the *451 board of county commissioners. Wilson v. Holding, ante, 352; Board of Education v. Comrs., 150 N. C., 116. In tbe exercise of tbeir powers and in tbe absence of express legislative direction to tbe contrary, they are not to be controlled by a vote of tbe localities affected, either informal or otherwise, and, whenever it is shown that they have officially dealt with a question lawfully submitted to tbeir judgment, tbeir action may not be controlled nor interfered with by tbe courts unless it is established that there has been a gross and manifest abuse of tbeir discretion or it is clearly made to appear that they have acted, not for tbe public interest, but in promotion of personal or private ends. Supervisors v. Comrs., 169 N. C., 548, 86 S. E., 520; Comrs. v. Comrs., 165 N. C., 632; Newton v. School Committee, 158 N. C., 116; Brodnax v. Groom, 64 N. C., 244.

On this question, in tbe Newton case, supra, it was held: “Tbe courts may not interfere with discretionary powers conferred on school committees in tbeir administrations unless tbeir action is so clearly unreasonable as to amount to an oppressive and manifest abuse of tbe discretion conferred.”

In Supervisors v. Comrs., supra, .the Chief Justice, delivering tbe opinion, states tbe position as follows: “Courts can interfere in tbe purely administrative matter of which roads shall be repaired with public funds only when tbe administrative officials, to which tbe decision has been entrusted, indulge in such fraud or malversation as would call for indictment, or attempt such fraud as to clearly require that tbeir future action be controlled to prevent the misappropriation of public funds for private purposes.”

In this last case, which is more directly relevant and controlling on most of tbe questions presented, it was further held: “Under tbe .Constitution and Sess. Laws 1905, cb. 114, entitled ‘An act for tbe betterment of public roads of Pitt County,’ the county commissioners are vested with tbe control of tbe county roads of such county, and, although tbe statute authorizes them to levy a special tax upon tbe property of each township annually, tbe fund to be collected to be used solely for tbe improvement of roads in tbe townships where it is collected, such provision does not deprive tbe county commissioners in favor of tbe township supervisors of roads of tbe power to determine which road, or what roads, in any given township from which a fund bad been raised, shall be worked.”

We were referred, on tbe argument, to Stratford v. Greensboro, 124 N. C., 127, in support of tbe position that, on tbe present record, tbe action of tbe commissioners could well be made tbe subject of judicial scrutiny and control, but in that ease there was specific allegation with evidence tending to show that the action of tbe city authorities was in pur *452

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Bluebook (online)
87 S.E. 346, 170 N.C. 448, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-commissioners-of-greene-county-nc-1915.