Gatling v. . Commissioners of Carteret

92 N.C. 536
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 92 N.C. 536 (Gatling v. . Commissioners of Carteret) 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
Gatling v. . Commissioners of Carteret, 92 N.C. 536 (N.C. 1885).

Opinion

*537 Ashe, J.

This was a civil action brought by the plaintiff against the defendants as commissioners of Carteret county, to have a debt due to him by the county set off against certain taxes assessed against him by the commissioners for the years 1882 and 1883, and for an injunction against the defendants, to restrain them from collecting said taxes.'

The plaintiff in his complaint alleged that the county of Car-teret was indebted to him in the sum of eight thousand dollars, evidenced by two judgments against the board of commissioners of said county, each for the sum of four thousand dollars, founded upon bonds issued by the board of commissioners of said county under the provisions of an act of the General Assembly of the State of North Carolina, entitled “An act to incorporate the North Carolina Railroad Company and the North Carolina and "Western Railroad Company,” ratified the 27th of December, 1852, whereby the said county and its properly constituted authorities became bound to levy annually on the persons, lands, and other property within said county, and collect, such taxes as may be sufficient to pay such bonds and interest. That the judgments are still due and owing, no part thereof having been paid, and that payment has often been demanded; that the plaintiff has property situated at Morehead City in the county of Carteret which has been assessed for taxes for two years, 1882 and 1883, both for State and county purposes, and the tax lists have been placed in the hands of the sheriff of said county for collection; that he has paid all of the taxes due for those years, except the general tax for county purposes, so far as they have come to his knowledge; that he is entitled in equity and good conscience to have the said indebtedness of the county to him declared a set-off or counter-claim pro tanto against said residue of taxes, and he prayed for such application and for a restraining order enjoining the defendants from collecting such residue.

The defendants answered the complaint, admitting some of the allegations thereof and denying others.

*538 The plaintiff then moved for a restraining order founded upon an affidavit, varying but little from the allegations. in his complaint, and the defendants filed a counter-affidavit similar to their answer.

On the 28th day of March, 1884, His Honor A. C. Avery, at Chambers, granted the restraining order as prayed for, to be heard before Plis Honor J. E. Shepherd, and it having been agreed between the counsel of both parties that His Honor should try the cause upon the facts found by him, and the complaint and answer, His Honor found the facts substantially as stated in the affidavit of the plaintiff, and adjudged that the plaintiff was not entitled to the relief demanded, and that the action be dismissed and the defendant to recover his costs to be taxed by the clerk.

The sole question presented for. our determination is, whether the plaintiff' can set up the judgments which he has against the county, as a set-off or counter-claim against the taxes admitted by him to be due to the county for the years 1882 and 1883.

The position taken bj^ the plaintiff in seeking to set off the debt due him from the county of Carteret against the taxes assessed by the county authorities upon his property situated in that county, cannot be sustained upon any principle of law or equity.

It is certainly an action of the first impression. Matter which is purely defensive in its character, and is only allowed as a defence to an action, is sought to be used as the gravamen of an action. As a counter-claim it cannot avail the plaintiff, for that is in the nature of a cross actiou, and must bo a cause of action existing in favor of a defendant and against a plaintiff, between whom a several judgment might be had. The Code, §244.

There is no rule of practice or procedure, known even to the loose pleading tolerated by the Code System, which allows a plaintiff to set up a counter-claim against a defendant — such an action is an anomaly in legal proceedings.

*539 The same observations apply with equal appositeness to a set-off, which, like the counter-claim, is a defence to the action, and only exists where the demand, as well of the plaintiff as of the defendant, is a debt, such a demand as under the old practice could only be recovered by an action of debt or indebitatus assumpsit, but enlarged by The Code so as to embrace any cause of action arising on contract existing at the commencement of the action, extrinsic to the plaintiff’s cause of action. The Gode, §244; Hurst v. Everett, 91 N. C., 399. But still it must be a debt in the broad sense of that term, a demand for money due, founded upon contract.

But a' tax is not a debt. “ Taxes are not debts in the ordinary sense of that term, and their collection will in general depend on the remedies which are given by the statute for their enforcement. "When no remedy is specially provided, a remedy by suit may fairly be implied, but when one is given which does not embrace an action at law, a tax cannot in general be recovered in a common law action as a debt. Taxes are not demands against which a set-off is admissible; their assessment does, not constitute a technical judgment; nor are they contracts between party and party, either expressed o^ implied, but they ai’e the particular acts of the government through its various agents, binding upon the inhabitants, and to the making and enforcement of which their personal consent individually is not required.” Cooley on Taxation, 15 and 16.

In the City of Camden v. Allen, 2 Dutcher, 398, the Supreme Court of New Jersey say, “ a tax, in its essential characteristics, is not a debt, or in the nature of a debt. A tax is an impost levied by authority of government upon its citizens or subjects, for the support of the State. It is not founded upon contract or agreement, it operates in invitum.” To the same effect is Shaw v. Pickett, 26 Vermont, 486.

If then, a tax is not a debt or obligation to pay money founded upon a contract, it cannot be liable under any circumstances to a set-off. In the case of City of Camden v. Allen, supra, the court *540 said, “ Debt is the subject-matter of set-off, and is liable to set-off; a tax is neither. To hold that a tax is liable to set-off would be utterly subversive of the power of government and destructive of the very end of taxation.” S. P. Cooley on Taxation, supra; Finnegan v. City of Fernandina, 15 Florida, 379.

In Battle, Treasurer, v. Thompson, 65 N.

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.C. 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gatling-v-commissioners-of-carteret-nc-1885.