Hailey v. City of Winston-Salem

196 N.C. 17
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 12, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 196 N.C. 17 (Hailey v. City of Winston-Salem) 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
Hailey v. City of Winston-Salem, 196 N.C. 17 (N.C. 1928).

Opinion

AdaMs, ¿T.

At the session of 1927 the General Assembly amended the charter of Winston-Salem, defined the corporate limits of the city, and provided for its government. Private Laws. 1927, ch. 232. In section 45 the board of aldermen is required to make provision for the establishment, continuance, maintenance, and support of a system of public schools; to appropriate annually for this purpose a certain part of the taxes of the city, and to ascertain and fix the amount of the appropriation. The substance of these provisions was included in the charter of 1915. Private Laws 1915, ch. 180. The appellant says that section 45 is in conflict with Article VII, see. 7, of the Constitution, and therefore inoperative for the reason that the maintenance- of schools is not a necessary expense (Hollowell v. Borden, 148 N. C., 255); that the charter contains no provision for submitting to the qualified voters of the city the question of levying a tax for schools, and that the omission of such a requirement invalidates that part of the section which purports to authorize the levy. His deduction is that as no means is provided for the exercise of the power, the power itself must fail. To support this proposition he cites Gastonia v. Bank, 165 N. C., 507.

In that case the decisive fact was that the Legislature had enacted a law which upon its face, without providing for a vote of the people, authorized the aldermen of Gastonia to issue bonds for improving the streets, etc., and for erecting graded school buildings; and the Court held that as the erection of school buildings is not a necessary expense, so much of the act as authorized the sale of bonds for this purpose was invalid because the act did not require submission of the question to the qualified voters. No election had been held and the will of the voters had not been ascertained. But in the case at bar an election was duly conducted and the qualified voters with substantial unanimity approved the issuance of bonds. The language used in Gastonia v. Bank, supra, is not to be given a strictly literal meaning; it must be considered in connection with other decisions. For example, in Bank v. Comrs., 116 N. C., 339, 363, it was insisted that it is as essential to the validity of bonds that the Legislature in express terms should authorize the election and specifically require the votes of a majority of the qualified voters as that it should authorize financial aid from the town. Disapproving [21]*21this contention the Court remarked: “It is admitted to be an essential prerequisite to tbe validity of sucb bonds that the Legislature should grant the power to aid, and that the majority of the qualified voters should signify their approval by their ballots cast. The machinery for ascertaining the will of the electors is a secondary consideration. The main purpose was to prohibit the imposition of a tax for certain objects without the assent of a majority of the qualified voters. . . . Where legislative sanction is given and the will of the majority of qualified voters is actually ascertained, it is certain that- the danger line has not been crossed, so as to wrongfully subject municipalities to the burden of a debt for any purpose except necessary expenses. The imperative requirement of the Constitution is that there shall be a concurrence of the legislative and the popular will, the former evidenced by a grant of authority to vote, the latter by the record that a majority of the qualified voters have cast the ballots in favor of creating the debt. Whether the legislative purpose is expressed or may be fairly implied from the language of the statute, is immaterial (1 Dillon, supra, see. 89 (55); Clark v. Des Moines, 87 Am. Dec., 423), as is the question whether the election is conducted under statutes passed for the particular purpose, or, in the absence, of such special provision, under the general election law enacted for the town or for counties generally, so that the sense of the voters is unquestionably and fairly ascertained. The power to subscribe being given, the fair implication was that the Legislature intended that the use of the machinery provided generally for taking a vote to authorize the borrowing of money might be used. The principle of strict construction is never 'carried to such an unreasonable extent as to defeat the legislative purpose fairly appearing upon the entire charter or enactment.’ If the special provision for holding an election in a town or county fails to provide in detail the mode or what is in common parlance called the machinery for conducting it, it must be inferred that the Legislature intended that general election laws might be resorted to, to fill in the hiatus, and not that the legislative will should be thwarted or defeated by any such omission.”

The Municipal Finance Act expressly confers upon cities and towns the power to issue their negotiable bonds for any purpose for which they may raise or appropriate money, except for current expenses (3 C. S., 2937), and it impliedly confers the power to hold the necessary election. It is the machinery which is of “secondary consideration.” The simple omission from the act of an express provision for holding an election cannot defeat the will of the qualified voters expressed in the manner prescribed under an implied power conferred by the law.

The plaintiff’s second position is this: that the charter of the city conflicts with Art. VII, sec. 7, because it attempts to annex to the city [22]*22tbe territory of one or more nonlocal tax districts without permitting tbe voters in tbe annexed territory to vote either upon tbe question of annexing such territory or upon, tbe question of levying school taxes therein. We may avoid confusion on this point by keeping in mind tbe distinction between statutes which control in tbe creation and consolidation of school districts and legislative authority to enlarge tbe boundaries of a municipal corporation. In Coble v. Comrs., 184 N. C., 342, we adverted to tbe distinction, saying that. if tbe corporate limits are extended tbe inhabitants of tbe annexed territory, regardless of their will, must share tbe burdens of tbe entire municipality. Dillon on Municipal Corporations, Vol. 1, sec. 106. Tbe object of tbe charter is to provide for tbe government, welfare and improvement of the city and not exclusively or primarily for tbe mere maintenance of schools. In our opinion tbe two objections set forth under tbe first assignment of error are without substantial merit and should be overruled.

It is contended that tbe charter is at variance with Article II, section 29, of tbe Constitution which declares, “Tbe General Assembly shall not pass any local, private, or special act or resolution . . . establishing or changing tbe lines of school districts.” We regard it as obvious that tbe incorporation of the city of Winston-Salem is not synonymous with tbe creation of a school district within tbe meaning of this section of tbe Constitution. Tbe word “district” as used in tbe public school law is defined in 3 C. S., 5387. Tbe definition was probably framed in view of tbe distinction between school districts and taxing districts. Coble v. Comrs., supra. Art. II, see. 29, applies to tbe former but not to tbe latter. Harrington v. Comrs., 189 N. C., 572. As a rule school districts are created by tbe county board of education. C. S., 5480. It is true that tbe boundaries of a “district” may be coterminous with those of a city or town (3 C.

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Bluebook (online)
196 N.C. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hailey-v-city-of-winston-salem-nc-1928.