Halcombe v. Commissioners of Haywood

89 N.C. 346
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 5, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 89 N.C. 346 (Halcombe v. Commissioners of Haywood) 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
Halcombe v. Commissioners of Haywood, 89 N.C. 346 (N.C. 1883).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

The aim of the present action is to arrest the collection of county taxes levied in excess of two-thirds of one per centum upon the valuation of the taxable property in the county of Haywood.

Numerous irregularities are apparent in the conduct of the cause from its beginning to the appeal. The summons issued on December 9th, 1882, and served soon after on the commissioners, is returnable to the term of the superior court held in the *347 month of May of the year following. The plaintiff on the same day filed in the clerk’s office a verified complaint, and five days thereafter what he designates a supplemental complaint, similarly sustained on oath. Upon the presentation of these, used as evidence, before the judge of the adjoining district, he obtained a rule upon the defendants to show cause before the judge of the 9th district on a day and at a place mentioned, why an injunction should not issue to prevent the enforcement of the alleged excessive tax, and meanwhile a restraining order.

On January 8th, 1883, according to notice, the parties appeared before the last named judge, when in answer to the rule, the defendants put in what they denominated a demurrer to the complaint, and an amended demurrer, both in form such, and signed by counsel; the latter of which, as appears from-the clerk’s certificate, was filed in his office on the 6th day of January.

His Honor, Judge Gudger, being a resident and tax-payer in Haywood, declined to entertain the application for an injunction order, or to act in the premises; and thereupon the plaintiff gave notice, which was at once accepted by defendants’ counsel, of a similar motion to be made before Avery, J., at Morganton, on the 18th day of the same month, and also for leave to amend his complaint. The temporary restraining order was continued in force until the proposed hearing could be had, and the clerk directed to transmit to him all the papers in the cause bearing upon the matter.

Upon the hearing and reading the affidavits and demurrer with the amendment thereto, the judge sustained the demurrer and vacated the restraining.order, taxing the plaintiff with the costs.

From this judgment the plaintiff appealed, but failed to perfect the same, and was allowed to amend the summons and complaint.

The plaintiff sued out on January 20th, what is termed an amended summons against the commissioners, and another two days later against them and one Á. J. Herren, a justice of the *348 peace in the county-, which were soon after served, returnable to the same spring term of the court.

The plaintiff' also filed what he calls an amended complaint in the clerk’s office, verified on January 21st, repeating in substance and almost in words the allegations contained in the former, adding an averment that he had paid or tendered the tax due from himself up to the alleged excess, to-wit: two-thirds of one per cent, on the hundred dollars worth of property.

With this corrected affidavit, after due notice to the defendants, the plaintiff made a renewed application to Avery, J., at Morgan ton, on February 3d, which was also denied, and the plaintiff appealed.

The case stated docs not disclose the grounds upon which the motion was refused, nor have we had the benefit of an argument for the appellees in support and explanation of the ruling.

This is a sufficient narration of the successive steps taken, as shown in the record after the initiation of the suit and before the term of the court to which the various writs issued were to be returned, and when in due and orderly course the pleadings were to be made up and the issues presented.

This collateral pursuit of a restraining order, to procure which proofs by affidavit or otherwise are required (and the pleadings themselves put in on oath may bo used as such), seems to have been treated as the cause itself, instead of its incident progressing regularly towards a final result.

It is understood and argued by plaintiff’s counsel that the denial of his motion was predicated upon the supposed effect of the previous denial, as being a case of res adjudioata. We do not concur in the application of the principle to the facts of the present case. The facts set out in the different affidavits or complaints are not the same: the former failed to show that the plaintiff had paid the tax admitted to be legal, an omission fatal to his claim for relief, as decided in London v. City of Wilmington, 78 N. C., 109, while the last contains an averment of such payment or offer to pay.

Indeed these are not amendments of the original, since the *349 judge of the adjoining- district- had before him only the applica^ tion for the ancillary restraining order and the-evidence upon which it was asked, but he liad not jurisdiction of the pleadings or processes iu the cause. There are two distinct and independent actions, and the last accompanying complaint, though misnamed, is the statement of the cause of action in it. The rejection of the first does not consequently offer an insurmountable obstacle to the granting of a second similar application supported by sufficient evidence. The authorities to this effect are numerous and clear. High on Inj., §998; Edney v. Motz, 5 Ired. Eq., 233; Jones v. Thorne, 80 N. C., 72.

If His Honor made his decision upon the ground that the former adjudication precluded him from entertaining the same motion again, it may have been induced by what is declared in Mabry v. Henry, 83 N. C., 298; and Roulhac v. Brown, 87 N. C., 1. These cases do not, however, settle a principle that covers the present, nor furnish authority for the ruling in the court below. In those cases attempts were made to reopen an adjudication previously made after full hearing upon the merits, and they were properly rejected.

The ruling does not extend to an application supported by sufficient evidence, when the former rejection w7as for the want of it. The distinction is between non-action, a refusal on account of deficient necessary evidence, and positive action, a refusal founded upon evidence sufficient to determine the question of right and a decision upon the merits of the proposition. An action dismissed for a cause not involving merits, like a nonsuit, does not deprive the plaintiff of the right of bringing a new suit for the same cause of action.

In Wilson Lineberger, 82 N. C., 412, after the overruling of a demurrer to the complaint, the court declined to entertain a motion to dismiss, the complaint being unchanged, because its sufficiency in law was involved in the motion, and this had been decided in the issue raised by the demurrer. Had the demurrer been upheld, and the defects in the complaint pointed and been *350 removed, it would of course have been exposed to a demurrer also. This is in substance the aspect of the present case. The withholding a restraining order on the first application simply adjudges the

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Bluebook (online)
89 N.C. 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halcombe-v-commissioners-of-haywood-nc-1883.