Harriss v. . Wright

28 S.E. 269, 121 N.C. 172
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 28 S.E. 269 (Harriss v. . Wright) 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
Harriss v. . Wright, 28 S.E. 269, 121 N.C. 172 (N.C. 1897).

Opinion

The charter of the city of Wilmington, including the several acts amendatory thereof, in effect prior to the act ratified 5 March, 1897, provided for the division of the city into five wards, the biennial (173) election of two aldermen from each of the wards, the holding of the election on the fourth Thursday of March of each year, and the opening of registration books previous to the election.

At and before the passage of the act of 5 March, 1897, the appellees were the mayor and aldermen of the city of Wilmington.

Under the unamended charter the biennial election for aldermen would occur on the fourth Thursday, 25 March, 1897. No appointment of registrars, judges of election, or provisions for opening the registration" books, as required by the unamended charter, was had.

An act entitled "An act to amend the charter of the city of Wilmington" was ratified 5 March, 1897 (Pr. Laws 1897, ch. 150).

The act provides for the election of aldermen to be held according to the charter of the city of Wilmington and the acts amendatory thereto, except that the registration books may be opened for only ten days previous to the election. It also provides that there shall be elected by the qualified voters of each ward one alderman only, and there shall be appointed by the Governor one alderman for each ward.

After the passage of this act, the board of aldermen, for the first time, on 10 March, 1897, called an election to be held on 25 March, 1897, and *Page 157 on that day appointed to act in the several wards of the city registrars and inspectors of election.

On 11 and 12 March there appeared in the newspapers published in the city of Wilmington the notice which is set out in full in the "facts agreed," giving notice that "an election would be held at the various polling places, for the purpose of electing one alderman from each of the five wards of the city."

On 13 and 14 March, 1897, there appeared in the same papers of said city a notice that "an election would be held on Thursday, (174) 25 March, at the various polling places, for the purpose of electing aldermen from each of the five wards of the city."

It will be observed that the first notice contained no date when the election would be held, but that the second notice corrects the first in this particular. The notices were not signed by any one.

The registration books were opened on 13 March, 1897, twelve days before the election, conformably to the requirements of the act of March, 1897 — the amended act. The election was held on 25 March, 1897. It was fairly conducted. The electors, when voting, voted ballots with one name for alderman, with the exceptions of one or two ballots, upon which two names appeared, as mentioned in one of the returns.

The several returns of election showed the following result:

First Ward — Andrew J. Walker, 820 votes; C. L. Spencer, 201 votes; W. H. Howe, 96 votes; C. H. Thomas, 1 vote.

Second Ward — J. C. Munds, 76 votes; W. E. Springer, 191 votes.

Third Ward — Owen Fennell, 268 votes; Washington Catlett, 19 votes.

Fourth Ward — H. McL. Green, 95 votes; W. E. Yopp, 189 votes.

Fifth Ward — Elijah M. Green, 534 votes; W. E. Mann, 162 votes; C. R. Branch, 84 votes.

The Governor, under the provision of section 2 of the act of March, 1897, appointed as alderman from each of the respective wards: S. P. Wright, John G. Norwood, B. F. Keith, A. J. Hewlett and D. J. Benson.

On Friday, 26 March, 1897, at 9 o'clock a. m., the appellants, S. P. Wright, J. G. Norwood, B. F. Keith, D. J. Benson, A. J. Hewlett, appointees of the Governor, and A. J. Walker and Elijah M. Green, from the First and Fifth wards, respectively, claiming to (175) be elected aldermen, took the oath prescribed by law, and organized, elected S. P. Wright mayor, who then resigned as an alderman, and H. C. Twining was elected to fill the vacancy caused by Wright's resignation as an alderman.

On the same morning, 26 March, 1897, at 11 o'clock, the appellants, H. McL. Green, C. L. Spencer, James C. Munds, Washington Catlett, W. E. Mann, together with W. E. Springer, Owen Fennell, and W. E. Yopp, all claiming an election as aldermen at the said alleged election, *Page 158 organized themselves into a board of aldermen and elected M. McL. Green as mayor.

Subsequently thereto, on the next day, Saturday, 27 March, 1897, W. E. Springer, Owen Fennell, and W. E. Yopp, who had the day before participated in the organization of the board that elected Green mayor, after notice to A. J. Walker and Elijah M. Green, organized themselves into an alleged board of aldermen, there being present Springer, Yopp, and Fennell, and elected Walker Taylor as mayor.

On 26 March, 1897, the appellees, the old board of aldermen, held a meeting, at which there was a quorum present, and formally resolved and gave notice that they would not deliver possession of the city government to any of the various persons claiming to have been elected aldermen at said alleged election.

The first mentioned mayor and board of aldermen, consisting of the Governor's appointees and two aldermen, claiming their election and appointment as aforesaid, took possession of the city government.

The appellees, W. N. Harris, as mayor, and W. C. VonGlahn and others, as aldermen, being the old mayor and board of aldermen, instituted suit against the defendants, S. P. Wright and the board of (176) aldermen electing him, alleging the unconstitutionality of the act of March, 1897, and that no election had been held, and demanding possession of the respective offices. Summons was returned to the April Term, 1897, of the Superior Court.

The appellant, H. McL. Green, and certain of the alleged aldermen who elected him mayor, likewise instituted a suit against the defendant S. P. Wright and others, upon the grounds set forth in their complaint. Summons was also returnable to the April Term, 1897.

The suits were consolidated at the April Term, 1897, by order of the court.

His Honor gave judgment for the plaintiffs, holding that the act entitled "An act to amend the charter of the city of Wilmington," ratified 5 March, 1897, was unconstitutional and that the election for aldermen of the city of Wilmington, held on 25 March, 1897, was invalid, and that the old board of aldermen and mayor, who were the plaintiffs, and their associates, were entitled to hold their offices until their successors were duly elected and qualified, and that they were entitled to the offices of mayor and aldermen of the city of Wilmington.

From this judgment the several sets of appellants appealed to the Supreme Court.

On the pleadings and the and the facts agreed, the contentions of several of the parties were as follows:

The appellant S. P. Wright, claiming to be mayor, and J. G. Norwood, B. F. Keith, A. J. Hewlett, D. J. Benson, H. C. Twining, A. J. Walker *Page 159 and Elijah M. Green, claiming to be, with Owen Fennell, W. E. Springer and W. E. Yopp, the aldermen of said city, contended that the act ratified 5 March, 1897, was constitutional and valid in its entirety; that the election was held under and pursuant to the said act and was a valid election, and that they were then elected (with the exception of H. C. Twining), and, having qualified, elected S. P. Wright mayor, who resigned thereupon as an alderman, when they elected the said (177) Twining an alderman in his (Wright's) place.

The appellants, Walker Taylor, claiming to be mayor, and W. E. Yopp, Owen Fennell, W. E. Springer, claiming to be, with A. J. Walker and Elijah M.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.E. 269, 121 N.C. 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harriss-v-wright-nc-1897.