In Re Harris

112 S.E. 425, 183 N.C. 633, 1922 N.C. LEXIS 326
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 2, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 112 S.E. 425 (In Re Harris) 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
In Re Harris, 112 S.E. 425, 183 N.C. 633, 1922 N.C. LEXIS 326 (N.C. 1922).

Opinions

CLARK, C.J., concurs in result.

APPEAL by defendant from Long, J., in habeas corpus proceedings (634) instituted and heard before him at chambers, 18 April, 1922, from IREDELL. Cause presented on writ of certiorari, duly issued from this Court, to review a decision of Long, J., on petition of Sherrill Harris.

From a perusal of the record, it appears that under C.S. ch. 27, subch. 4, as amended by Laws 1921, ch. 110, a recorder's court was established *Page 679 for Iredell County. Acting under provisions of said law and the jurisdiction thereby conferred, defendant was, on 27 February, 1922, convicted of the criminal offense of selling spirituous liquor and sentenced to imprisonment for a term of six months and assigned to work on the roads, etc., during said term, without felon stripes. That, being held under said sentence, the defendant filed his petition for habeas corpus before his Honor, B. F. Long, resident judge, Fifteenth Judicial District, on the alleged ground that the judgment against him was illegal and void. Chiefly for the reason that the act providing for the establishment of said court and conferring jurisdiction thereon, was in violation of Article II, section 29, of the Constitution prohibiting local, private, or special legislation in various matters therein specified, and including acts relating to the establishment of courts inferior to the Supreme Court. On the hearing, his Honor being of opinion that the act was in all respects constitutional and valid, entered judgment in denial of plaintiff's application, and he was remanded to custody and is now held under said sentence of the recorder's court. Thereupon said petitioner applied for and obtained this writ of certiorari, on petition, and which was duly filed and served for the purpose, as stated, of reviewing the adverse judgment inhabeas corpus proceedings, and the validity of the sentence under which the petitioner is being detained. In the fall of 1916 there were several amendments made to our Constitution, becoming effective 10 January, 1917. Reade v.Durham, 173 N.C. 668; Mills v. Comrs., 175 N.C. 215. Among these amendments, appearing chiefly in Article II, section 29, there is an inhibition against passing "local, private, or special act or resolution relating to the establishment of courts inferior to the Supreme (635) Court, authorizing the laying out, opening, altering, or discontinuing of highways, streets, or alleys; relating to ferries or bridges," etc. After the adoption of these amendments, the General Assembly, in 1919, chapter 277, the same being entitled "An act to establish a uniform system of recorders' courts for municipalities and counties in the State," provided for the establishment of such courts, and in section 64 exempted from the effect and operation of the law 10th, 18th, 19th, and 20th Judicial districts, and the 11th Judicial District, except Caswell County, and ten additional counties, by name: Anson, Chatham, and eight others, the exemption now appearing in C.S. 1608. Later, in ch. 110, Laws 1921, some amendments were made *Page 680 to the general statute, and Iredell and Granville and Cherokee counties were withdrawn from the excepted cases and brought within the provisions of the general law, the result being that the general statute applied to about 56 counties in the State, and 44 were excepted from its provisions, and it is contended by the petitioner that the statute under which the court has been established is a "local and special law" within the meaning of the constitutional inhibition. In Mills v. Comrs., 175 N.C. 215, a statute authorizing the commissioners of Iredell and Catawba counties to provide for building bridges over the Catawba River, which had been washed away by a recent flood, was challenged as being in violation of the constitutional provision, and speaking to the meaning of the word "local" as contained in the amendments, the Court, among other things, said: "It is said in some of the decisions on the subject that the significance of the term `local' in constitutional provisions of this character is comparatively of recent use and importance, and has received no fixed or generally recognized meaning. Like other legislation or written instruments sufficiently ambiguous to permit of construction, it must be defined by reference to the context, the purpose appearing in the terms of the law and the attendant circumstances relevant to its true interpretation. In Lewis' Southerland Statutory Construction it is said (2 ed., sec. 199, p. 358) `That special laws are those made for individual cases. . . . Local laws are special as to place'; and further (at sec. 200): `It seems impossible to fix any definite rule by which to solve the question whether a law is local or general, and it has been found expedient to leave the matter, to a considerable extent, open, to be determined upon the special circumstances of each case.'"

A position that is in accord with the comments as to the meaning of the word "local" appearing in Gray v. Taylor et al., 227 U.S. 51. And in further reference to the amendments it was said: "It is well understood that our General Assembly, at session after session, was called on by direct legislation to authorize a particular highway or street, (636) or to establish a bridge or ferry at some specified place. Such questions being not infrequently at the instance of rival parties or opposing interests, were urged and debated with great earnestness by their respective advocates and renewed and protracted to such an extent that they were of serious detriment to the public interests, and, at times, prevented full and proper consideration of vital public measures. The Legislature, in these cases, was in fact called on to usurp, or rather to exercise, functions which were more usually and properly performed by the local authorities, and it was in reference to local and special and private measures of this character that these amendments were adopted, and, as stated in Brown's case, supra, it was never intended to *Page 681 prohibit legislation authorizing the raising of proper funds by the sale of bonds or by taxation for measures required for the public good, though such funds should be for the improvements in some fixed place or in restricted territory, determined upon by local authorities in pursuance of general laws on the subject." This principle of interpretation as to the meaning of these amendments had been previously announced in Brown v. Comrs.,173 N.C. 598, and has been approved since in several decisions of the Court where the subject was directly and fully considered. Huneycutt v. Comrs.,182 N.C. 319; Comrs. v. Bank, 181 N.C. 347; Comrs. v. Pruden, 178 N.C. 394;Martin County v. Trust Co., 178 N.C. 27; Parvin v. Comrs., 177 N.C. 508. InHuneycutt's case, supra, Associate Justice Stacy, for the Court, said: "Thus it will be seen that the purpose of the act in question was not to authorize the laying out, opening, altering, or discontinuing of any given road or highway, but to provide ways and means by which the general road work of the entire county might be successfully carried on and maintained.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 S.E. 425, 183 N.C. 633, 1922 N.C. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-harris-nc-1922.