Manly v. . City of Raleigh

57 N.C. 370
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 57 N.C. 370 (Manly v. . City of Raleigh) 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
Manly v. . City of Raleigh, 57 N.C. 370 (N.C. 1859).

Opinion

Pearson, C. J.

1. Has the General Assembly power to extend the limits of an incorporated town, without the consent, and against the wish of the citizens who live on, or own the land comprising the part to be annexed ?

“All legislative power is vested in the General Assembly.” The Constitution of the United States, the Declaration of rights, and the Constitution of the State, impose the only restrictions to which this otherwise unlimited power is subject; frequency of elections being relied on to prevent its abuse, or mitig.’.te the effect of abuse, by the repeal of an unwise enactment.

Counties and towns are instruments used for the good government and management of the whole State. To establish a county, or incorporate a town, is a legislative act, consequently, the General Assembly may exercise this power, whenever, and in such manner, as in in its opinion, the public good will be thereby promoted; unless the time, manner, or other circumstance of the act violates some provision of the Constitution.

Counties and towns are usually made upon the petition of *373 the citizens, especially interested, or a majority of them; but there is no ground to support the position, that the consent of this particular portion of the community, is a circumstance necessary to give validity to the exercise of the power of the General Assembly. Ours would be a strange sort of government, if the Legislature could not make a new county without the consent of the people there residing being first had and obtained, or if, when in the opinion of the Legislature, the population of a particular locality has become so dense that it cannot be well-governed by the ordinary ■ county regulations, and requires the special “rules and by-laws” of an incorporated town, to secure its good order and management, such locality cannot be incorporated into a town, or annexed to one already incorporated, without the consent of the inhabitants; and by a logical deduction, without the consent of every single individual. For, there being no social connection, each person must answer for himself, and is not bound by the acts of the others; so that the objection of one man, takes from the Legislature the power of doing what is necessary to promote the general welfare, unless he is specially excepted, and thus allowed to enjoy the benefits, without being subjected to the burthens of the incorporation.

The position assumes that such legislative acts involve a eontraet between the General Assembly on the one part, and the citizen, or citizens of the locality on the other part. Herein lies the fallacy. There is no contract in respect to it. This is settled by Mills v. Williams, 11 Ired. 558, where it is decided that the General Assembly has power to abolish a county, although a majority of the inhabitants are opposed to the passage of the repealing act. The subject is there fully discussed. An extract will serve our turn :

“The purpose, in making all corporations, is the accomplishment of some gniblie goodSome corporations are created by the mere will of the Legislature, there being no other party interested or concerned. To this body, a portion of the power of the Legislature is delegated, to be exereised for the *374 public good, and subject at all times to be modified, changed or annulled.
“ Other corporations are the result of contract. The Legislature is not the only party interested; for, although it has a public purpose to accomplish, it chooses to do it by the instrumentality of a second party. These two parties make a contract. The Legislature, for and in consideration of certain labor and outlay of money, confers on the party of the second part, the privilege of being a corporation, with certain powers and capacities. The expectation of benefit to the public, is the moving consideration on one side; that of expected remuneration for the outlay, is the consideration on the other. It is a contract, and therefore, cannot be modified, changed or annulled, without the consent of both parties. So, corporations are either such as are independent of all contract, or such as are the fruit and direct result of a contract.
“ The division of the State into counties, is an instance of the former. There is no contract — no second party, but the sovereign, for the better government and management of the whole, chooses to make the division, in the same way that a farmer divides his plantation off into fields, and makes cross fences, when he chooses. The sovereign has the same right to change the limits of counties and make them smaller or larger, by putting two into one, or one into two, as the farmer has, to change his fields; because it is an affair of his own, and there is no second party having a direct interest.” So, file incorporation of towns is an instance of the former. There is no contract — no second party, and the General Assembly has power to incorporate a town, or to extend, or contract the limits of one already incorporated, whenever in its opinion, public policy requires it to be done. It is a legislative act, in which no second party has a direct interest.

2. Is the act void because of the provision, that it shall be of no effect unless accepted by the Mayor and Commissioners within one month after the ratification thereof? It is insisted by the plaintiffs that by the true meaning and spirit of the Constitution, the Legislature is required to pass all statutes *375 upon its own responsibility, and its own judgment as to the expediency; that it lias no power to delegate its authority, or make a statute depend upon the opinion or wishes, of any man, or set of men, and that, in this instance, the interest of the persons without whoso acceptance the act is not to take effect, is opposed to that of the plaintiffs; so that they are put at the mercy of persons interested against them, and are aggrieved in their rights and estates by a statute, in respect to the expediency of which, and its necessity for the public good, there has been no absolute and unconditional expression of opinion by the law-making power, as is required by the Constitution. This position receives some countenance from a doctrine of the

late Chief Justice Nash, in Hill v. Bonner, Bush. 257. That was a proceeding under the act to divide the county of Surry, which was made to depend upon a vote of the people. At a subsequent session, an act was passed confirming the first act, so the point was not presented; but the learned Judge intimates an opinion, that the original act was unconstitutional, and protests against that mode of legislation, “because it alters the fundamental principles of the government, by converting it from a representative republican government, into a pure democracy.” And it is supported b}r Basto v. Him rod, 4 Selden, 483. The action involved the constitutionality of an act of the Legislature of New York, (1849,) “to establish free schools throughout the State,” which wms made to depend on a vote of the people of the State.

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Bluebook (online)
57 N.C. 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manly-v-city-of-raleigh-nc-1859.