Martin County v. Wachovia Bank & Trust Co.

100 S.E. 134, 178 N.C. 26, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 381
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 10, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 100 S.E. 134 (Martin County v. Wachovia Bank & Trust Co.) 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
Martin County v. Wachovia Bank & Trust Co., 100 S.E. 134, 178 N.C. 26, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 381 (N.C. 1919).

Opinion

Clark, O. J.

This is a controversy submitted upon an agreed case, without action, relating to a proposed issue of $150,000 of bonds of Martin County for tbe purpose of paying tbe county’s share of tbe cost of building a bridge at Williamston over tbe Roanoke River, which divides Martin and Bertie counties, including tbe causeway or continuation of tbe bridge through tbe swamp on tbe Bertie side to tbe highlands.

It is provided that tbe entire work 'is to be constructed by the two counties jointly, at their joint expense, with Federal and State aid. Tbe proposed road or approach on the Bertie side will run through swamps and other lowlands, and is necessary to tbe use of tbe bridge and practically a part of it. Tbe bonds were awarded by Martin County to tbe appellant as tbe highest bidder on 30 June, 1919. Tbe appellant is willing to comply with its bid, provided tbe county can lawfully issue these bonds and levy sufficient taxes to pay them. This proceeding was instituted in order to determine this question.

Tbe defendant bank refuses to take and pay for said bonds up>on tbe ground that they are not legal because “tbe act authorizing such bond issue violates tbe constitutional amendment, Art. II, sec. 29, which declares that tbe Legislature shall not p>ass any local, qirivate, or sp>ecial act relating to ferries, or bridges; and for tbe further reason that tbe Legislature bad no power under tbe Constitution to authorize Martin County to issue bonds to p>ay a part of the costs of building tbe road in Bertie County under tbe exclusive control of Bertie.”

Tbe court below adjudged that tbe bonds are valid obligations of tbe county; that tbe county is authorized to levy a sufficient tax to pay tbe principal and interest of tbe bonds without regard to tbe tax limit prescribed by tbe State Constitution, and that tbe proceeds of tbe sale of tbe bonds may be used by Martin County “in constructing tbe road approaching tbe bridge in tbe county of Bertie whether said road be wholly in tbe county of Bertie or partly in tbe county of Bertie and p>artly in tbe county of Martin.”

[29]*29The plaintiff relies upon three different statutes for authority to issue the bonds and to levy sufficient taxes to pay principal and interest thereof, i. e.:

1. Chapter 53, Public-Local Laws 1919, entitled “An act to authorize the board of commissioners of Martin and Bertie counties to build abridge over the Eoanoke Eiver at 'Williamston and for other purposes.”

2. Chapter 103, Laws 1917, amending Eev., 2696, as amended by ch. 185, Laws 1919, which is now secs. 137-143, ch. 69, Cons. Stat.

3. Chapter 312, Laws 1919, entitled “An act to enable all counties to provide funds to pay the cost of constructing or improving roads with Federal aid, and to pay the cost of maintaining such roads.”

Under each of these three acts Martin County is authorized to issue bonds for road and bridge purposes and to levy sufficient taxes to pay such bonds.

The first act is applicable only to Martin and Bertie counties and specifically authorizes them “by joint action and agreement to build and construct a bridge over the Eoanoke Eiver at Williamston, as the same has already been surveyed and laid out, and to build and construct the road leading from the bridge on the Bertie side to the highlands of Bertie County”; authorizes each county to issue bonds for this purpose, the total amount not to exceed “the actual cost of said bridge and road,” the Martin County bonds not to exceed $150,000 and the Bertie County bonds not to exceed $50,000, and further authorizes each county to levy a “sufficient tax to pay the bonds issued by it.”

The second act provides in substance that “any county in the State” may build a public road or a bridge in the county, and any two counties may jointly build a highway bridge over a stream which divides them, and may apportion the cost between themselves in such proportion as they may agree upon; but the cost must not exceed 2 per cent of the assessed valuation of the taxable property in the two counties. County bonds may be issued for such roads or bridges in an amount not exceeding “the actual cost” thereof; and a “sufficient” county tax may be levied to pay the bonds.

The third act provides that any county may issue its bonds to pay its share of the cost of constructing or improving public roads in the county with Federal or State aid or both, and may levy a “sufficient” tax to pay such bonds; and that the term “road” as used in the act includes bridges and culverts in all cases where they constitute a part of the road which is .to be so constructed or improved. The act provides, however, that certain portions of it shall not be enforced in 31 counties named therein (which do not include Martin) unless it is adopted by the voters at an election.

Pursuant to the first act, which for convenience may be called the “Special Act,” Martin and Bertie counties having previously taken [30]*30appropriate action for building at their joint expense the bridge and road prescribed in that act, Martin County now proposes to issue the $150,000 of bonds in question to pay its share of the cost. It appears upon the face of the special act that the road or approach referred to therein is to be almost wholly in Bertie.

It may be noted here that the bridge proper across the river is in Bertie for the boundary of Martin County is the low-water mark on the south side of the river. This appears from ch. 4, Laws 1729; 25 St. Records, 212; 2 Rev. Stat:, 164, which boundary is recognized by the subsequent acts creating Edgecombe County out of Tyrrell, Laws 1741, ch. 7; 23 St. Records, 164; 2 Rev. Stat., 124; the act creating Halifax county out of the territory of Edgecombe, Laws 1758, ch. 13; 23 St. Records, 496; 2 Rev. Stat., 133; and finally, the act creating Martin County out of Halifax and Tyrrell, Laws 1774, ch. 32; 25 St. Records, 976; 2 Rev. Stat., 145. Indeed, it has been the usual procedure by the act establishing new counties that where a river or other stream is the dividing line said river has remained within the limits of the county from which the new county has been taken. But counties are merely instrumentalities and agencies of the State government. It has been enacted that when a crime has been committed on a boundary, a watercourse which lies wholly in another county, either county has jurisdiction of the offense (Rev., 234), and that a grand jury may be authorized to indict for offenses committed in another county (S. v. Lewis, 142 N. C., 626); and that as to civil matters not only the Legislature can change the boundaries at will with or without provision that the annexing county shall pay a part of the debt of the county from which the territory was taken (Mills v. Williams, 33 N. C., 558; Comrs. v. Comrs., 95 N. C., 189; Comrs. v. Comrs., 79 N. C., 565; Watson v. Comrs., 82 N. C., 17) ; but the establishment of the boundary being a political question the Legislature, even after taxes are assessed, can decide where the boundary is (even though erroneously in fact) and direct to which county the tax from the disputed territory shall be paid. R. R. v. Washington, 154 N. C., 333.

The act of the Legislature here has authorized Martin County to issue $150,000 bonds as its just contribution to the entire cost of the bridge and its approaches from its beginning in Martin to the highlands in Bertie. The Legislature was doubtless moved to so enact- by the representatives of that county in the General Assembly.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 S.E. 134, 178 N.C. 26, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-county-v-wachovia-bank-trust-co-nc-1919.