McCormac v. Commissioners of Robeson

90 N.C. 441
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 90 N.C. 441 (McCormac v. Commissioners of Robeson) 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
McCormac v. Commissioners of Robeson, 90 N.C. 441 (N.C. 1884).

Opinions

The act "to establish a graded school in Shoe Heel districts number one and two for white children," ratified on the 8th day of March, 1883, among other things, provides as follows:

ACTS 1883, ch. 282: —

Section 1. That the board of commissioners of Robeson county shall submit to the qualified voters of Shoe Heel districts known as districts number one and two for white children in said county, on the first Thursday in April, 1883, under such rules and regulations as said board may prescribe, whether an annual assessment shall be levied therein for the support of a graded public school for the white children in said school districts. Each voter shall vote on a written or printed ballot with the words "for school" or "no school," and said election shall be conducted under the same rules as are prescribed by law for the election of members of the general assembly; provided that two ballot-boxes shall be used, and those electors who reside in district number one shall deposit their ballots in one box, and those electors who reside in district number two shall deposit their ballots in the other; and if a majority of the electors of one district shall vote "for school," and not a majority of the electors of both districts combined, then in that event the school shall be established in the district where the said majority of the ballots were cast, and the trustees named in this act who reside in the said school district shall be trustees of said school.

Section 6. That J. C. McCaskill (and others named) in school district number one, and J. B. Wilkinson (and others named) in school district number two, be and they are hereby constituted a board of trustees for the graded school for the whites in school districts number one and two, and are incorporated by the name of the Shoe Heel Graded School, and may sue and be sued, have a common seal, purchase and hold real and personal property, not *Page 443 exceeding ten thousand dollars in value; and shall have power to fill all vacancies occurring in said board; to employ and dismiss teachers and regulate their salaries; to suspend and expel any pupil, and do all such acts as shall be necessary to carry on said graded school. They shall elect one of their number chairman, and one as secretary, and prescribe their duties.

Section 8. The board of trustees may admit as pupils in said graded school children who reside without the boundaries of said school children who reside without the boundaries of said school district, upon the payment of such rates as shall be fixed by the board.

Section 10. Provides that the funds raised for these districts under the general school law shall be used for the benefit of said graded school.

Next before, at the time of, and next after the passage of this act, there were established in the county of Robeson, Shoe Heel districts number one, two and three, each being separate and distinct from the other, as provided by law. After the passage of the act, the county commissioners undertook, by their order, made at the request of citizens of district number three, to consolidate districts one and three, and at the election held under the act, these two districts were treated as district number one, and the registered voters in both districts voted as electors in district number one. A majority of the votes cast in this consolidated district were "for school," as were a majority of the votes in district number one, as constituted before the consolidation. A majority of the votes cast in school district number two were for "no school."

Treating the election held as regular, and there appearing to have been a majority of the votes cast in district number one in favor of the graded school, the county commissioners proceeded to levy the tax as allowed by the statute, for the support of the school, and placed the tax-list in the hands of the sheriff for collection, and the sheriff was about to proceed to collect the same. *Page 444

The plaintiffs allege in their complaint that they are taxpayers in Shoe Heel school districts number one and three for white children in the county of Robeson; that the county commissioners had no authority to consolidate school districts number one and three, and that their action was therefore null and void; that as a consequence, the election held under the act was illegal and nugatory; that the tax laid was therefore unlawful, and the said sheriff had no legal authority to collect the same; and they demanded judgment that an injunction issue restraining the defendants and their agents from collecting the said tax, and from paying to the trustees named in the said act any part of the public school money for the graded school contemplated by the act.

Upon notice and motion the court granted an injunction restraining the defendants, their agents and servants, from collecting any tax levied in and on account of school district number three for white children for a graded school, until the hearing of this action. From this order the defendants appealed. That it is within the power and is the province of the legislature to subdivide the territory of the state and invest the inhabitants of such subdivisions with corporate functions, more or less extensive and varied in their character, for the purposes of government, is too well settled to admit of any serious question. Indeed, it seems to be a fundamental feature of our system of free government, that such a power is inherent in the legislative branch of the government, limited and regulated, as it may be, only by the organic law. The constitution of the state was formed in view of this and like fundamental principles. They permeate its provisions, and all statutory enactments should be interpreted in the light of them, when they apply.

It is in the exercise of such power that the legislature alone *Page 445 can create, directly or indirectly, counties, townships, school districts, road districts, and the like subdivisions, and invest them, and agencies in them, with powers corporate or otherwise in their nature, to effectuate the purposes of the government, whether these be local or general, or both. Such organizations are intended to be instrumentalities and agencies employed to aid in the administration of the government, and are always under the control of the power that created them, unless the same shall be restricted by some constitutional limitation. Hence, the legislature may, from time to time, in its discretion, abolish them, or enlarge or diminish their boundaries, or increase, modify or abrogate their powers. It may provide that the agents and officers in them shall be elected by the electors, or it may appoint them directly, or empower some agency to appoint them, unless in cases where the constitution provides otherwise, and charge them with duties specific and mandatory, or general and discretionary in their character. Such power in the legislature is general and comprehensive, and may be exercised in a great variety of ways to accomplish the ends of the government. State v. Jones, 1 Ired., 414; Millsv. Williams, 11 Ired., 558; Love v. Schenck, 12 Ired., 304; Taylor v.Commissioners, 2 Jones' Eq., 141; Manly v. Raleigh, 4 Jones' Eq., 370; Hillv. Commissioners, 67 N.C. 367; Com'rs of Currituck v. Com'rs of Dare,79 N.C. 565; Watson v. Commissioners, 82 N.C. 17; Cooley Const. Lim., 191-2-3; 1 Dill. Mun. Corp., § 10 and note, 381; Cooley on Tax., 110,et seq.

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Bluebook (online)
90 N.C. 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccormac-v-commissioners-of-robeson-nc-1884.