Mullen v. Town of Louisburg

33 S.E.2d 484, 225 N.C. 53, 1945 N.C. LEXIS 264
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 21, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 33 S.E.2d 484 (Mullen v. Town of Louisburg) 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
Mullen v. Town of Louisburg, 33 S.E.2d 484, 225 N.C. 53, 1945 N.C. LEXIS 264 (N.C. 1945).

Opinion

Barnhill, J.

Plaintiff has properly preserved and brought forward his exception to the order of Harris, J., making the Power Company a party defendant. In our opinion the exception is meritorious and must be sustained.

A third party, before he will be permitted to become a party defendant in a pending action, must show that he has' some legal interest in the subject matter of the litigation. His interest must be of such direct and immediate character that he will either gain or lose by the direct operation and effect of the judgment, and it must be involved in the subject matter of the action. One whose interest in the matter in litigation is not a direct or substantial interest, but is an indirect, inconsequential, or a contingent one cannot claim the right to defend. 39 Am. Jur., 900, 935.

Although the enforcement of the judgment, when rendered, might benefit or prejudice the applicant, this does not entitle him to intervene as a defendant if its effect is indirect, as where the party for or against *57 whom the judgment is rendered may, because of it, become more or less able to satisfy some obligation existing from him to the intervener. 39 Am. Jur., 935; Cleveland R. Co. v. North Olmsted, 130 Ohio St., 144, 101 A. L. R., 426; School Dist. v. Royal Oak Twp. School Dist., 293 Mich., 1, 127 A. L. R., 661; Wightman v. Evanston Yaryan Co., 217 Ill., 371, 75 N. E., 502; Grand Rapids v. Consumers’ Power Co., 216 Mich., 409, 185 N. W., 852.

Creditors and distributees of an estate may be materially affected by a judgment against the administrator, as would taxpayers by a judgment against the municipality. Yet, in the absence of peculiar circumstances, it would hardly be contended that these would be entitled to appear, become parties to the action, and defend. The Power Company is in no better position than one of these. Its only interest in the litigation rests upon the fact that the judgment rendered may or may not prevent the defendant town from consummating the proposed transactions which have not yet reached a contract status. This is not such an interest as will support the order entered.

Counsel for plaintiff stressfully contend that the Town Commissioners acted in bad faith and abused the discretion reposed in them by law in the many respects pointed out in their brief. This question has passed the point of debate. The court below expressly found as a fact: “That in all its acts and proceedings in connection with the matters or things in controversy herein the said Board of Commissioners of the Town of Louisburg was acting in good faith without abuse of any discretionary power or authority conferred upon them by law.” To this finding plaintiff did not except. Hence the finding is presumed to be supported by evidence. Joyner v. Stancill, 108 N. C., 153; Hawkins v. Cedar Works, 122 N. C., 87; Sturtevant v. Cotton Mills, 171 N. C., 119, 87 S. E., 992; Hickory v. Catawba County, 206 N. C., 165, 173 S. E., 56; Wilson v. Robinson, 224 N. C., 851.

It is true that in appeals of this character from an order granting or denying injunctive relief, the findings of fact made by the court below are not conclusive. Smith v. Bank, 223 N. C., 249. Yet it does not behoove us to seek for cause to upset or reverse a finding the correctness of which appellant at least impliedly concedes when he fails to except thereto.

G. S., 143-129, provides that neither any institution of the State nor any county, city, or town shall award a contract for the purchase of apparatus, supplies, materials, or equipment requiring an estimated expenditure of public money in an amount equal to or in excess of $1,000 except to the lowest responsible bidder after due advertisement as provided in the Act.

*58 It is conceded that the proposed contract for the purchase of electricity involves a sum in excess of $1,000. Is the purchase wholesale of electric current from a public utility for redistribution through the defendant’s local plant a “letting” of a public contract for “supplies” within the meaning of the Act?

While there is a conflict of judicial opinion on this question, the great weight of authority is to the effect that such contracts are not within the intendment of such requirement. Anno. 128 A. L. R., 168. Indeed some, if not all, the cases cited contra are not in point either factually or by reason of the provisions of the applicable statute. Clearly the terms “apparatus,” “materials,” and “equipment” denote particular types of tangible personal property and could not be construed to include electric energy. Hence, if the purchase of a required quantity of electricity is within the purpose and intent of the Act, it is by virtue of the use of the term “supplies.” As this term is used in conjunction with other terms having a particular connotation, it might be said that its meaning as used in the statute is confined to property of like kind and nature.

Conversely, given its broadest and most comprehensive meaning “supplies” are things supplied, the quantity or amount of a commodity at hand, needed or desired. And “commodity” means that which affords convenience or profit, especially in Commerce. Webster’s New International Dictionary. Thus it might be construed to include electricity furnished for redistribution.

“Hundreds of words in the English language bear more than one meaning. 'Few words are so plain that the context or the occasion is without capacity to enlarge or narrow their extension.’ ” Crawford, Statutory Construction, 276, sec. 174.

o It is the duty of the court then to find the legislative intent. In so doing, the context of the Act and the spirit and reason of the law must be considered, for it is the intention of the Legislature, as expressed in the statute, which controls. Crawford, sufra, 292. Cases within the letter of a statute, if without its spirit, will not come within its interpretation. Crawford, supra, 293.

It is the universal rule that in seeking the intent it is the duty of the Court, where the language of a statute is susceptible of more than one interpretation, to adopt the construction and practical interpretation which best expresses the intention of the Legislature, Dyer v. Dyer, 212 N. C., 620, 194 S. E., 278, for “the heart of a statute is the intention of the lawmaking body.” Trust Co. v. Hood, Comr., 206 N. C., 268, 173 S. E., 601; Dyer v. Dyer, supra; Crawford, supra, 291.

The purpose of the statute, G. S., 143-129, is to prevent favoritism, corruption, fraud, and imposition in the awarding of public contracts *59 by giving notice to prospective bidders and thus assuring competition which in turn guarantees fair play and reasonable prices in contracts involving the expenditure of a substantial amount of public money. It has application to contracts for the purchase of materials and supplies where the bidders are free to name the price for which they are willing to furnish the same.

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Bluebook (online)
33 S.E.2d 484, 225 N.C. 53, 1945 N.C. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mullen-v-town-of-louisburg-nc-1945.