Nesbit v. . Kafer

21 S.E.2d 903, 222 N.C. 48, 1942 N.C. LEXIS 19
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 30, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 21 S.E.2d 903 (Nesbit v. . Kafer) 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
Nesbit v. . Kafer, 21 S.E.2d 903, 222 N.C. 48, 1942 N.C. LEXIS 19 (N.C. 1942).

Opinion

Winborne, J.

These questions are presented as decisive of this appeal :

1. Where in a proceeding instituted in Beaufort County a drainage district, comprising lands lying in both Beaufort and Craven counties, is duly created and organized in accordance with the Drainage Act, sub-chapter III, chapter 94, of the Consolidated Statutes of 1919-1924, sections 5312, el seq., as amended, and the assessment rolls showing the assessments placed against each tract of land in the district for payment of bonds issued by the district, have been made and filed in each county, are such assessments, as they become due, liens upon the land within the district to which same relate ?

2. If so, where the assessment rolls which were filed in Craven County have been removed therefrom, and there is left in that county no other record relating to the drainage district except a map on which are shown the boundaries of the several tracts of land within the district, in Craven County, is such map sufficient in itself to put a subsequent purchaser of such land in Craven County on notice of the proceedings, including the assessment rolls filed in Beaufort County?

The Drainage Act read as a whole furnishes an affirmative answer to each question.

*51 1. Section 5361 of tbe Consolidated Statutes provides that drainage “assessments shall constitute a first and paramount" lien, second only to State and county taxes, upon the lands assessed for the payment of bonds and interest thereon as they become due, and shall be collected in the manner and by the same officers as State and county taxes are collected,” that the assessments shall become due and payable on the first Monday in September each year, and that “if the same shall not be paid in full by the thirty-first of December following, it shall be the duty of the sheriff or tax collector to sell the land so delinquent.” See Taylor v. Comrs., 176 N. C., 217, 96 S. E., 1027; Pate v. Banks, 178 N. C., 139, 100 S. E., 251.

In the light of these provisions, it is proper to inquire as to when “assessments” come into existence. After prescribing in preceding sections of the statute procedural requirements for the establishment of drainage districts, comprising lands in one or more counties, the preparation and filing of drainage maps “showing . . . the boundary ... of the lands owned by each individual landowner within the district,” the classification of the lands in the district, the calculation of the ratio of assessment of the different classes of land, the ascertainment of the cost of construction of the improvement to be undertaken, and the determination of the amount of bonds necessary to be issued and the issuance and sale thereof to defray the costs, it is provided in section 5360 of Consolidated Statutes that “the board of drainage commissioners shall immediately prepare the assessment rolls or drainage tax list, giving thereon the names of the owners of land in the district and a brief description of the several tracts of land assessed and the amount of assessment against each tract of land . . .” to provide funds each year sufficient to pay principal of and interest on bonds and certain other expenses, and that “these assessment rolls shall be signed by the chairman of the board of drainage commissioners and by the secretary of the board.”

While this section further provides that “there shall be four copies of each of the assessment rolls, one of which shall be filed with the drainage record, one shall be filed with the chairman of the board of drainage commissioners . . . one shall be preserved by the clerk of the court, . . . and one shall be delivered to the sheriff, or other county tax collector, after the clerk of the Superior Court has appended thereto an order directing the collection of such assessments, and the assessments shall thereupon have the force and effect of a judgment as in the case of State and county taxes,” the assessment arises upon the completion of the assessment rolls.

Thus it is clear that the Legislature intended that the assessments as shown on the assessment rolls which the board of drainage commissioners is required to prepare immediately upon the sale of the bonds, become *52 liens as they become due, affecting all of the lands on the assessment rolls, which relate to the entire district for the entire period over which the payment of the assessments is spread. In the present case it is agreed that the assessment rolls were not only prepared, but filed.

Furthermore, it may be noted that the order to be appended by the clerk, directing the collection of the assessments, is similar to that required in connection with county tax books delivered to the sheriff or tax collector as authority for collecting taxes, now appearing in Machinery Act, as section 1103 of chapter 310 of Public Laws of 1939, carried in Michie’s Code as section 7971 (158), but which does not affect the right of the county to enforce the tax lien in an action in the nature of an action to foreclose a mortgage, C. S., 7990, which course is open to drainage districts. Drainage District v. Huffstetler, 173 N. C., 523, 92 S. E., 368; Com. v. Epley, 190 N. C., 672, 130 S. E., 497; Wilkinson v. Boomer, 217 N. C., 217, 7 S. E. (2d), 491.

But it is contended that under provisions of C. S., 5365, the assessments did not become a lien upon the lands in Craven County until the clerk of Superior Court of Beaufort County had prepared annually during the month of August, form of tax bills or receipts with appropriate stubs attached, covering all the lands located within the district in Craven County, and certified the same to the sheriff or tax collector of Craven County for collection. However, to ascertain the legislative intent this section may not alone be considered. The whole act must be read. And, in this connection it is proper to bear in mind that the receiver of the drainage district in question is not proceeding to have the land sold by the sheriff, but is proceeding in an action in the nature of an action to foreclose a mortgage under the provisions of C. S., 7990. Moreover, reading sections 5364 and 5365 of Consolidated Statutes together, it appears that they pertain to collection of assessments. The former relates to the preparation annually during the month of August, of receipts or tax bills and stubs, properly bound, for drainage assessments due on each tract of land recited in the assessment rolls which lie in the county in which the district is established, that is, in present case, Beaufort County. The latter relates to contemporaneous preparation of like receipts or tax bills and stubs, properly bound, covering all the lands in the drainage district located in other county, or counties, that is, in present case, Craven County. And in these sections, respectively, the clerk is required to enter an endorsement in prescribed form to the sheriff of the respective counties in which the lands lie, as his’ authority for collecting the assessments. Hence, the provision in C. S., 5365, that “thereupon such drainage assessments in such county shall have the force and effect of a judgment upon the lands so assessed, as in the case of State and county taxes, and shall in all other respects be as valid assess *53

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White v. Pate
293 S.E.2d 601 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1982)
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Bluebook (online)
21 S.E.2d 903, 222 N.C. 48, 1942 N.C. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nesbit-v-kafer-nc-1942.