Plott v. . Comrs.

121 S.E. 190, 187 N.C. 125, 1924 N.C. LEXIS 242
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 22, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 121 S.E. 190 (Plott v. . Comrs.) 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
Plott v. . Comrs., 121 S.E. 190, 187 N.C. 125, 1924 N.C. LEXIS 242 (N.C. 1924).

Opinion

This is a motion upon affidavits and other evidence to enjoin the board of commissioners from signing, issuing, and delivering to the board of education or selling any school bonds purporting to be authorized by an election held in Waynesville Township on 28 July, 1923, and from levying a special school tax thereunder, and to enjoin the board of education from making application to the commissioners to issue said bonds and from issuing or selling them, from borrowing money on them, and from acquiring any property by virtue of said election.

At the hearing Judge Bryson found from the evidence the following facts:

First: That at a regular meeting of the County Board of Education of Haywood County, held on 17 May, 1923, all members being present, the following resolution was unanimously adopted:

"It was unanimously declared that Waynesville Township be, and the same is hereby created, a special school-taxing district, as provided *Page 127 by sec. 234 of art. 18 of the public school laws of North Carolina of 1923. The county board of education, after due inquiry, found that it is desirable to levy a special tax for schools, in addition to the county tax for the six months school term in said Waynesville Township Special School-Taxing District, and hereby defines and describes the boundary lines of Waynesville Township Special School-Taxing District to be as follows: To embrace all territory now contained in Waynesville Township; and that this order defining said school district be spread upon the minutes."

Second: That thereafter, either in May or June, 1923, a majority of the committees and trustees of the several public schools in Waynesville Township, together with 25 or more citizens and taxpayers of Waynesville Township, qualified voters, filed petitions with the Board of Education of Haywood County, requesting that an election be held in Waynesville Township on the question of creating said township a special school-taxing district, and also for the purpose of voting bonds in the sum of $177,000 on behalf of said special school-taxing district.

Third: That the Board of Education of Haywood County duly approved, and so endorsed, said petitions and presented the same to the Board of County Commissioners of Haywood County.

Fourth: That the Board of County Commissioners of Haywood County, in regular session on 7 June, 1923, all members being present, considered said petitions, ordered elections as requested, designated voting places, appointed registrars, ordered a new registration, and notice of the election to be given, prescribed ballots, etc., a copy of such orders being contained in Exhibits A and B attached to and made a part of the answer of the Board of Education of Haywood County, and incorporated into this finding of fact in their entirety.

Fifth: That pursuant to the orders of the board of county commissioners referred to in paragraph four of these findings of fact, notices of such elections were duly published, a new registration of the qualified voters of Waynesville Township made by the registrars designated and elections held at the time and places appointed.

Sixth: That as the result of such election an accurate tabulation of the votes cast showed:

In South Ward Precinct, for or against bonds — Total number of qualified voters ................... 1,119 Total number of ballots cast "for the issuance of $177,000 school bonds" ........................... 550 Total number of ballots cast "against the issuance of $177,000 school bonds" ........................... 228 Majority for bonds .................................. 322 Total number voting ................................. 778 *Page 128

In South Ward Precinct, for local tax — Total number of qualified voters ..................... 1,119 Voting "for local tax" ............................... 550 Voting "against local tax" ........................... 229 Majority "for local tax" ............................. 321 Total number voting .................................. 779

North Ward Precinct — Total registration ................................... 1,126

For or against bonds — Total voting "for the issuance of $177,000 school bonds" ............................................ 632 Total voting "against the issuance of $177,000 school bonds" ............................................ 103 Majority "for bonds" ................................. 529 Total vote cast ...................................... 735

For or against local tax — Total registration ................................... 1,126 Total voting "for local tax" ......................... 626 Total voting "against local tax" ..................... 107 Majority "for local tax" ............................. 519 Total vote cast ...................................... 733

Seventh: That the results of said elections, so held in the North and South Ward precincts, were duly certified to the Board of County Commissioners of Haywood County by the judges and registrars of said precincts.

Eighth: That the Board of County Commissioners of Haywood County tabulated said returns, found a majority of the qualified voters of Waynesville Township voting "for the issuance of $177,000 school bonds" and "for local tax" and so declared the results of such elections as being in favor of the "issuance of bonds" and "for local tax."

Ninth: That at the date of the action of the county board of education declaring Waynesville Township a special school-taxing district (paragraph one of findings of facts) and at the date of said elections, there was situate within the territorial limits of Waynesville Township

(a) A special school-tax district coterminous with and comprising the corporate limits of the town of Waynesville; that in said district there was and still is a bonded indebtedness of $38,000.

(b) A special school-tax district comprising the corporate limits of the town of Hazelwood and certain territory contiguous thereto having a bonded indebtedness of $20,000, and State loan of $15,000.

(c) Saunook Local-Tax District. *Page 129

Tenth: That a considerable, if not the larger part of Waynesville Township lies outside of the special districts of Waynesville and Hazelwood and the local-tax district of Saunook.

Eleventh: That no separate election was called or held at which the question of voting bonds in the sum of $177,000 or issuance of local tax, the subject of the election called (see paragraph four of findings of fact) was submitted to the voters of Waynesville Township residing and voting outside the territory embraced in said special and local-tax districts of Waynesville, Hazelwood and Saunook.

Twelfth: That the registrars in making said registration did not confine their work in its entirety to the designated registration places, but registered certain persons, number unknown, at other places, and in some instances placed names upon the registration books without personally interviewing the person or persons; but the court does not know, and from the evidence cannot find, who or the number of persons so recorded, or their preference as for or against the issuance of bonds or local tax, or whether such person or persons did or did not participate in said election, and this finding applies as well to those whose names were placed upon the registration books after personal interview away from the designated registration places.

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Bluebook (online)
121 S.E. 190, 187 N.C. 125, 1924 N.C. LEXIS 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plott-v-comrs-nc-1924.