Spence v. . Granger

167 S.E. 805, 204 N.C. 247, 1933 N.C. LEXIS 373
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 22, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 167 S.E. 805 (Spence v. . Granger) 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
Spence v. . Granger, 167 S.E. 805, 204 N.C. 247, 1933 N.C. LEXIS 373 (N.C. 1933).

Opinion

*248 Clarkson, J.

Tlie summons in this proceeding was issued 29 August, 1927, and served on tbe appellants 7 September, 1927.

This is a proceeding brought by plaintiffs against defendants to establish a “jury ditch” about four and a half (4%) miles long, draining into Pasquotank River, known as “Shepard Ditch,” under C. S., 5275. O. S., 5276, sets out the procedure. C. S., 5277, costs of repairs enforced by judgments. 0. S., 5279, provides that the dominant owner can repair by giving servient owner three days notice. C. S., 5280, canal for seven years necessity presumed and procedure provided for maintaining same. Public Laws, 1931, chap. 227, among other things makes a new section 5280(a) and is an enabling act “to make other and further assessments for the costs of establishment, construction and expense” when former provisions are insufficient.

Some of the defendants, appellants, in answer to plaintiffs’ petition, among other things, say: “That all of the lands of the above named defendants drain into a ditch called the “Eight Foot Ditch” or into ditches running parallel therewith; from the opposite side of the road running between these lands and the Shepherd Ditch.” . . . The above answering defendants further answering the petition say for themselves, that their lands, nor any part of them drain into said Shepherd Ditch, but on the other hand are shut off from the same by a 20-foot road, and all ditches that could lead into said Shepherd Ditch, from their said lands or any of them are now, and have been dammed off from said Shepherd Ditch for over twenty-five years. . . . That they have kept the above referred to and mentioned Eight Foot Ditch open as a common drain for their lands, as well as other ditches running parallel to said Eight Foot Ditch, and that all of said ditches are independent of said Shepherd Ditch, and have been, for a longer time, than any one now living can remember; and that all of said ditches drain into a swamp opening into Pasquotank River. . . . That they have been keeping and are now keeping said Eight Foot Ditch open.as a common drainway for their lands; and to make them come into the Shepherd Ditch would not only work a great hardship upon them, but would cause them a great expense, for which they could not get any benefit at all.”

On 9 February, 1928, jurors were regularly appointed. They rendered their report 22 May, 1929, making assessments. On 25 June, 1929, judgment and confirmation was entered by the clerk. On 17 July, 1929, the clerk made an order appointing certain commissioners to carry out the former judgment. Thereafter two of the jurors made a report to the clerk that “it is necessary that an amount be further assessed against the *249 land embraced in said Jury Ditch proceeding that will aggregate an amount approximately eighteen hundred dollars ($1,800).”

The clerk made an order as follows: “It appearing to the court upon investigation that the former report of the jurors in the above entitled proceeding has produced an amount insufficient to pay off and discharge the cost and expense of the work done in the establishment of the Tad-more _Jury-Ditches, established under this proceeding: Therefore, by authority of the laws of North Carolina as contained in chapter 94 of the Consolidated Statutes and as amended by chapter 221 of the Public Laws of North Carolina, 1931, it being found by the court as a fact that the deficiency exists to the extent of approximately eighteen hundred dollars ($1,800). It is therefore ordered, that the jurors in the proceeding meet and forthwith make a supplementary report upon an equitable and just basis and proportion as made in the former report, sufficient in amount, to cover said deficiency, being approximately eighteen hundred dollars ($1,800), as aforesaid. This 31 October, 1931. That thereafter, to wit, on 14 November, 1931, the jurors, pursuant to the order entered by the Superior Court clerk, submitted a report of their supplemental assessment, with a schedule assessing against each landowner an increase of 40 per cent over his former assessment. Thereafter, to wit, on 15 January, 1932, said supplemental report was confirmed by the clerk. Thereafter, in apt time, these movants or appellants, filed a motion in the cause before the clerk to vacate and set aside said supplemental assessment.”

Among the grounds: “That said report, said order and said judgment were each and all entered without notice to movants.”

The clerk who had rendered the judgment without notice, on 19 February, 1932, vacated and set aside the judgment. An appeal was taken to the Superior Court and Judge F. A. Daniels, on 19 February, 1932, made the following order: “The court being of the opinion that said judgment in the above entitled cause ought to be vacated and set aside and that the order of the clerk of Superior Court this day entered should be affirmed, doth — upon motion of attorneys for movants, order, adjudge and decree that the order this day entered by the clerk of Superior Court setting aside the judgment confirming the supplemental report heretofore filed herein be, and the same hereby is, in all respects affirmed.”

The record discloses no exception or appeal from the judgment. The record has an affidavit set forth, dated 16 February, 1932, signed by J. B. Leigh, attorney for the appellants, in which it is alleged that at a meeting of “all parties concerned being represented” that it was agreed that the lands of appellants did not drain from the jury ditch in ques *250 tion and tbat they were to dig an “intercept ditch” and pay for same pro tanto, which they did. “It was expressly agreed that these said parties aforementioned should be forever excluded from the provisions of the jury ditch and that said agreement was not put on record due to the inadvertence of the parties and of this affiant in believing the matter to be forever closed as regards assessments.”

The appellants filed an affidavit signed by all of them confirming the affidavit of Leigh. Further “They, and each of them, prior to the rendition of said judgment had compromised and agreed with the said Montgomery (W. S. Montgomery, jury ditch contractor) as per the affidavit of J. B. Leigh, Esq., duly filed in this case, and that they, and each of them, have paid to the said Montgomery the various amounts agreed upon in said compromise; that none of them were served with any notice of the hearing of the matter in the Superior Court, or any other court, nor did they, or any one of them see any publication of any notice in the press or otherwise until it was reported afterwards that judgment had been rendered against their lands.”

On 5 September, 1932, the clerk who had theretofore passed on all these matters, on exceptions to the supplemental report of the jurors, found certain facts. The clerk found all the facts for appellants as they contended for on this appeal. No notice given as to order appointing the jurors who “filed a supplemental assessment of 40 per cent against all of the said parties appearing on the original assessment roll,” etc.

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Related

Spence v. . Granger
175 S.E. 824 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
167 S.E. 805, 204 N.C. 247, 1933 N.C. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spence-v-granger-nc-1933.