State Ex Rel. Bryan v. Patrick

33 S.E. 151, 124 N.C. 651, 1899 N.C. LEXIS 106
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 9, 1899
Docket1
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 33 S.E. 151 (State Ex Rel. Bryan v. Patrick) 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
State Ex Rel. Bryan v. Patrick, 33 S.E. 151, 124 N.C. 651, 1899 N.C. LEXIS 106 (N.C. 1899).

Opinion

Fairoloth, C. J.,

renders the opinion of the Court in this case and in the succeeding case No. 2, dependent upon the same facts agreed, the decision below being in favor of H. P. Dorth, the appointee of the new Internal Improvement Board.

MONTGOMERY, J., renders dissenting opinion. OlaRK, J., renders dissenting opinion. Furches, J., renders concurring opinion.

Fairoloth, C. J.

This action is for the possession and control of the property of the Atlantic and North Carolina Railroad Company. From the agreed facts and admissions we are informed as follows: That said road was chartered in 1852, and said charter was amended in 1854-5, wherein it is provided that the State is entitled to eight directors and the private stockholders to four directors; also that the *658 Board of Inernal Improvements, consisting of the Governor and his two appointees, shall appoint the eight State directors ; that said Board has continuously till the present time, annually, made such appointments; that said Board of Internal Improvements, of which the Governor is ex o'fficio President, is to be appointed biennially with the advice of the Senate, and is a corporate body, Code, Section 1688; that said Board of Internal Improvements was appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the Senate on March 8, 189Y, and tbeir commissions were issued on March 9, 1897, for two years in the face of the commission; that defendant, Patrick, in September, 1898, was duly elected President of the road for the term of one year.

By an Act of the Assembly, ratified February 10, 1899, The Code, Section 1688, was declared repealed, and a substitute therefor was adopted, making the Board of Internal Improvements consist of nine members to be elected by the General Assembly on joint ballot, incorporating the same, and requiring it to meet on the 24th of February, 1899.

On' February 12, 1899, the Legislature elected a new Board of- Internal Improvements, who met and organized on February 24, 1899, and ordered that the State proxy and the Board of Directors (defendants) be removed from their offices, and that said offices be declared vacant, and elected the plaintiffs to fill said vacancies.

These new Directors met on February 28, 1899, and elected the. plaintiff, Bryan, President of said Company, and on the same day demanded of the defendants possession of the property, etc., of the road, which was declined.

It will be observed that if defendants’ office was for two years, it did not expire until March 9, 1899, and that plaintiffs’ claim rests on legislation in February, 1899. The single question then is, Has the Legislature power to remove one from his office and confer it on another ? The plaintiffs’ *659 counsel in his well considered argument, insist that “To be appointed biennially” means that the appointment must be made every two years, but that it does not fix any term of office, if we understood him. Suppose that the Legislature enacts t4at an official Board (for it is not disputed that the members of the Board of Internal Improvements are officers) shall appoint A B biennially to perform the duties prescribed in the Act, it would fail to occur to intelligent minds that A B has an office between any two such appointments ? The long recognition of such a conclusion would at least raise a doubt of the plaintiffs’ construction. • ’ Do the duties of the Board cease as soon as it has made a biennial appointment ? Suppose the State proxy or any State director should prove unfaithful to the State’s interest in the railroad at any time during the two years, how would he be removed and his place be supplied except by the action of the Board ? which it could not do according to the plaintiffs’ contention.' The Act of 1897, Oh. 122, Section 1, expressly requires the Board to remove for cause and fill the vacancy in such cases, and the Act ratified March 6, 1899, does not repeal said Section 1, but only amends it by eliminating the word “Governor” from the Board. It appears to this Court that “to be appointed biennially" ex vi termini implies a two years’ term of office.

The simple question of the power of the General Assembly to remove a legal incumbent from his office and confer it on another has been so much discussed, decided and settled, that it seems to have become axiomatic. The law' is a legal standard, based on experience in the past and established to avoid uncertainty, that it may be known of all men. Eacts seldom repeat themselves exactly, but in different cases they approach each other so closely that they fall into the same class and are necessarily governed by the same legal standard.

*660 This question of legislative power over the property of the citizen was presented to this Court in 1805, in the interesting’ case of the University v. Foy, 5 N. C., 58, (1 Murphy 58, 81). Ey the Act of 1789, the Legislature granted to the Trustees of the University all the property that has escheated, or should thereafter escheat to the State. The Act of 1800 repealed the Act of 1789, and declared that any property, real or personal, that had in the meanwhile escheated and was held by the University should revert to the State as the property of the same, as if the Act of 1789 had not been passed. In the meantime, valuable property in the Wilmington district had escheated, and was sued for by the University. The court, after elaborate consideration, held that the University should recover, and that the Act of 1800 was invalid as to that property. The opinion was so clear and strong that Mr. Webster, in his able argument in the famous case of Dartmouth College, cited and quoted from the opinion, and the Court he was addressing adopted the same principle that had been announced in the above case against Eoy. Some modernized suggestions have been made against the Dartmouth College opinion, but none of them have offered any reason or cited any authority to support their suggestions — presumably for the reason that none were convenient.

In 1883 a similar question arose in Hoke v. Henderson, 15 N. C., 1. This referred to property in an office. It is now admitted that an office is property, and that it is protected by the rule which applies to property of a more tangible character. It was held that the Act, undertaking to deprive the legal incumbent of his office without his consent, was void.

• It may not be amiss to remark here that the people of North Carolina, when assembled in convention, were desirous of having some rights secured to them beyond the' con *661 trol of the Legislature, and those they have expressed in their Bill of Rights and Constitution.

The principie involved in Hoke v. Henderson has been followed by a full list of decisions without exception to the present time. That principle is the basis of the recent decisions in Wood v. Bellamy, 120 N. C., 212, and State Prison v. Day, at the present term.

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Bluebook (online)
33 S.E. 151, 124 N.C. 651, 1899 N.C. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-bryan-v-patrick-nc-1899.