State Ex Rel. County Trustee of Brunswick v. Woodside

31 N.C. 496
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 31 N.C. 496 (State Ex Rel. County Trustee of Brunswick v. Woodside) 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. County Trustee of Brunswick v. Woodside, 31 N.C. 496 (N.C. 1849).

Opinions

This is a suit against the defendants on the sheriff's bond of said Woodside, executed in September, 1843, and the breaches assigned are, that he collected and failed to pay over the county taxes, assessed in March, 1844, for the year 1843; and that he failed to collect and pay over the said taxes. It appeared from the record that there were but four magistrates on the bench of the County Court when the taxes aforesaid were imposed, and it was not alleged or pretended that the magistrates of (497) Brunswick had ever been classified, as, by Private Laws of 1831 and 1835, they were directed to be; and it was insisted for the defendants, unless the said magistrates had been so classified no number short of a majority had the power of county taxation. It was admitted that some twelve or fifteen magistrates then resided in the county. The relator offered in evidence a document from the County Court clerk's office, which contained an aggregate valuation of the real estate in Brunswick and the number of black and white polls, which, the clerk then stated, was the data on which he made out the tax list for the year in question, and that the list he gave the sheriff contained the names and the amount collectible out of each taxpayer. It was objected to by the defendants, because the clerk had no right, on such a document, to issue a tax list to the sheriff; that a document, to sustain a tax list, ought to set forth the names of each inhabitant liable to pay taxes and the amount for which he was so liable. It was allowed to be read. D. B. Baker, Esq., the attorney of record for the relator, was introduced as a witness for the purpose of proving that, as county solicitor for Brunswick, he was directed by the County Court to call on the defendants for a settlement, in relation to the county taxes, and also to prove the admissions made by the defendants, or some of them, as to the collection of the said taxes by the said Woodside. His testimony was objected to, on the ground that an attorney of record was not a competent witness for his client. The objection was overruled. There was no evidence of record in the County Court that the relator in this case had ever been appointed county trustee, and, failing to show this, the plaintiff offered a bond he had executed as such, and also offered to prove that he acted as such, and had been treated by the defendants as such, in paying him a portion of the county taxes. This testimony was also objected to, but was received. The tax lists, taken by the magistrates in (498) 1843, were offered in evidence to show that the clerk had authority, or some data to act upon, in making out the tax list delivered to the said Woodside. This testimony was objected to because they had not been recorded as directed by *Page 347 law, but they were received. Upon the question whether a demand had been made on the defendant Woodside before suit was brought, B. D. Baker, Esq., stated that, as solicitor, he called on the defendants for a settlement about the county taxes before suit brought; that some settlement had taken place between the defendants and the committee on finance; that he had a paper of some kind in his hands when he endeavored to effect a settlement, showing that one had been had with a committee of finance. He also stated that Woodside admitted that he had collected the taxes. And the defendants offered in evidence a receipt signed by the relator, dated June, 1845, as evidence of a payment. The defendants insisted that this testimony, taken altogether, furnished no evidence that a demand had been made. The court thought there was evidence of a demand to be left to the jury. The defendants also insisted that the county trustee was not the proper person to relate, even if it had been made to appear by the record of the County Court that he had been appointed. This suit is for the bridge tax. All the objections raised in this case, by consent of the counsel, were reserved by the court, with liberty to enter a nonsuit. And the court, on consideration, ordered a nonsuit to be entered, and the relator appealed to the Supreme Court. The action is brought on the official bond of Robert Woodside, who was sheriff of the county of Brunswick, and his sureties. The breach assigned is for (499) collecting and not paying over the county taxes assessed for the year 1843. On the trial below, several objections were urged against the plaintiff's right to sustain his action, and, being all reserved by the court, by the consent of the parties, with liberty to enter a nonsuit, the duty is imposed upon us of considering the whole. We will proceed to do so in the order in which they stand.

The first objection is that no tax was legally imposed by the county of Brunswick for the year 1843, because, by the private acts of 1831 and 1835, the magistrates of that county were directed to divide themselves into classes for the purpose of holding the county courts, which had never been done; therefore, no number less than a majority could lay the tax, and in this case it was admitted that a majority was not present. This objection was substantially answered by this Court in the case of S. v. Woodside,30 N.C. 106. That action was brought on the *Page 348 official bond of the defendant Robert Woodside and his sureties, to recover the county taxes for the year 1842. The same objection was taken there as here, and being insisted on, as it is now, did not receive that specific answer it ought to have done. It was not, however, overlooked, as is supposed, but was considered to be overruled by the opinion given. It was decided that, under section 6 of the act of 1831, ch. 154, three magistrates were competent to hold the court and lay the county taxes. It is not stated in so many words in the opinion given that this might be legally done, although the magistrates had not classed themselves, but was so substantially, for the opinion states that the magistrates were required to class themselves. Section 6 of the act of 1831 expressly gives to the magistrates, who do attend, the power to do any business that a majority is required to do, which shall be as valid as if done by a majority. We were of opinion then, as we still are, that, although the (500) magistrates were required to class themselves and had neglected so to do, a court composed of any number was competent to lay the taxes. One design of the act was to remedy an evil, felt and complained of by all who were in the habit of attending the county courts. It is an old trite saying that what is everybody's business is nobody's business. By the general law it is made the duty of all magistrates to hold the terms of the County Court, and it is found by experience that much delay occurs, in many instances, in organizing the court and in retaining a sufficient number of justices on the bench for the transaction of business. It was the object of the act of 1831 to remedy this evil, by causing the magistrates to divide their number into classes, containing five members, whose duty it should be to hold three respective terms of the court, and, when so classified, that a majority of the acting class should be competent to do and transact all the business that seven could do. But that they did not intend to confine the power to assess the taxes to the magistrates in their respective classes is manifest from the fact that, if that were true, the words quoted from section 6 would be tautological and unmeaning, as that power was granted to the classified members by the third clauses of the act. It is, however, contended that the act of 1831 is repealed by that of 1835. To a certain extent this is so; wherever it makes provision for the same thing in a different manner it does repeal the act of 1831.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 N.C. 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-county-trustee-of-brunswick-v-woodside-nc-1849.